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About Beaver State herald. (Gresham and Montavilla, Multnomah Co., Or.) 190?-1914 | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1911)
WAS Cannot Cast ths Future. A man may presume to know much of wbat is passing but he dare not predict what part of the passing show shall disappear, as a fashion does. In time It must follow, as no man can pretend to place his finger unerringly on juat that particular part, then no man can begin to tell just what man or woman living today will be revered in time to come 99 To Rsmedy Corrosion. Corrosion In metals Is said to be prevented by the passage through the metals of a weak current of electrio- Ity. This ts a like cure like” treat ment. for the pitting of metals Is said to be due to the local electrical action, that ts. feeble current developed by the acidular water on dissimilar met als, often Impurities in the metal it self, at the not««» ot ^w-rnsion. The Greatest Social Force. The middle classes are the prepon iterant social force of today In repub lics as well as tn monarchies In Eu rope or in America Everything ts everywhere subordinated to the neces sity of satisfying them as speedily and as thoroughly as possible.—Per- rero in Pari« Figaro. iiiiiipLFi TWWt. Moth-ra win 2nd Mrs. wiaelcw*« Snothtns •ymp 'u<* bur ned» t-i use toe ths.r,-UUruc luring ihr trettuu< period Don't Let Old Age Come. Let us have a movement against mental surrender to old age at any time Such a movement wou’d make for sane moderation in all things, a cheerful spirit, appreciation of the joy and deltgh’ of living. Such a move ment would dwell on the marvels and beauties of nature and the gr-at pos sibilities ot god m the lowest of men THE TRUTH ABOUT BLUING. Talk No. 9. This common article fools many. Think of it, large bottle, little pinch of blue, fill it up with water. There I you are. Does it look good to you? Buy RED CROSS BALL BLUE, a pure blue. Makes beautiful, clear, white clothes. You will like it. Large package 5 cents. ASK YOUR GROCER. rii**'- Txt 1 -.'.r STILL MAUD LILLIAN Naw Head and Body for Child'« Bo loved Doll, But balr Wai the Sams. With tears in her eyes and a targe and very much damaged doll in her anna. a very little girl appeared at the mending counter of a doll's hos pltal the other day and displayed her broken treasure The doll's face was broken, one arm was completely gone and one foot waa minus all the toes The very little girl confided to me clerk that she wanted dolly made well again "I'm afraid it won't be worth while to fix it." said the clerk, regarding the new patient dubiously "You see there would have to be new head and new arm and new I really think it would be better you to get a new doll " The tears overran the eyes of very little girl at thia suggest Ion "But | want her to look like this doll." she protested "I love Maud l.llllan too much to have a new doll in her place You can get a new head for her and a new body, too. if you like but 1 want her to have the same hair that she has now. so she'll look like her old self “ The toy shop people are used to carrying out the Individual Ideas of the little mothers of the doll so no objection was made to p Maud Lillian's Identity by i her somewhat crumpled gold V beautiful new doll of the site was chosen, her glossy new wig removed and the broken doll's wig substituted Newly hewlgged In this fashion and robed In th«- garments of the discarded doll. Maud Lillian bore a resemblance to herself that was startling considering the rather ex tensive anatomical alterations that had been made In her The very lit tie girl seised her triumphantly and bore her away, but the onlooker who had witnessed the operation could not but wonder tn w'at Maud I JI Ilan's ego really consisted W HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS WOMAN HAD OVERLOOKED BET It h.is ctedriy proven its right to be («lilt'd “the best.” Didn't Know What She Had Forgot ten, but Returns Homo With Money After Shopping. She had just returned from a shop ping tour. tired, but radiant. He had just returned from Ilia of flee, tired. but well, tired. Quivering with delight at the array of damplea »nipped from roll» of dr®»« the contents of her goods, »he emptied • pur»® Into her I lap There was a metal Hr pound, A look of dismay crossed her face. "I Just ’There! ” esrlalmed knew there sonivlhlng I had for ✓ IF I A Toulc. AUciahv« ou<l X«w.lv«ul Th, br.t rr'iiedy I"« M lseys. IJvef sud Iv-wrl». Itts.lusU, l’implr». KtuOUelis •mi IH*<«d.iS of Ih» Skll* Puone» Ih- l‘be-1 ■ ■»! •' -• Tarn, siixugth sud 1 Igei le tu« «uUi« •/•leu«. Skylights lanks Gutters Down Spouts Steel < riling /. c BAYlR dear?” hr asked with Interrai 1‘artland. Oirgon Market SEND run (AlAt'HitF. half Aide to Memory. Emporia Man Hello, Griggs' The Inst time I saw you. I think, waa dur A'gy Telephones Ing that luiiitin-r when the graaahop Algy swaggered Into the posto!?! <e pers stopped the railroad trains In and entered the telephone box He Nebraska was Immaculately clad, and In a lord Omaha Mun No. Grimshaw It waa ly humor the summer when the gramthoppera "Hello'" he drawled putting the re didn't atop the trains In Kansas c< Iver to his ear A minute passed 11« repeated the Tims Wasted. summons His lordly humor began to "If you are ao firmly opposed to descend In tun's war, why do you wish to ««-nd your "Hal lo"' be called son to West Point-' No resitonse "Oh. »hats the use discussing the "Hallo”' thing with people »ho are so narrow Still no reai-onse Ills lordly humor minded that they always want to »ns now as gon«- as hfs temper, and make a personal matter of every in he shouted thing« Into th- receiver terriational Issue'"' Judge which must have made even that ex perienced Instrument tremble At last, when the perspiration drib bled from his bursting brow, und his hat was limp and both he and his Inn guage were exhausted, a notice caught ills eye It read " asked the second “Give the number you require to never have any grasa the clerk at the counter and »alt u ti cut before they'll give til the connection is made." to eat.” He slunk away so quietly that no one saw him go A Friendly Tip. “I’m going to keep on (‘limbing til I reach the top of (hr ladder,*’ »»id It has been known during a long the candidate who had Juul been elect time that In western Eutope man ex rd to a petty offi< •• •That*« all tight,” rejoined the old isted during the g!a< ial e;«>ch We now know that th«- great It«- age con- politician, ’but take my Hdvlce and slated of different gla<Ial times sepe keep an eye on the men ut the bottom. rated by Interglacial limos In glacial They are th® chupN who t un uj'bvl the times tlie snow line dropped 3.000 or ladder.” 4.000 feet below Its present level In Equivocal. the Alps, whereas In Interglacial times "A proposal of marriage Is a serious it lay about 1.000 feet higher than at present. Thus the temperature seems matter You first have (he ordeal of ■” to have been higher In the interglacial anklng the girl "Then of unking h»T father's, to periods than it is now There Is abundant evidence. In the boot------" "No. no! A fellow can't stand opinion of Penck, that man existed du ring ttie beginning of the last glacial everything When It comes to a ques e;>och. There is some reason for lion of her father's foot, there's a kick thinking that at least 20.000 years coming.” have elapsed since the last glaciation and that the man whose jawbone was found in 190# near Heidelberg lived 2'10,000 years ago Scientific Ameri can. Phuiif s o i ......... cny. The late David Graham Phillips had. like many bachelors, a cynical view tc of matrimony. Mr. Phillips, at a re union of Princeton's class of '87. at, The. the Princeton club, said of marriage: "The Persians have a proverb that Who would have thought that the HAT is a "gay cat?” Per I every young man should consider well haps you have never heard squalid parlor. Into which the warm before proposing. It runs: 'He that of him. though you know- sun filtered, was a place of dreams? ventureth on matrimony is like unto tom cats, wild cats and fem But so It was. The ta< Iturn little En- one who thrustetb bis band into a inine "cats.” He is an In gllshman In the corner, who was born sack containing many thousands of in South teresting combination, and his spe- Africa, was gazing Into space serpents and one eel. Yet, it the 1 îles is numbered by thousands. He ts uion the yellow corn fields of the Ar prophet so will it, be may draw forth half tramp, availing himself of all the gentine Republic, upon construction the eel.'" hobo's expedients for gadding about camps In the Andes, and upon broad roads leading by gentle stage« through Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, small, sugar- the world without paying for his trav egulate e'9- ant* half-man with a trade, the the pampa« from one hospitable ranch coated, easy to take as car.dy. re, id bow- ?oal of whose rambles Is always a job to the next. Around from his artic and invigorate stomach, liver anc els and cure constipation. He has all the "bum's" philosophical I ulate vision by a question. he stated contempt for the man so "easy" as to In a matter-of fact way that be would The Wealthy Ones of Earth. 'ride the velvet.” which means to pay be In Argentine next fall. Taking into account Australia and railroad fare Rut he also Incurs the The booted, gigantic Swede was all of the islands of the tropical seas, bum's" astonished disdain b«cause of thinking of logging camps In Minne the world may have 10.000 million his incorrigible habit of looking for sota. of perilous drives to the lakes, of aires, outside of North America and work fist-to-fist buttles between champions Europe, Russia excluded. The United Another.. In his “We travel from wanderlust, from among the snows States alone must have more mil love of adventure.” explained an ex- mind s eye. b«-held the sunny orchard« lionaires than the total tor continents ”gay cat." who had Joined the "home of California; another Imagined him which contain two-thirds of the peo guard" of those who have ceased from self helping build st«*el bridges in pie in the wnrH. rambling “When I was a youth I Mexico. The sap of spring was rising wanted to see the country, and see ft in their veins, and. like birds of pas Manitoba's Fish Industry. right. I wanted excitement. I had a sage, they were impatient to be off A Fish from Lake Winnipeg are now good trade and was living at home, few more weeks would see them scat sent down south as far as Maryland. tered to the points of the compass, but the lure of the road called me Most of them are not white fish, but “I could have paid car fare and rid ensconced In box cars and on blind cheaper grades. The fishing industry baggages, but all bent on the quest of Manitoba is now second only to den In the railway cafs. but you can't of tbelr ' golden fi-ece”—tbo perfect see the country that way. What man wheat as a commercial asset looking through the windows of a Pull job. Some would fall by the wayside— man car. knows anything about the Shake Into Your Shoes regions through which he has passed? mangled or slain beneath the wheels Allen'« Foot-Ea.-e. • p«wder for the feet, ft ra-e, You must travel a few hours at a time, of trains, and would be burled In the usinTu:, swollen, smarting, sweating feet. Makes new shoes easy. Sold by all Druygisxa and Shoe on a slow freight, and be thrown off pauper graveyards maintained by the Stores. Don't accept any substitute. Sampk at the most unexpected places by railroads for tbelr vagabond victims. FREE. Aik-- '• ■' 1. Roy. N. Y. brakemen, to see the country. You But of these the army of wanderers A u > —«• “ —■... — • • want to mooch (beg) a handout at would take no heed. A eer’ain English family owns s backdoors to get acquainted with peo The "gay cat" believes that his con stiletto which inspires every one who ple. You even learn something when stitutional right to the pursuit of hap bolds it with a horrible and almost some ‘fly mug' (detective > gets so cor piness includes the privilege of rid irresistible desire to kill some wom dial that he insists on your Btaylng In ing on trains without paying fare. an. This weapon belonged to an an his midst for 30 days—on the rock The most he will do Is to pay 50 cestor whose wit« deceived him and pile What dude In a palace rar can cents to a "shack” (brakeman) for Well Dressed American Men. drove him mad He swore revenge learn as much about his native land permission to ride unmolost«-d over The best dressed rnen are to against the whole sex and with the as I did In 14 years as a 'gay cat’?” bls division. Frequently a supposed dagger kliied bis wife, his wife's sister vagabond crouching painfully In a found in New York, says a German The Wanderlust Never Dies. and another woman before he was dis This man was a miner by trade, and brake-beam has $lo0 In his pockets paper In an article <- the decadence armed and secured. had followed the profession from and a bank book for several hundred In male fashions. In which the writer laments the fact that men of the pres OWARD e RltJl« — Amayer an*! H Lead » 111 e. Col-’T«»<lo. Spsj- neo pr. >-w: Geld, Pennsylvania to California, and from more, But he would have suspicions ent day are content to be clothed Rilvur. Lea<i. $1. Gohl. HUv»-r. 7,>.. Gobi jty- Z nc i California to Alaska. He never begged of his own sanity should he spend any or Copper. SI- ’»Í h ; . .ng ”na .(1 full price ’’4 save In an emergency of hunger, and of his money for the comforts and re and no longer trouble about elegan <• ►ntonai' nt.< • Control h - i Cmpir»* w >rk wo IwiUxL Referen««: Oar*»onat« N»- < - tí usually bad 11,000 or so tucked away spectabillty of a seat In’ a railroad in dress. Germans, this authority asserts, in a bank In this city or that. But it coach. The “gay cat,” In an emergency, Is don't look well In civilian dress, not How Good Hea th Tells. was only after many years of wander Foor physical health handicaps ing as a knight errant of the pickax not abashed at begging a meal at a even the Emperor. He sails danger tnany girl workers and prevents the and shovel that the wanderlust of bls backdoor. But as he has more Belf- ously close to lose tnajeste by further highest development of their powers youth was quenched and he settled respect, he usually employs greater stating that the Kaiser wears his An anaemic brain produces poorer down to be a prosaic hotel clerk. art and skill In his "mooching" than trousers too short; that the Crown work than one that is nourished by In the Bhabby sitting room of a 10- dose a "bum.” One roving mechanic Prince Is too much Influenced by blood rich In red corpuscles The dys cent lodging house In St. Louis there accosted an astonished housewife with French fashions and that the rest of the royal family simply know noth peptic girl Is Irritable, seedy, and out lounged recently half a dozen weather the question: Ing about clothes. of sorts when all her vitality la called beaten and hardy men, self confident "Madam, have you a hatchet?” on to make a special effort in her of mien and monosyllabic of speech "What do you want with a hatchet?” work. "Nerves" may make all the dif In their short words was none of the she countered, suspiciously. Inviting Temptation. ference between success or failure. whine of the professional beggar, and “I want to knock my teeth out," an Many people plan for defeat like To keep her health up to a good In tbelr straightforward look was noth swered he with solemnity. the boy whose mother told him that standard ought to be the alm of every ing of the hangdog. They had trav "Lands alive!" almost screamed the ho could not go to the river, nor girl who wishes to make something eled to most of the countries of the woman "Why should you knock your swimming, hut he did When h e re of her life. Too many girls allow globe, and. Ignorant of alien languag«-« teeth out?” turned and his mother saw the signs, themselves to drop Into poor health, and customs, had supported them- "What's the use having teeth If you he confessed that he was i tempted which Is so apt to become chronic ud selves by the sole resource of their have nothing to eat?" was the re and went with the boys, . She noticed less the tendency Is checked at the be own hands. They were confident of sponse. The "gay cat” obtafn«;d one that his coat bulged out. Putting her ginning. A girl owes a duty to herself taking care of themselves in any situ ot those rare feast« known in the ver hand In she pulled out his bathing to keep fit and well and attend to her atton. nacular as a "sit down. suit. When confronted with It he digestion, her muscles, her breathing said, "I was afraid that I might he The habits of breathing properly, tempted when I got there, so I took chewing^he food thoroughly, dally ex these along ” Some people expect erclses out of doors, are all small mat to fall, and plan for It. ters; bat one or two rules of daily conduct occasionally broken contrive New Musical Instrument. after a time to affect physical health Army men recently returned from and personality both. Once let a girl the Philippines brought a new musi make her mind up to cultivate a habit cal Instrument which Is proving a de- of self-development, and she follows lightful acquisition for the drawing these rules almost automatically. room. It Is called a mandola, and la Each detail may be unimportant tn larger and contains more notes than Itself, but the sum of them Is not. the ordinary mandolin Mrs. Reber, They are the points that tell In the daughter of Generil .Mlles, Introduce/ making of what should be every girl's the first mandola In Washing* oa alm to obtain—health and oersonalit/ old Lr ‘jfonxe. tonic, dpprlite restorer, <i rc.il digestive help <ind <i preventive of ( ramps, Di.irrlioeti, Costiveness, Materia, fever and Ague, take nothing but Salmon Hue for Caviar. Owing to the diminishing supply of sturgeon caviar. Hlborlan fi»h«rtu,ti ba.e been experimenting with salmon roe. a commodity that was formerly thrown away as valueless or even In jurious to health OWES HER HEALTH To Lydia L. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Scottville, Mich I want to ti-H you how much good l.ydlaE. I’liikh ini's i g<- 1 a li I« t '.im pound and sanativ » ash have don« me. I live on a farm an l have worked very hard. 1 am forty- five yi-ars old, an-l lam the mother of thirteen <-hildr>-r. ¡Many |»-<»ple think 1 it stialign that 1 am A ¡not l>rok«n do » n V |" ith li ird work m I I—Uth«- care of in» fam ily. but I t«ll them of my go<i<| friend, your Vegetable < <>in|M>iiiul. and that th«r« will I e no I- n kache and le-arin^ <lon n jmii ' s for t! eri if they wilt tak > it as 1 have. I am searcely ever with, out it In the hotl.-u-. ”1 will say also that I think there Is no Ix-tter niedieine to In- found for girls t<> build them up and mak-i strong nnd Well. Mr eldest daughter lias taken Lydia E. Pink, ham’s Vegetable ( otn|»>und for pain- ful |H-rhwl ian-l irregularity, and it ha# always hcl]»'<l her. ”1 am in., ays ready and willing ti ■rx-ik a good word for the l.ydia E. i'iiikhani's Remedies [ tell every on > I meet, that I owe my health and haj*. pin««« t-i these wonderful tn>-<lleim s.” — Mrs. J.G. Jons -os.Scottville,Sih li, ILF. I».«. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- mind, made from native roots anl erbs, contains mi narcotics or harm, ful drugs, and toslay holds th« record for th« largest number of uctual cures Of female diseases. A Barbar ous Idea. In Chicago a voice hna been raised against the cat's whlskiTs, which are alleg'd to carry microbes. The future may develop barbers for cuts, for It la not to be supposed that In this age of enlightenment and fade rata will bn permitted to go about with microbe laden whiskers. Judge. First Suburbanite- I hear you've got a new cook. Second Suburbanite Yes. First Suburbanite White of black? Second Suburbanite—Neither; green; very green. Value of Names. "Was your speech succesful?” “Not very,” replled the utatcHmnn who does not dec«-lve himself, "The only way I could get any great amount of applause was to say 'George Washington' or 'Abraham Ida- coin' and then wait.'" Hint That Failed. Visitor (waiting an Invitation to lunch)—Two o'clock! I f«-ar I'm keep ing you from your dinner. Hostess—No; but I fear we are keeping you from yours! —Meggendorf Blaetter. Gone, But Not Forgotten. "Did your investment In western mineral stocks prove a good buy?” "Yes; a goodbye to my money." Destroys HairGerms Reccntdiscoverles have shown that falling hair is caused by germs at the roots of the hair. Therefore, to stop falling hair, you must first completely de stroy these germs. Ayer’s Hair Vigor, new improved formula, will certainly do this. Then leave the rest to nature. Don not change the color of the hair. r.ol. with .«Oh botti. , ix-, Show II t. your dootor A.h him about it, thon do M h. ..V. Recent discoveries have alio proved that dandruff ia caused by germs on the scalp. Therefore, to cure dandruff, the first thing to do is to completely destroy these dan- druff germs. Here, the same Ayer’s Hair Vigor will give the same splendid results. —***• »Mi. O. Ayw Oe.. LmU. M m . .