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About Eastern Clackamas news. (Estacada, Or.) 1916-1928 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 3, 1927)
EASTERN CLACKAMAS NEW S, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1927 It GIRLHOOD TO / MOTHERHOOD J U S T HU M AN S O % F By Q EU E C A R R * ^ ■ ■ — « HE things th a t help are things like th is; The good w ife's arm s, the husband’s kiss, T he comrade hail, the fireside glow— W hatever fortune men may know, However much th eir fame esteem, W hatever else the world may seem, These are the things th a t really aid. T The things th a t help are little things: We think th a t genius fortune brings, And yet a song, a m erry phrase, A sun th a t shines or w intry days, May help us more to climb the hill T han all our genius ever will. All, friend, If you would help me climb Help keep me hHppy all the tim e! ✓ . "I MUST H I K E AL O N G , DE AR . I H A V E AN A P P O I N T M E N T T O H A V E MY K N E E S M A S S A G E D !" M akes L ife Sw eet For seven generations the National Household Remedy of Holland for kid ney, liver and bowel troubles has helped make life brighter for suffering men and women. Begin taking them today and notice how quickly your troubles will vanish. At all druggists in 3 sizes. SOMETHING TO T H IN K A B O U T T a k e e v e ry g o o d t b 'n g th a t com es y o u r w ay. T h e r e a r e so m a n y p le a s a n t little o u tin g s t h a t w o u ld se n d y o u h o m e r e s te d a n d w ith a d iffe re n t v ie w p o in t, but y o u th in k u p so m e e x c u se fo r w o rk t h a t m u st' b e d o n e a n d d o n o t g o . By F. A . W A L K E R CHEMIST NOW ALCHEMIST F TOUR fam ily has never been edu cated to e at clabbered milk, they m ay refuse to e at one of the most de lightful as well as healthful dishes. P u t a qu art of whole milk into a deep dish and set aw ay to thicken. Chill, cover w ith a sprinkling of brown sug ar, cinnamon o r nutm eg and serve. W ith a little bread and butter, this will m ake a wholesome meal. I BABIES LOVE MfcWNHflMS SYRUP The LfanU’ tad Children’s Regulator T le a g a n t to g iv e —p le a s a n t to ta k e . G u a ra n te e d p u re ly v e » - . « ta b le a nd a b so lu te ly h a rm less. \ I t q u ick ly ov erco m es colic, J d ia rrh o e a , fla tu le n c y a n d */ o t h e r lik e d iso rd e rs . T h e o p e n p u b lish e d a K A f f o rm u la a p p e a r* on Hn&.J v e v e ry la b e l. p M A t A l l Druggbls M & y Orange Layer Cake. T ake one-third of a cupful of but 1 ter, add one cupful of sugar, gradual ly, one beaten egg, one cupful of milk, adding the lu tte r alternately with one and three-fourths cupfuls of flour which has been well sifted w ith three te a -i.... ... y t talking pow der: Fla h a s b e e n re lie v in g c o u g h s d u e to colds vor with orange ex tract anil bake In f o r s ix ty - o n e y e a rs . tw o layers In a m oderate oven for tw enty m inutes. Spread with whipped cream, flavored w ith grated lo o s e n s th e p h le g m , p ro m o te s e x p e c to r a tio n , g iv e s a g o o d n i g h t ’s r e s t fre e orange rind or w ith a filling prepared fr o m c o u g h in g . 30c a n d 90c b o ttle s . as follows: Use one egg well beaten, a B u y It a t y o u r d r u g s to re . G. G. G reen, tablespoonful of flour; one-half cupful In c ., W o o d b u ry , N. J . of sugar and one-half cupful of boil ing w a te r; cook until smooth, adding a tablespoonful of butter, tlie grated rind Boils a n d c a rb u n c le s a r e t h e r e s u l t o f im and juice of an orange and spread p ro p e r d i e t o r in fe c tio n o f t h e s k in . I t is h a rd t o d e te rm in e t h e e x a c t c a u s e b u t CA R B O IL when cold on the cake for filling. The w ill g iv e q u ic k relief. N o e x p e n siv e o p e ra tio n top may he covered w ith whipped is n e c e s s a ry n s o n e a p p lic a tio n o f C A R B O IL t h e p a in a n d c o n tin u e d u se cream or an Icing. S ro saw m s p tly o u t s to t h p e s core. G e t a g e n e ro u s 60c bo x B o s c h e e ’s S y ru p Soothes the Throat WHAT CAUSES BOILS. f ro m y o u r d r u g g is t. Money back ii not aatidied. 8 P U R L O C K -N E A L C O .. NASHVILLE. TCNN. Fruit Punch. Boll together fo r ten m inutes three cupfuls of sugar, tw o cupfuls of w ater w ith the grated rind of one lemon and orange. S train while hot, add one glass of Jelly—cu rra n t is best. Set on Ice and when ready to serve add the Juice of nine lemons, five oranges, one cupful of cherries and shredded pine apple. Four Into n punch howl, add Ice w ater anil n pint of charged w ater, one at a time, to give It sparkle. For Pipe Sores,Fistula, Poll Evil Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh Money back for flrat bottle If not suit«). All dealers. 40 T U L I P I I I L B S , f o u r e a c h o f te n v a r i e t ie s f 1; 15 I ris , t h r e e e a c h o f liv e v a rie tie s , 91; p o s tp a id . W . P . K IM B A L L , 26 4 B a s t T w e n t y - th i r d S tre e t, P O R T L A N D , O R E G O N . Wise Bluejay Mrs. K ate Holden of Memphis tells N ature Magazine she w as puzzled b.v the antics of a bluejay flying madly among the branches of a wide-spread lng elm. She discovered the wise bird was taking advantage of a heavy dew the night before and busily knocking the m osture off the leaves and onto Its wings, thus taking Its m orning bath. Coronado Bavarian Cream. Soak two ounces of gelatin in cold w ater to cover. T ake one q u a rt of ripe straw berries, crush and mix with one pound of powdered sugar. B eat three cupfuls o f double cream until stiff, add the gelatin to the crushed fruit anil stir until the m ixture Is set. Mix lightly w ith whipped cream, fill th e molds anil harden. W hen ready to serve unm old anil decorate with whipped cream anil shapely berries. Farmer’s Time Saved S tatisticians estim ate th at a bushel of w heat can now be raised with the expenditure of but ten m inutes of the farm er's time, as compared with three hours anil three m lnntes In 18S0. (© , 1927. W e s te r n N e w s p a p e r U n io n .) ----- () ---- 9 ^ 3 '1 1 '5”5* ’ ': What Does Your Child ' ’ i Want to Know ^ “ tte rC o Jo j on Y oy, • A n s w e r e d by ; BARBARA W B O U R J A IL Y ■ ■ N T H E Middle ages the alchem ists were alw ays thinking about the possibility of transm uting the baser m etals Into gold. They fulled. But the discoveries m ade bp the chem ists of the present surpass all the dream s of the wise men of the past. So there w as no exaggeration in volved when R obert E. Rose of the D epartm ent of the Interior talked about the work th a t waa being done In the laboratories of America as' the “treasu re hunting” of the period. They came upon silk hidden In the liber of c o tto n ; vivlil dyes and orien tal perfum es in a pot of t a r ; bright m etals In dull, common clay; silver hidden in lead; deadly poisons and m edicines in one lump of coal, and fertilizer out of the air. All the discoveries from radium to modern explosives have been made by men and women who w anted to find out what things were made of. T he chem ists a re alw ays trying to discover If there is anything In the world th a t cannot be m ade simpler. They have found th a t there are m illions of different substances, mil lions of different kinds of molecules. But th ere nre only 92 different kinds of atom s and about tw enty of them form the m ajority of molecules. T here nre seldom more than three or four kinds of atom s in one kind of molecule. Each substance Is composed of characteristic molecules. But the only things In molecules nre atoms. It follows th at the difference In the molecules m ust depend on the num ber, arrangem ents and kind of the atoms. So here, according to Doctor Rose, is the whole secret. Once we have lenrned to rearrange atom s we have learned how to transform m atter. H ere Is an example th at covers the whole subject. . It w as In 1843 that, by a long process of boiling and redistilling coal tar, a substance called aniline was finally discovered. A q u a rte r of a century later a hoy of the nam e of I’erekln, who was In terested in chem istry, tried to make quinine artificially. He put oxygen into the aniline. Tills resulted In bis obtaining n brightly colored sub stance. When tested It was found to be a bright violet-mauve dye. T his caused a stir, for It meant th a t dyes could be made, instead of taking them from plants. It was also found th a t the m anufactured colors were more vivid than the natural ones. T he first striking success of I’ere kln w as In making turkey red from coal ta r. Then he tried for Indigo. T his w as more difficult. It took tw enty years of experim enting before he succeeded. It wn? the same story with regard to medicine. For Instance, salicylic acid was found originally only In the w lntergreen plant. Hence It was scarce and expensive. It is now ex tracted from coal tar, th at Inexhaust ible source of things, plentiful and cheap. So there Is no knowing what needs of hum anity the chem ists may lie able to supply through new combina tions of elem entary m aterial. I DELECTABLE DISHES tif is i s r v a • ] | fr<- ' Don’t blame the feed or the con dition of your stock if market men grade you low arid custom ers complain on account of the color of your butter. You can keep your butter always that golden June color which brings top prices by using Dandelion Butter Color. It's purely vege table and meets all State and National Pure Food Laws-used by all large creameries for years. Its harm less, ta ste less and doesn't color buttermilk. Large bottles, 35c at all drug and gro cery stores. <© b y M c C lu re N e w s p a p e r S y n d ic a te l Writ* for FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE ---------O--------- W J , k ibclurdtt* U , he W hat Editors Have to Stand Rcrlmglom. Vrrmoat W H Y DO ES A R IV E R F L O W F A S T E S T IN T H E M I D D L E ? M EN Train»« for BUSINESS. TRADES or PROFESSIONS E n r o ll n o r tim e . S e n d f o r l i t e r a t u r e . •: By D O U G L A S M A L L O C H 4 Vinton, Iowa —"W hen I waa seven teen years old_I had to stay a t home from school. I finally had to quit school, I was so weak. I suffered for about tw o years be fore I took L ydia B. P lnkham 's Vege table C o m p o u n d , then I picked up one of your books and read It. I be gan taking themedl- cine. Now I am a housekeeper w i t h I have tak en It each one Whs born. I can not tell you all the good I have re ceived from It. When I am not as well as can be I tak e It. I have been doing th is for over thirteen years and It al ways helps me. I read all of your little books I can get and I tell everyone I know w hat the Vegetable Compound does for m e.”—Mas. F rank S ixlebs , 610 7th Avenue, Vinton, Iowa. Many girls in the fourth generation a re learning through th e ir own per sonal experiences the beneficial effects of Lydia K. Plnkham ’s Vegetable Com pound. M others who took It whon they were young are glad to recommend It to their daughters. F or over half a century, women have praised th is reliable medicine. FO R = THE THINGS THAT HELP i ■ Iowa W oman Found Lydia E. Pinkham ’» Vegetable Com» pound Alway» Helpful SC H O O L i~ Th* water at th* edges i Must slow Its rapid pace Because it rubs against the banks O REG ON IN ST IT U T E O F TECHNOLOGY T .H . C . A . I I l ^ f . P o r tla n d ,O r c g o i I That keep it in its place. < ro n v rl» h t ) E ditor (considering article)—You say here, "seems to advance, hut re al ly Is as unprogressive as a clock." 1 don't get that. W riter—Why, you see, a clock Is running all day and yet It always winds up at the same place. Page 3 P ertinent R em a rks on People o f P rom inence The Some of Lady Oxford's thumbnail sketches of prominent Englishmen are quite clever. Abbreviating the al ready brief, we quote from her char acterization of Lord B irkenhead: ' He listens to himself, but tils brains— which are of the most rem arkable— sometimes go to his bead and he hears confused noises.” Of Lord R eading: “Though he has a warm corner for himself, he fins no cold corners for o ther people.” Lloyd George "loves a crowd more than himself qy his friend. He guesses w ithout pause what the person he Is talking to Is thinking; but while they are stationary, he Is a movie. In spite of an Intelligence am ounting to gen ius, he waylays himself." The Cecil family, she says, have “minds and m orals of distinction, but have subconsciously massaged away some of the more active muscles of their conscience.”—Boston T ran scrip t T he things th a t help may m atter more D em and for R a t S kin s T han things th a t men may battle for. M ay C heck the Pest Though now they dream of doughty deeds, Europe has discovered a scheme for The h e art more love than honor needs. holding In check the prolific r a t Va The hearth more m errim ent than rious Industries hnve created a de mand In London alone for rat skins P 'h l— T he things th a t help perhaps may hold th at am ounts to very nearly $200,000 More treasure than the proudest hull— a year, and there Is every Indication May he our treasure, a fte r a l l ! tlint the consumption of this m aterial (© b y M c C lu re N e w s p a p e r S y n d ic a te .) will Increase. Book binding, photo --------- i )--------- graph fram es, purses and thum bs for ladles’ gloves are among the uses to which the skins are put. A fter the passing of the rat act In Denmark some tim e ago, the great body of unemployed laborers took Im m ediate advantage of the bill, and the By H . I R V I N Q K I N Q Individual rat-catcher's earnings aver aged between $1.715 and $1.00 a day. It Is estim ated th at the damage by C O V E R IN G M IR R O R S ra ts In England alone am ounts annual N SOME sections of the country It ly to many millions of dollars, so that Is custom ary when a death has oc any Inducement to prom ote their cap curred in the family to cover the mir ture should be encouraged as fa r us rors and to keep them shrouded while possible. (THE W H Y of SUPERSTITIONS I the body rem ains In the house. Gen- erully, however, It Is only a m irror which happens» to he 111 the room where the body lies which is veiled. This custom is traced by Professor Frazer to the belief of prim itive man— of which belief we still see vestiges remaining—th a t the ghost, the soul, of a dead person hovers for a white about Its late tenem ent. A m an's reflected Image w as considered to tie n part of himself, possibly his “exterior soul”— and concerning the belief Ih "ex terior souls” the professor accumu lated a vast am ount of data. The idea In veiling the m irror w as to obviate the chance of the lingering soul of the deceased taking away with It the “exterior soul" of any person those reflected Image appeared in the glass. M irrors are very ancient and before m irrors w ere introduced there were pieces of bright m etal In which an Image m ight lie reflected and which were covered upon occasions of death, a custom still observed by some sav age tribes. W hether the "exterior soul” Idea ap plies here, as the professor thinks, or not. It is certain th at prim itive man like the savage who Is the primitive man of today regarded his reflection as som ething vitally pertaining to his personality, and It was natu ral that lie should protect it against any pos sibility of contact with n lingering spirit by preventing Its existence. And w hat w as begun ns a precaution Is practiced today liecause of an atavism which makes the superstitious feel It m ight be "unlucky” not to do It. (© by M c C lu re N e w s p a p e r S y n d ic a te .) Maybe Thi» Contains Hint for You! ((c) by M c C lu re N e w s p a p e r S y n d ic a te .) Both W ays "Can you serve company?” asked the m istress. "Yes, both ways, mum,” replied th* new maid. “Both ways?" “ Yes, muin. So they'll come agile I or so they'll stay away." F o r a G ood Boy Friend—Yon lu> ky devil! H ear yn cleaned up a million last week. B roker—IM say I'm lucky. My wife has prom ised me live thou-and ef It! W hy do so many, many babies of to- duy esenpe all the little fretful spellg and Infantile ailm ents th a t used to w orry m others through the day, and keep them up half the night? If you don't know the answer, you haven’t discovered pure, harm less Cas- toria. It is sweet to the taste, and sw eet In the little stom ach. And Its gentle Influence seems felt all through tbo tiny system. Not even a distaste ful dose of castor oil does so much good. F letcher's Castorln Is purely vege table, so you may give It freely, a t first sign of colic; or constipation; or diarrhea. O r those many tim es when you Just don't knmv w hat is the m at ter. F or real sickness, call the doc tor, always. At o ther tim es, a few drops of Fletcher's Castorla. The doctor often tells you to do Just th a t; nnd alw ays says Fletcher’s. O ther preparations may be Just as pure. Just as free from dangerous drugs, but why experim ent? Besides, the book on care and feeding of babies th a t comes w ith F letcher's C astorla Is w orth Its weight In gold! a Children Cry for Los Angeles, Calif.—"It was my good fortune to get one of Dr. Pierce's books several years ago and ft has b e e n a wonderful help to me while bringing up my family. The plain advice given Is invaluable to m others. “The use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite ‘ P rescription during expectancy and af terw ard was to me the g reatest help. It gave me strength, spirit and nerve. I have also used the ‘Golden Medlca Discovery’ for a had cough and bill ousness, and It has entirely rid mi Of these troubles."—Mrs. Noemli Reynler. 160 N. Dltman 8t. Dealers W rite Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. for free medical advice. H u y W ool C o m fo rt U n its in 3 L b . S h e e t* . S u ffic ie n t f o r o ne C o m f o r t—C le a n , S a n i ta r y C o lo red W o o l— $2 25 d e liv e re d p a rc e l-p o s t. W ool C o m fo rt l l a t t C o., B ox 1391, C h a r lo tte , N. C. " M a n u f a c tu r e r s O v e r 25 Y e a rs .” msm M IT C H E L L E Y E S A L V E heals I n f l a m e d e y e s , g r a n u l a t e d lid » , s t y e s , e t c . S u r e . S a f e . S p e e d y . 2 5 c at a l l d r u g g i s t s . H a l l & R u c k e l . N . Y .C . A Real Boss T his generation has seen a number of child monnrehs. King Alfonso of Spain was born a fte r the death of his father and became king at birth. He seems to have taken himself seriously as a king from babyhood and to have rebelled lustily against Ills m other's regency w henever It took the form of reproof or punishm ent. Many stories hnve come out of Spain of the way he kinged It around the palace In Infnney. In the nursery lie was corrected for putting a knife In his mouth. "Gentlemen never eat like th at," he was told. He retorted, "I'm not a gentleman, I’m a king.” Many a nuin who believes th at the earth revolves on Its axis also believes that he Is the axis. The young Indy across the way say« her father's business Ideals are very high and she doesn’t believe he’ll he satisfied until he’s cleaned up $10,- 000,000 !>y srime hook or crook. BABY I___________________________ DR. STAFFORD’S LIVE TAR Splendid for (’ROUPand cold«. Relieve* congestion, honree- ness, coughing. Taken inter nally for inflamed membranes of throat and bronchial tubes. . HALL A RUCKEL, New York 1 "■ bronchitis W. N. U., P O R T L A N D , NO. 44-1927. K itty ! K itty! Jane—T h at lace Is thirty-five years old. Rose— Pretty. Did you make It your self? Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets, you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin prescribed by physi cians and proved safe by millions over 25 years for Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago Pain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism | DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART~ Accept only “ Bayer” package which contains proven directions. Tlanily "B ayer" boxes o f 12 tablets. Also bottle« of 24 and 100— D ru g g ist. of • a llc /lic a c . ] A spirin 1» the trad* m ark of B a je r M anufacture of M ooo*cetkacl4«ater