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About Beaver State herald. (Gresham and Montavilla, Multnomah Co., Or.) 190?-1914 | View Entire Issue (March 6, 1913)
NUHSEKYMEN WILL ATTEND fía* the Annual Rose Nhow in Portland to Be Great Event. F<w Rah or TrnrU For Or. <« Wuh Land, 40 a. all rule, n.ar tUdarvd«--. Ifella Co.. Gaio.; hoiiw. barn, uuUlkig« . 7-a on hard. sir. F!. W. Hloltv.l'vdarwl««. Colo. F..r Rale- S'JO a near Colville. Hor.ru Co.. Waah.i «*• a. rult. liai under. 4 r. Uni««, barn, oulbkl«« . la orchard, «turk ms.hrn.ry «Ir I. E llnlrirk. Cohrille. Wash. fur gala or Trarlv fur Wml«-rn l’r<>|H-rty .T.'O a. In les Cu , III , 126 a roll 12 r deviling. n>-Urn l<arn. outbids«, «had«, air. 1. I*. Clarke, Franklin Grw«. III. Machinent ttxrsrz «..'hNnvwl: -ngln-a. Ixlfar«. aawmlll« Mr H>. J. F Martin Co.. Si l«4 * ! .. I'urUaiul S...I fur Ulurk I lai anU pru—r BANDMEN: HOLTON and BUESCHER Iwnd ln«irum.nt«. Th. moat r-mplata «tnrk < f Mualral M.-r. har.ll«. In (ha Northw«al Wrila fur < «inhwmu. ( BEST PLACE TO KEEP FRUIT hKIIO HLING-l l'CAM MIMIC CO. IM K«r.a<l Slrwl I'artlaiul. Orwoa HUNTERS! TRAPPERS! Ifeal dlract with manufar. turvr, W. pay th. hiyh«-t i.rlr«« for Haw kur«. Writ* f<>r traa prira Ual and ahippiiur sea, N M L'NUA CO.. HJUIUK IIIM1M Portland, Or. The National Nur- scryrnen’s association of America will hold its annual convention in Portland next June and u la'Ko rnajor- Ity ut the 3000 delegates will come to Portland In time to take inf the Rose show and Rose festival. The Rose festival week comes June I» to 14, and the floral exhibit will be one of the greatest drawing cants for the first three days of the celebration. The National Nurserymen’s association is the most Important floral organization in the United States i nd in the mem bership and among the delegates who will bo here will be the foremost pro fessional rusarians in the country. Special attention will be given to their entertainment while here and th« judging in the Rose show compe titions will probably be done by some of these uX|>erta. roiruku OU A Toy for Cats THE CATNIP BALL For fun and health. At ■Ini*. toy «nd d.partrn.nt .<.««• Writ» ML A. C BM U 15. le IVUll.lfeafa,. t‘rr l«.»k >*n Cals. Putting It Delicately. He was a stage aspirant, and bad contrived somehow to gain an Intro duction to a well known mauagor, who agreed to fix a date for a trial. I This duly came off. and expectantly the aspirant awaited the verdict. "What do you think of It?” he asked, after a deep silence. “Well,” the man ager implied slowly, "all I can say te that If ever you are put In prison for acting It will be a grave miscarriage of justice." , Erratic Traveler. 1 Opportunity Is th« slowest thing tn the world when It I« approaching you; but when It la going tn the other di- , rectlon It (rm«!« taster than light. i I W 0 Where persona have a house with eight or ten Inch beams on which the floor Is laid In the first story, the spaces between the b**ami make an eg- oeUent place to keep canned fruit in tha collar Boards can be nailed firmly to the underside o' the beams, forming shelves oh which the fruit can be *eL Wide boards are best The air la dryer In this point In the collar than nt any other place, and there Is a freer circulation, too. keep ing the fruit In a mor« even tempera ture and better atmosphere than Io possible In a fruit cupboard or on shelves built along the side walls. In erecting such shelves care should be taken to secure the boards well with nails A good plan In to saw the boards to fit a certain place, allow ing tha ends to be just even with the sides of th« beams. Then a small board can be nailed firmly on the end of the shelf and. when ,n place, nail ed to the outside of th« beams. Meddling Stage Directors In a recent lawsuit regarding the ownership of a play a stage director testified that In thirty two years' theatrical experience he had never heard of a play being produced as 1 |M < hlef duty originally «rill* n of a stage director.' ,’’ he said, "Is med- dllng with manuscripts, I have even beard of stage directors who tried to Improve on Shakespeare by revamp ing his works ” N W»rr not macU to do Markin« Work, but thrra la a marhinr- mad# to do Wumrn’a Wurb, and It do«« it quirkvr and bettor than It’« erer b*an done brfor*. THE MEADOWS POWER WASHER TAKEN THE WORK OUT OF WASH DAY. Fr** Illustrated ratal«»* arnt upon receipt of th* roti pun below or postal men t lent ng thia paper. Space Batwaan Bearne Provid** Dry Spot th* Moot Fitted for Ita Proper Precorranoti. Mother« irti! find Mr». Winslow"« Soothing Syrup i.‘ « beet ret ><-dv t<> u«u tut m«U «trituren ?uilu* .“is teothing period. The Wrong Burna. At the town of Ayr, two mll«a out of Glasgow, aland* the cotta«* built by William Borns, In which li a son Robert was born A Californian, who waa In Scotland recently, was asked If ho would Into to see the cottage of William Burns. "Sure, 1'11 go." r» • ponded the American, "but I'm bleaeed If 1 see how he finds time to live there very much." ONES free Meadows Washing Ma chine catalog. CARD SERVES AS DIAPHRAGM Intertstlng and Instructive Expert m«nt May Be Tried With Any Talking Machine. Here Is an amusing and lnstructlvs experiment that may be tried with any talking machine. Heretofore It baa been supposed that the needl* and sound box were necessary tc transmit the words or music etched In the disks or rolls used as record» on these machines. You may be sur prised to know that an ordinary visit ing card, or any similar card, will be quite effective an a diaphragm. As tho disk revolves push aside th« needle and apply the corner of th» N mm . Oldest Known Prescription. The oldest prescription In the world Is In the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It Is on a piece of stone 3x4 inches lt> size and was probably written 3.601! years ago In Egypt. The prescription takes up both faces of the stone and la written In the old cursive charao ters, tho compound being a remedy that was used for a fumigation. bhuid blu* !■ a writk solution. A mid It. Buy Red Cr<j*a Ball blue, th* blue that*« all blue. Aaa you j aru*«r. Awake. "That man talks a great deal, but you must admit that he's wide awake.* Card as Diaphragm. "Well," replied Farmer Corntossel, re card to the surface. It will receive flectlvely, "you couldn’t expect a matt to fall asleep during one of his own and transmit the sounds perfectly clearly. Of course, such a primitive speeches." transmitter has neither the volume FOR EVE nor the expression of the regular ap DISEASES paratus, but It Is most Interesting a» a scientific experiment and will af Not Many. "Women are living longer tha:* they ford a great deal of amusement as did a generation ago,” says a statie well as furnish food for thought. tical authority Yes, but will they own up to being any older?—Ex REAL MEANING OF “POTLUCK” change. Inhabitants of Limoges Make One Plunge With Ladle and Take Whatever They Can Get. L Happy? The real origin of the word "pot luck* is unknown to most of the peo ple who use It In Limoges, France, however one runs Into potluck Itself, My Symphony, It’s really only remarks the New York Sun. In a cer To live content with email means. another word for per tain corner of that quaint city of jost e seek elegance rather than luxury, fect dtgesiKMi — ac!ive liver ling roofs there is still segregated, ind refinement rather than fashion; — bowel regularity. Sick much as If in a ghetto, a Saracen pop ■o be worthy, not respectable, and ness always brings ulatlon. probably a remnant of the sealthy, not rich; to study hard, think discontent and “the wave of Saracens that swept over lulckly, talk «ently, act frankly; to blues,” but why re Europe hundreds of years ago. Here Isten to stars and birds, to babes and main so? Get a bot they live In their crooked, narrow tongs, with open heart; to bear all tle of streets, following old customs handed iheerfully, do all bravely, await oc- down from generation to generation. Misions, hurry never—In a word, to1 There are many butcher shops in the rt the spiritual, unbidden anif uncon- quarter and outside of each steams a iclous grow up through the common— | great pot of soup over a glowing bra !hls is to be my symphony.—Chan- > zler. In each pot stands a ladle as ting. Leisurely. ancient as the pot. ONLY ONE "nnoMO QCININE" “The hired man fell off the fenc« When a customer comes with a pen today. It will make That fa LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Ixink down In tho meadow lot just now!* for th« ni»inature uf E. W. (¡ROVE. Cur«* a Cold ny in goes the ladle and comes up full the “inner man” "Had he hit tho ground when you in Ona Day. Cum* Grip in Two Day*. 2£c. of savory broth and chunks of meat, strong and healthy left?"—Louisville ' *<r|r r Journal. odds and ends that the butcher has Dlre^ Hint. and prevent Stomach had left over. And what comes up the Boy’s Idea of the Veit. They had been talking as they walk Ills, (’olds, Grippe customer has to take. One can imag Little Hurney attended a wedding ed. She had remarked pathetically: and Malarial Disor ine how anxiously the hungry urchin where tho bride wore a veil. Whllf "Oh. It must bo terrible to a man to ders. or the mother of seven must eye the going homo ho said: "Mamma, when be rejected by a woman!" "Indeed It Inexorable ladle and how a pretty girl you married did you wear curtains?* must.” was his response. Then, after REfUSt SUBSTITUTES might get another draw from the a while, with sympathetic ingenuous butcher's boy. ness. she exclaimed: "It doesn't seem At any rate "to take potluck" means that I could ever have tho heart to do to take what you get and say nothing Poetry and Music. It.” And there camo a silence be If I hnd to live my life again I would whether the pot is In Limoges or In tween them as he thought it over. Save made a rule to read some poetry the flat of the man who eagerly In rtt.ES CVRET» IN S TO 14 DAYS •nd listen to some music at least once vites a friend of his youth to dinner. Toar drusviet will rt-fund money If PAZO OÍNT- •very week; for perhaps the parts of MKNT falla to euro anv ra.-w of ltching, Btind. UlMüinir or Protrudins Piles in 6 tu 14 Java. 60c. my brain now atrophied would thus RIDDLES. Save been kept active through use Was Even More Upset. The loss of these tastes Is a loss of Which Is the largest room In the Fi1 “I can't understand how you have Sappiness, and may possibly be Inju world? the presumption to think I would rious to the Intellect, and more prob- The room for improvement Li permit my daughter to become your xbly to the moral character, by en When cm you drink out of a flag wife.” “It does seem rather surprie- feebling the emotional part of our na staff? FOR CONSTIPATION Ing. I suppose; but cheer up, ture.—Charles Darwin. When ft holds a flagon. nnd nil fórma of You’re not half so badly upset as 1 How high ought a lady to wear her DIGESTIVE DISORDERS was when she suggested it to me.' »» Band Cure for Fatigue. dress? One of the most efficacious cures A little higher than two feet. for fatigue from overwork consists in Why do little birds In their nests DISTEMPER walking barefoot In sand. The nerves agree? CATARRHAL rtVER of the sole and heel are slightly Irri Because they are high men (Hy AND ALL NOSE tated by coming in contact with the AND THROAT DISEASES grains and accelerate the circulation men). Which la the most dangerous bat Cure, the sick and acts as a preventive for others. Liquid of the blood tn all parts of the body. g ven on the tongue. Safe for brood mares and al! others. Best The effect produced Is highly Invig that flies in the air? kidney remedy; 60 cents and $1 n Imtll*; (Sand tlOtho dozen. A brickbat Hold by all drurgl.t« and horse goods houses, or sent, express orating. Besides this, the monotony Why Is a flirtation like plate pow paid, by the manufacturers. of an ample extent of yellow sand ex- der? erclses a soporific effect on the brain SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. Chemists. Goshen. Ind. Because It brightens up spoons. which Induces sleep.—Harper's Week- How long did Caln hate his brother? As long as he was Abel. Saving of Men. Why is a bad cold a great humilia Men are led away from threatening destruction; a hand Is put Into theirs tion? Because ft brings the proudest man The North Pacific College was estab which leads them forth gently toward» to his sneeze (his knees). lished in 1898. It has departments of a calm and bright land, so that they Why Is a tumbler like a pugilist? Dentistry and Pharmacy. No school in look no more backward, and the hand Because he can’t get his living with America has better facilities for the train may be a little child's.—George Eliot out some assaults (somersaults). ing of young men and women for success Love as Form of Religion. ful professional careers. The annual ses Why is Ivy climbing a tree like a sion begins October First. An illustrated I Love at Its highest point—love sub watch? catalog of information will be forwarded lime, unique, Invincible—leads ui Because it's a stem winder. I upon application to straight to the brink of the greal When are roads like corpses? abyss, for It speaks to us directly ol When they are men-ded tho Infinite and of eternity. It Is emi Why la cold cream like a good chap nently religious; It may even beoom« eron? Eul Sixth and Oregon Sti., Portland, Ore. religion.—Amlel. Because it keeps off the chaps. When is a blow from a lady wel come? When she strikes you agreeably. What snufftaker is that whose box gets fuller the more snuff he takes? A pair of snuffer* No ttoUffhtful 1 »«»rw«.n U*M liquid blu*. It’d* pinch of blu« in a larir« Ix-ttl« of wulrr. Ank fur Hud Cm** Bali Blu*, the blu* that'* ali blu*. ET us put aside the official gog Ing Chinese were scattered her« an« gles of Peking and the jere there on the hulk, and if the vessel miads of Chinese worthlessness, sailed before the game was finished it and notice some of the ripplea made little difference to the travel Bid stirred by the little white stone tie simply waited for the next boat. of western progress that has been 8cores of coolies In their eagernesd dropped into the well-nigh stagnant to make a few "cash'’ in unloading tbs pool of Chinese thought The point cargo of rice sacks, tea. flour, cottorn of Impact Is small, but the ripples are goods and bales of silk, leaped frosa expanding. the hulk to the vessel before it cams Geographically, almost In the .ery to a standstill, and I was told thsg heart of the yellow empire, nestles a some were drowned in the effort to b* beautiful summer resort. The lovely, first white bungalows, imposing churches' Little attention Is paid him whs and school buildings, telephones and thus falls Into the water. A rope Is telegraphs scattered over this garden sometimes thrown, but before this valley 6.000 feet above the level of life-thread can be availed of the vesast the sea, seem as though dropped from often closes in and be is heard of ns the hand of some giant fairy, and the more. more so when we consider that a The Chinaman's Idea Is that tbs hundred years ago there was not a dragon wants those who are thus un Protestant Christian in China, writes fortunate, and It Is tempting the de Thomwell Haynes tn the Philadelphia mon’s ire to Interfere with his de Record. signs, not to speak of the responsibil But during the hot, trying days of ity of the rescuer for all the future every year at thia summer resort of life of the rescued. When the cargo-!»-handled, malls Kullng. just off the great yejlow Yangtse. over 100 miles below Han exchanged and the passengers aboard, kow, the "Chicago of China." some the steamer pushes itself away from 1,500 foreigners, consisting mostly of the hulk and twists Its nose on up missionaries. Interspersed with Amer river, past every conceivable kind eff ican, English and German government craft The Pagodas. officials and tourists from all over the Farther on up the river, on tbs east, gather for two or three months to regain depleted strength and store north side, was passed Nanking, tbs HOSTETTER'S Stomach Bitters 75 YEARS OF PUBLIC APPROVAL PINK EYE North Pacific College of Dentistry and Pharmacy Registrar, North Pacific College PUTNAM FADELESS DYES A Chinese Pagoda ap energy for another year's on slaught against Chinese apathy. All travelers to Kullng must go by way of the Yangtse to Kluklang, the river port, whence they go over and up the hills toward the south for sev eral miles to Kullng, and these jour- news to and from that Mecca of health are as Interesting and helpful as the residence there. Luxurious Boat*. While American consul at Nanking I took this journey. "Lazy John’ had begun to bespeak the coming of the hot summer months, and one early morning of June found myself at Hslakwan. the port of Nanking, the old southern capital of China, await ing the up-river steamer toward Han kow. These boats are models of luxury, the staterooms are large, the berths resemble beds, your servants are al lowed free passage, wine Is served free at meals, electric bells, fans, lights vie to be nearest at hand—In fact, every convenience and luxuary abounds. When our vessel docked at the hulk, native passengers began crowd ing on board, and luggage carrying coolies were clamoring for pay Groups of card-playing, oplum-smok-1 capital of Nganhui province, which contains one-third as many Inhab- l'ants as the United States. Just at the water's edge is a beautiful pa goda. a most interesting type of that peculiar class of buildings that ria* three, five, seven, nine—always an odd number—stories high in the form of a narrow and polygonal obellsK which Is tenanted mostly by Idols and bats. The stiffness of the lines of thia pagoda has been toned by time; de cay has thrown off a brick here and there; the lightning and winds bava robbed It of several corners, and Na ture has dropped seed on Its roofa which the fierce tropical sun hu warmed Into maturity. At so frequent intervals on both sides of the river are seen these pago das that they seem almost a natural feature of the landscape. From them magnificent birdseye views of the sur rounding country are obtained; but not all are open to ascent The purpose of erecting pagodas la the same as that for which we mor« civilized nations install systems of sewerage. The pagoda secures health, old age and prosperity. The wind« may blow, but they bring no harm, floods may come, but they cause m damaxe