Eastern Clackamas news. (Estacada, Or.) 1916-1928, November 10, 1927, Page Page 5, Image 5

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    EASTERN CLACKAMAS NEWS, THURSDAY, NOVEMHER 10, 1027
1 Improved Uniform International
SHE WENT FROM
BA" TO WORSE Sunday School
Down to 98 Pounds — Final]]!
Restored to Health by Lydia
E. Pink ham’» Vegetable
Compound;
Cleveland, Ohio.— "After having m>
first baby, I lost
weight, no matter
what I did. Then a
doctor told me I
would be better If
I had another baby,
which I did. But I
got worse, was al­
ways
sickly and
went down to 98
pounds. My neigh­
bor told me about
Lydia E. Plnkham's
V e g e t a b le Com-
ound, as It helped her very much, so
tried It After taking four bottles, I
weigh 116 pounds. It has Just done
wonders for me and I can do my house­
work now without one bit of trouble."
— Mas. M. R iessingeb , 10004 Nelson
Ave„ Cleveland, Ohio.
If some good fairy should appear,
and offer to grant your heart’s desire,
what would you choose? Wealth?
Happiness?
Health? That’s the best gift. Health
Is riches that gold cannot buy and
surely health Is cause enough for
happiness.
Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Com­
pound may be the good fairy who
offers you better health.
f
H ir a U u ,
p irv lf
vac*tiHk.
lafaats
..4
CkilSrm'i ft.fnl.tor, (om ok on «very UWL
Guaranteed uon-narcohc, non-alcoholic.
MRS. WINSLOWS SYRUP
The laianU’ and Children’* Regulator
Children grow healthy and free
from colic, diarrhoea, flatulency,
constipation and other trouble If
Riven it at teething time.
j
Safe, pleasant—always brinRs re­
markable and gratifying results. |
A t A ll
D r u g g is te (
C re d it to M o to rista?
The automobile bus been responsible
for the development of a sturdier find
Incidentally a smarter race of roosters
and chickens, according to Rich­
ard C. Haldemnn, president of the
Pennsylvania Motor federation. Ualde-
mnn asserts that the large num­
ber of chickens killed on the roads
during the early days of the auto-
blle age weeded out “ mentally unfit
roosters and hens.”
He asserts that
Instead of being blamed for the chick­
ens which are still killed the motorists
should be thanked, for they are aiding
the farmer In developing a better
grade of fowls.
*
>
- A
The bureau of public roads has de­
veloped an Instrument that determines
accurately the relative smoothness of
a highway.
F e e l T ir e d a n d
L a n g u id ?
^ L W A Y S tired and achy> Sur«
your kidney« are w orking right?
Sluggish kidneys allow waste poisons
to remain in the blood and make one
dull and languid, w ith often nagging
backache, drowsy headaches and dizzi­
ness. A common warning is scanty or
burning secretions.
Use D o a n ’s P ills. D o a n ’s, a stimulant
diuretic, increase the secretion o f the
kidneys and aid in the elimination o f
waste impurities. T h ey are praised the
w orld over. A sk your neighbor l
D O A N ’S
STIMULANT DIURETIC
KIDNEYS
foster Milbum Co. Mlg.Ckem.Duffalo.NY
CO R N S
Ends p a in a t on ce
/
In one m in u te pain from corns is endsd.
Dr. Scholl's Z \ no-pads d o this aa/e/y
b y rem oving ths cau se— pressing and
rubbing o f shoes. T h e y are thin, medi­
cated, antiseptic, healing. A t all drug
and shoe stores. Cost but a trifle.
D Z S ch oll's
'Lino-pads
Put on« on —the* pain is gone!
r Lessonf
<By R E V . P n. r i T Z W A T B R . D.D . Doaa
Moody B ible Institute o f C hicago.)
(© . 1927, W estern N ew spaper Union.)
Lesson for November 13
HOSEA
PREACHES
C O D 'S
LO VE
LESSEN
T E X T — H o s e a 11 :1 -4 :8 . » ;
14 4-8.
G O L D E N T E X T — 1 d e s ir e m e r c y a n d
n o t s a c r ific e a n d
th .
, : u
is ,
of
G o d m o re th a n b u r n t o ffe r in g s .
P R I M A R Y T O P I C — G o d '. W o n d e r f u l
Love.
J U N IO R
T O P I C — G o d '«
W o n d e rfu l
Love.
IN T E R M E D IA T E A N D S E N IO R T O P ­
I C — T h e U n c h a n g i n g L o v e o f G od.
Y O U N G P E O P I.E A N D A D U L T T O P ­
IC — T h e L o v i n g - K i n d n e s s o f G od.
KALGAN IMPORTANT
CHINA TRADE CENTER
Situated on Horseshoe Curve
of Great Wall.
Washington. — “Kulgun,
Important
trudlng center of northern China, re­
cently occupied hy Nationalist forces,
occupies one of the most ancient
i crossroads in the world,” says a bul­
letin from the Washington lieudquur-
ters of the National Geographic so­
ciety. “There the caravan route from
Peking to Urgu, on the other side of
the Gobi desert, crosses the great wall
of China. The greut wall has fallen
into disuse and is no longer a military
highway, but tbe caravan route to
Mongolia has kept pace with tbe times
and now uutomoblles mingle with the
camel trains on Its long uad tedious
path.
W h e re
nosea's message was primarily to
fsrael.
The nation was outwardly
prosperous, for its height of temporal
glory was reached In the time of Jero­
boam II. (See II Kings 14-20). With
tills prosperity come luxury, immoral­
ity and apostasy. Calf worship and
Dual worship were substituted for the
worship of God.
I. The A postasy of Israel (chs. 1-3).
Israel's covenant relationship with
Jehovah Is presented under the figure
of a marriage. Their spiritual whore­
dom Is symbolized by the example of
an unfaithful wife.
1. The murriage (1 :1, 2).
Hosea was commanded by God to
take un unchaste woman to be his
wife. While tills was a strange act,
yet it was right, for it was commanded
by God, and its motive was the eleva­
tion of the woman to the prophet’s
moral plane. It was designed to show
God's wonderful condescension and
love in entering into covenant rela­
tionship with a nation of such immor­
ality.
Tlie nation had no more to
commend It when God chose it than
this unchaste woman when Hosea con­
tracted marriage with her.
2. The unfaithful wife (ch. 2).
Notwithstanding the wonderful con­
descension on the part of the prophet
In contracting marriage with tills
woman, Gotner, the unfaithful wife,
departs from him to consort with her
former base lovers. This shows Israel's
base Ingratitude In their departure
from God to go after idols. Sore chas­
tisement fell upon her for her unfaith­
fulness.
3. Illustration of Comer, the unfaith­
ful wife (ch. 3).
This Illustrates God’s undying love
for Israel. The motive governing the
prophet’s act was love. God's love for
Israel Is Just as real. Ills grace will
yet move Him to take back that nation
to Himself.
II. God’s Love for Israel (Hosea
11:1-4, 8, 9).
1. Its beginning (v. 1).
It began when Israel as a nation
was in its childhood. God loved the
nation even while In Egypt.
2. ‘•Called my son out of Egypt” (v.
1).
God called Israel out of the bond­
age of Egypt and brought them Into
Canaan, the land of freedom— flowing
with milk and honey. Such love and
favor placed Israel under peculiar ob­
ligation to God.
3. “Taught Ephraim to go” (v. 3).
In spite of Israel’s backsliding (v.
2), God Is represented as teaching
Israel how to walk, even as a father
taking up his child In his arms. God
watched over them as parents watch
over their children by night
4. “I drew with cords of a man (v.
4).
Observe that Ills drawing was not
with a stout rope as used with an un­
ruly heifer (ch. 10:11), but a cord
such as a man could bear. God's won­
derful love in Christ should constrain
ns to obey and serve Him.
5. Took off the yoke from the Jaws
and placed food before them (v. 4).
The figure is of a husbandman lift­
ing the yoke from the oxen so that
they could e a t
6. Unwillingness to give them up
(vv. 8, 9).
In spite of all Israel’s sin, God was
unwilling to destroy them.
III. God
Pleads for
Repentance
(14:4-8).
Notwithstanding their awful sins,'
God urged Israel to turn unto Him.
He Is doing the same to backsliders to­
day. He made promise unto them.
1. “I will heal their backslidings” (v
4).
This on the condition of frank and
full confession.
2. “I will love them freely (v. 4).
This Is characteristic of God. Only
God can express unmerited love.
3. “I will be as the dew to Israel"
(v. 5).
God will refresh the nation as dew
does the parched grass.
4. Growth promised (v. 5).
5. Beauty assured (v. 6).
6. Pleasant fragrance (v. 7).
While this Is a picture of the re­
stored nation, something similar may
be seen In the fragrant, fruitful lives
of men and women who have sinned
and come back to God.
Faithfulness Is A ll
He who Is faithful over a few things
Is lord of cities. It does not matter
whether yon preach In Westminster
Abbey, or teach a ragged class, so you
he faithful. The fa ith fu l«... ta all.—
George Macdonald.
*
R a ilw a y
M eets
D e s e rt T ra ils .
“Kalgau Is situated near the bor­
der of the province of Chili and Mon­
golia, about 125 miles by rail north­
west of Peking.
At this point tbe
great wall bas foriued a horseshoe
curve. Kulgan is on the outer edge
and Nankow on the Inner. The trav­
eler from Peking thus crosses the old
fortification twice, once at Nankow
and later at Kalgan.
The railway
Journey from Peking occupies an en­
tire day, due to tbe steady rise lu
the landscape toward the Mongolian
plateau, which has Kalgan on its rim.
“Thence tea and tobacco for the
northern trade must be hauled ucross
the Gobi by cart, camel or an occa­
sional motor truck. Such a Journey
occupies many days, wells being
twenty, thirty and even fifty miles
apart. Caravans ure enormous, some
numbering between three und four
hundred camels.
Many camels suc­
cumb to beat, cold, hunger or thirst
and the trail Is marked by «leached
bones of dead animals. Eor the most
part they get through, however, and
on their way south pour the products
of Mongolia Into Kalgan. Hides, wool
and furs reach this outpost of civili­
zation In enormous quantities from
the grazing lands of the north,
“Another Mongolian product mar­
keted through Kalgan Is the hardy
little Mongol pony of the plains.
These are In demand throughout the
northern provinces, especially gray
and white ponies, the latter being fa­
vorites with the Chinese. Foreigners
find these tough little beasts first rate
for saddle purposes, though they have
a reputation for stumbling.
“Plains, ponies and herds give Kal­
gan the air of the old American West,
an Illusion not dispelled by Its repu­
tation Snr lawlessness.
“The city 1ms an estimated popula­
tion of 70,000 who are largely em­
ployed In trading and allied Industries,
such as the manufacture of saddles,
harness and rope.
Low mud and
block houses with tile roofs stretch
In dirty monotony on either side of
the Ta Ho, which stream cuts the city
In two, nnd during the rnlny season
sometimes floods the neighborhood.
There are many Russian Inhabitants
and they have their own bank and
church. Modern architecture is rep­
resented by a few business buildings
belonging to the fur and tobacco trade
and native stores. The white popu­
lation other than Russian has always
been small, limited to a few traders
and missionaries.
Famed for Color and Climate.
“Kalgan is a name unfamiliar to
the majority of China’s Inhabitants,
the city being known by the Chinese
as Chang Chin Kou.
Mention this
name to a home-loving Chinaman and
he pictures for you a wild frontier
settlement In whose streets galloping
Mongol horsemen from the plains
Jostle ten caravans en route for Si­
beria and soldiers from the local gar­
rison. Such a picture of Kalgan Is
equally true today.
It Is known
among foreigners resident In Chinn ns
a city of the ‘wild and woolly’ West,
where the hospitality of the traders Is
only equaled by a bracing upland cli­
mate.”
Say» Fish Eating Causes
Rise in Japan’s Birth Rate
Moscow.— A close connection be­
tween fish-eating and the birth rate
hns been discovered In Jnpan, accord­
ing to the claim of Josef Washington
Hull, an American author nnd former­
ly private secretary of the Chinese
war lord, Wu Pel-fu.
Japan. Hall said on a visit to Mos­
cow, has become the greatest nntlon
of fish eaters In the world nnd simul­
taneously the birth rate In Japan ha»
Increased. The ratio works out, he
claimed, at about 400 pounds of fish
for each gain In the birth rate.
Hall's pen name is Upton Close.
Succeeds in Extracting
Rubber From Fig Trees
Pasadena,
Calif.— Dr.
Frederick
Osins, rubber specialist, announced
that his Initial experiments In extrac­
tion of rubber from fig trees has
proved successful.
Doctor Oslus said that rubber In
commercial quantities may he ob­
tained from the Panache, or French
fig, and that the common California
varieties, the Kadota and the Adri­
atic. are being subjected to research
processes now.
He said he had produced a fine
piece of rubber from Panache milk.
The Sane Christian
A safe auto driver keeps hts hand
on the wheel and his eye on the road
4 sane Christian keeps his hand on
:he Bible and his eye oo God.— T. C
Horton.
Tit for Tat
New
York.— They
culled Mayor
Walker of New York Jimmy In Itoine;
in New York he culls Gujllclmu Mar­
coni BilL
Pa^e 3
HIDDEN 300 YEARS,
TREASURES RETURN
l Two Van Dycks and One Mu­
rillo Found in Peru.
Lima, Peru.— Two paintings by the
Flemish master, Van Dyck, and an­
other long-forgotten treasure from the
brush of Murillo are about to make
their reappearance in the world of art
after more than three centuries of se­
clusion in the ancestral mansion of
Señor J. 1. Irlvarren de la Puente,
descendant of one of the most cele­
brated members of the old Spanish
nobility in Peru, the Marquis de Villa-
fuerte y de la Puente.
The three works, valued at approxi­
mately $1.250,000, have been pro­
nounced genuine by the late The-
ophllus Castillo, Peruvian artist and
critic who enjoyed a high reputation
In European art circles. They have
been vouched for by other critics who
have made special visits to Peru to
view them.
O f the trio the most valuable is the
Murillo, worth $1,000,000. Its subject
is “Saint Joseph and the Infant Je­
sus.” Its canvas measures approxi­
mately three feet in height by two
feet In width.
The first of the Van Dycks is paint­
ed oil copper, its subject being: “The
Itepentent Magdalen Distributing Her
Jewels.”
It is rectangular and is
smaller than the Murillo. This work
is in a perfect state of preservation
and is valued at $150,000.
The other Van Dyck is ‘‘The W or­
ship of tlie Golden Calf.” The owner
values this picture at $100,000.
Tlie pictures were brought to Peru
more than 300 years ago by the Mar­
quis de Villafuerte y de lu Puente.
The owner recently decided to sell
all three works and hns offered them
to the British museum.
SAY “ BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST 1
Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for
Colds
Pain
Headache
Neuralgia
Neuritis
Toothache
DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART
Accept only “Bayer” package
which contains proven directions.
ITandv “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablet«
Also Lotties of 24 and 100— Druggists.
Asfixia is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacldcatcr of Sallcyllcacid
D o H is L ook s B elie H im ?
Mrs. Hoyle— “Your husband Is a
bright-looking man.” Mrs. Doyle—
“Yes, that's the way lie looks.”
T i m n n r hi —
R e s u lts w o n d e rfu l a n d sure. On© c o m p le te b o *
o f li K K M O l.A w ill txtnvince th e m ost sk ep tl-
<*al. A ls o cures B c*e m a . P r ic e 11.25. A s k y o u r
d e a le r, l t e i s u t y I t o o k l e t F R F K . I>r C IL.
B e r r y C o., D ept. 19.2975 M ic h ig a n A v o . C hicago.
S C H O O L
Take
S a lts to Flush K id n eys
B ladder B others or
B ack H u rts
FO R
M EN
Traiaing for BUSINESS, TRADES ot PROFESSIONS
Clean Kidneys
By Drinking
Lots of W ater
Herd of Antelope Is
Found in Texas County
E n r o ll a n y tim e .
O REG O N
H e n il f o r l i t e r a t u r e .
IN S T IT U T E
Ï . 01, C. A , lU tlg ,
OF
T E C H N O LO G Y
F o rtlu n ti, O rego n
P A R K E R ’S
H A IR B A L S A M
R e m o ve « D a n d ru ffs tops H airV ailing
Restores C olor and
B ea u ty to G ra y and Faded Hair
If
60c. and $1.00 at Druggist».
H ltw o* ( ’ hem. Wkp. I'atchop.iir. N. Y.
FLORESTON
Mercedes, Texas.— In the remote
wilderness of chaparral in the border
district between Mercedes and I.aredo,
a herd of nntelope wns recently dis­
covered by Chnrles G. Jones. Mate
game warden.
Mr. Jones said upon
Ills return to Mercedes that the ranch
region of the border is still teeming
with wild game.
“For three weeks I have been get­
ting acquainted In Starr, Zapata and
Jim Hogg counties and find game
plentiful,” he said. “There are thou­
sands of quail, deer and wild hogs on
every side. There are about 150 ante­
lope In Jim Hogg county. If the
hunter was ever careful In his life, let
It he when he runs across these pro­
tected animals, for no one is nllowed
to shoot an nntelope in Texas at any
time.
“They are the most graceful animals
that ever lived, nnd the hunter should
view them for their beauty and not
their moat. This little herd In Jim
Hogg county is practically all that Is
left of hundreds of thousands of these
noble creatures that 35 years ago
roamed over the prulrie sections of
Texas.”
Eating too much rich food may pro­
duce kidney trouble in some form,
says a well-known authority, because
the acids created excite the kidneys.
Then they become overworked, get
sluggish, clog up and cause' all sorts
of distress, particularly backache and
misery In the kidney region, rheu­
matic twinges, severe headaches, acid
stomach, constipation, torpid liver,
sleeplessness, bladder and urinary irri­
tation.
The moment your back hurts or kid­
neys aren’t acting right, or if bladder
bothers you, begin drinking lots of
good water and also get about four
ounces of Jad Salts from any good
pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in a
J glass of water before breakfast for a
few days and your kidneys may then
I act fine. This famous salts Is made
from tlie acid of grapes and lemon
j juice, combined with litlda, and has
been used for years to flush clogged
Kidneys and stimulate them to activ­
ity; also to neutralize the acids in
the system so that they no longer
Irritate, thus often relieving bladder
disorders.
Jad Salts cannot Injure anyone;
makes a delightful effervescent lit bin-
water drink which millions of men
and women take now and then to help
keep the kidneys nnd urinary organs
Denver, Colo.— Plans for an expedi­
clean, thus often avoiding serious kid­
tion that has its destination 500 feet
ney disorders.
below the surface of the Pacific ocean
weio revealed here recently hy George
R ev erse E ffect
M. Williamson, one of the Williamson
A paradox pointed out by the
brothers who filmed Jules Verne’s
“Twenty Thousand Leagues Under Arkansus Gazette is that a woman
the Sea" 13 years ago. In the project | can deflate a man by blowing him up.
Expedition to Study Life
„ 500 Feet Below Pacific
announced by Williamson, three men
will be lowered to a depth of 500 feet
below the surface of the ocean In a
steel ball-shaped chamber, nnd, from
heavy glass portholes, they will study
deep-sen
life.
A
specially
built
schooner carrying the party of scien
lists, who will perform the researches
will sail from San Diego, Calif., with-
In the next 00 days for the west coast
of Mexico, where the first experiment
Is to be made, he said.
Lumbago
Rheumatism
S H A M P O O — Ideal for nse in
connection with Parker’s Hoir Balaam. Moke» the
hair Boft and Huffy. r>0 cents by mail or at drug­
gists. lliscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. x.
PASTOR KOENIGS
N E R V IN E
/ ‘"'Epilepsy
Nervousness &
Sleeplessness.
, PRICE $150 AT YOUR'DRUG STORE
W r ite fo t fre e B o o k l e t
KOENIG MEDICINE CC.
1045 N. WELLS ST. CHICAGO.ILL
H A N F O R D ’S
B a ls a m of M y rrh
Since 1846 hat healed Wounds
and S o re s on Man and B east
AD dcslsrs sra antborisrd to rrfand year money lor U m
first bottle il net soiled.
DEAFNESS
HEAD NOISES
R e lie v e d b y
LEONARD
EAR OIL
'
"R u b Back of E a r «"
INSERT IN NOSTRILJ
Cheery News for Mothers
A t A ll Druggists.
Price $1
Oakland, C alif— "I married vary
! young and my children came very
Folder about " D E A F N E S S ” on request.
L 0. LEONAS0, lac. TO Fifth I n . Rev Toft
close together. During my first ex­
pectant period a
friend told me of
L ost A n y w ay
Dr.
Pierce’s
Fa­
I
vorite Prescription.
“I had my cashier watched by a
|
I have had seven
detective to see that lie didn't ab­
children- all very
scond with the money.”
strong and healthy
“W as that worth while?”
— and I took the
" N o ; I still have the cashier, but
'Favorite Prescrip­
tion’ each time ex­
the detective absconded with the
cept the laat, and
money."— Fllegende Bluetter, Munich.
that was my hard­
est ordeal I nover
with any of tbe
London.— Stnmps once owned hy
others, always felt well, waa able to
the czar of Russia and which cost
T h e m o r e y o u r o u g h th e w o r s e y o u f e e L
do all my own work right up to the
a n d th e m o r e In fla m e d y o u r t h r o a t a n a
his government 1250,000 to produce
last, never auffered very long with
l u n g s b e c o m e . G i v e th e m a c h a n c e ta
were put up for auction here recently.
any except the laat one. and I am sure
h e a l.
*
that would not have been had I taken
They fulled to bring one-hundredth of
the 'Preacrlptlon' aa before.”— Mr»
their cost.
Benlta Strohallen, 877 86th St.
The stnmps were offered on the In­
h a s been g iv in g r e lie f f o r s lx t y -o n e
All dealers. Tablets or liquid.
y e a r s . T r y It. 30c a n d 90c b o t t le s . H u y
structions of a client In Latvia, whose
It a t y o u r d r u g sto re . G . G. G r e e n , I n c *
representative attended the sale in
W o o d b u r y , N . J.
The
world
knows
nothing
of
Its
case the reserve price was not
greatest
men.—
Taylor.
W . N . U., P O R T L A N D , N O . 4 5 -1 9 2 7 .
reached.
This was set at *3,750,
which was the price once offered for
Rid yourself of “creeping ills.” Put your body in
the stnmps when exhibited In America.
trim by cleaning up your Wood from the «lowing
Although the bidding began at *1,-
down poison« poured ioto it by inactive kidneys.
000 nnd rose by $125 bids to *2,000 it
liver and bowels. You may rely upon
went no higher.
the famous old Dutch National
Household Remedy— in use since
1696. The original and genuine.
Stamps of Late Czar
Bring Little at Sale
Stop Coughing
Boschee’s Syrup
GUARD
-J44444H4 *4 4 4 4 4 4 ***#4 H 4 #4 4 4 4 4 H H H H H H H 4
Great American Hen
Lays 760 Eggs a Second
Washington. — American hens
are creating a record for them-
J selves by laying collectively at
♦ tlie rate of 700 eggs a s< cond, or
$ 24,000,000,000 a year, according
♦ to tlie I>epartment of Agricul-
♦ ture, thus accounting for about
♦ 10 per cent of the total value of
sic all live stock and its products
♦ last year. Only the dairy Indus
♦ try, with 40 per cent, nnd tlie
J swine Industry, with 22 per cent,
♦ were higher.
X
Tlie great American hen is
♦ responsible for more than one-
} third of the world's supply of
♦ poultry nnd eggs, the depart-
X men stated.
H A A R LE M OIL
« ™
™
a r s
KIDNEYS
NOW!
Accapt no im ita tio n «
MI D ru ggists
Tfiraa S is ««
Cuticura Baths
Best for Children
J j
* |
j |
*
*
*
♦
*
*
♦ 1
* I
♦
Teach your 9hildren to use Cuticura Soap
because it is best for their tender «kina.
Assisted by occasional applications of
Cuticura Ointment to first signs of Irri­
tation or dandruff, it keeps the skin and
acalp clean and healthy. Cuticura Tal­
cum is cooling and soothing.
Soap®« Ointment 25 a nr) Mr Talmm 2T> SoMararr-
wh«ir- Sample each fr«-« A'ldrem. ' CnUcnra Lab*
t f s t a n ■», P r p t
fR T
B3. M ald *n . Maas
( uticura Sharing Stick 2 Sc.