Forest Grove press. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1909-1914, July 10, 1913, Image 3

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    FOREST GROVE PRESS, EOREST GROVE, OREGON. THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1913.
Forest Grove = s a TO PILOT AIRSHIP
Steam Laundry OVER SEA IN 1915
The Ansco Camera
approaches very near perfection as
a picture taker.
The manufacturer have spent years
of time and a great deal of money per­
fecting these machines.
They are now a means of Education
and a great source of enjoyment for
old and young alike.
Don’t fail to take an Ansco with you
on your vacation trip.
We have them at all prices from
Wood, Coal,
Cold Storage
and Ice.
to B e o n V ie w at S a n F r a n c ia c o E x ­
MERTZ & LATTA
Cor. 5th Ave.
and 2nd St.,
F o rest G rove, O re.
BUTTER WRAPPER
THE PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS
Plient 901
Notice.
PRINTING
The Sunrise Grocery will pay
cash for all farm products,
Eggs, Butter, Veal and pork,
the best market price paid and
all goods sold at the bottom
price. Pacific Avenue at Third
street. JOHN DODGE. Proprie­
tor.
23tf
FOR PANAMA EXHIBITION.
A c c o r d in g to P la n s , T w o M a c h in e s A r a
$2.00 to $20.00
Littler’s Pharmacy
Gaunt Zeppelin Himself May
Oirect Atlantic Flight
a t th e
FOREST GROVE PRESS
100 for $1.25
2 5 0 fo r $1.75
50 0 fo r $2.25
p o s itio n , It la S a id — F l i g h t to U n it e d
S t a t e s,
It
la
E s t im a t e d ,
Tillamook County Beaches
“N ature’s Playground" as these beaches have been called,
are now open for summer visitors. New hotels, with all
modern conveniences, cosy cottages, camping grounds and
D o u b l e Dssly Train Service
Leaving Portland daily............................................8:45 A. M.
“
“ Except Sunday................1:20 P. M.
Beaches Reached in 5 Hours
Business men can leave Saturday afternoon and arrive at
beach points in time for dinner, spend the evening and
Sunday with the family an i return to Portland Sunday
night without loss of time from business.
R O U N D TRIP FARES FROM PO R TLA N D
Season tickets on sale daily . . . $4.00
Week End (for return Monday) . $3.00
Corresponding low fares from other points.
Cal! for our brand new folder “Tillamook County Beaches"
Folders and full information fo ra any S. P.
Agent or at
If#/ I OGDEN
SUNSET \P »1
»SHASTA 1
ROUTES
City Ticket O ffice
£ 0 Sixth Street, Cor. O ak
JOHN M. SCOTT
General Passenger Agent
Portland, Oregon
Help Fight the
Great Red Plague
Citizens of the state are urged to inform themselves regarding this
plague which is causing great suffering among boys and young men and
especially among the innocent girls and women of the state. Parents are
urged to protect their children, and provide clean, wholesome information
in place of the unclean misinformation they cannot now help getting.
Such instruction will be found in the following
For Young Men
Free Circulars
Circular Xo. 2 — The Four Sex Lies.
Circular Xo. 9 — Sex Truths for Men.
For Older Boys (13 to 18 yrs. of age)
Circular Xo. 8 — Virility and Physical Development
For Younger Boys (10 to 13 yrs. of age)
. Circular Xo. 7 — The Secret of Strength.
For Girls
Circular Xo. 4 — A Plain Talk with Girls about their Health.
For Young Women
Circular Xo. 10 — Physical Development, Marriage and Motherhood.
For Parents
Circular Xo. 1 — The Need for Education in Sexual Hygiene.
Circular Xo. 3 — When and How to Tell the Children.
Circular Xo. 5 — A List of Books for Use in the Family on Sex.
Circular Xo. 18 - How One Boy Was Instructed in Sex Matters and
What Happened. Illustrated
Send 2-cent stamp with your address to
Department D
. The Oregon State Board of Health
720 Selling Building, Portland, Oregon
Applicant* are kindly *»ked to «elect only those circulars for whleh they h are a
definite use. These wUl be gladly sent.
Taka
T h re e D a y s.
Count /.epindln is seriously planning
to drive one of his airships across the
Atlantic, according to private advices
received In New York lately by an
aeronautic authority. The news Is
made more dramatic because of the
fai t that the letters say that Count
Zc|>|telin bluiself will pilot the huge
sldp If his health, at seventy-seven
years, continues to remain good.
The report, which originates In a
highly reliable source, says the trip
will be made In the summer of 1915,
by which time the engineers at the
great Zeppelin works at Friedrichs-
hafeu expect to have completed an air­
ship twice the size of the present Zep­
pelins The ship Is to be 1,000 feet
long and fifty-two feet beam, with five
to six motors, and the time estimated
for the ocean passage Is three days.
The plan contemplates that the air­
strip will follow the ocean steamship
lane, so that the air craft will be In
continuous wireless communication
with ocean vessels In case of emer­
gency.
A i r s h i p ’s P o w e r s
SUMMERING AT
W ill
Know n.
Dr. Colsman, director of the German
Airship Navigation company, which
operates the passenger Zeppelins In
Germany, has announced that the ra-
dh:s of the Zeppelin airship Is now
known so definitely, owing to its con­
st-nation system for retaining Its gas,
that there is no longer any doubt of
th ‘ airship's ability to cross the At-
Inn'ic.
The same Information says It is prac­
tically assured that at least two Zep­
pelin airships will be sent to the Pan­
ama exposition at San Francisco by
way of the ocean nnd overcontlnentnl
Hi::lit. Zsppelin engineers, it Is said,
will visit the United States this year
to test the atmospheric currents nnd
decide on the best route across the
1-01111110111 nnd to select bases for re­
plenishment of the airships en route in
ease the heat of the American plains
lias a more powerful effect on the ships’
-rns supply than over the plains of the
upper Rhine valley.
Z e p p e lin M a y C o m e H e re .
Count Zeppelin, so the private cor­
respondence says, may come to the
United States with liis engineers.
Some time back the count denied a
similar report that he was contemplat­
ing the achievement of crossing the
ocean.
Expert aeronauts in this country who
have visited Germany nnd have been
passengers on the Zeppelins and are
acquainted with many of the com­
manders of the Zeppelin airships nnd
members of the technical staff have re­
turned here, convinced that the devel­
opment of the Zeppelin airship has
very nearly approached the long ex­
pected perfection that would enable It
to traverse the ocean.
JAPS SWARMING IN HAWAII.
T h e y , W i t h C h in e s e a n d K o r e a n s , M a k s
B u l k o f P o p u la t io n .
More than half of the population of
Hawaii Is composed of Japanese, Chi­
nese and Koreans, according to statis­
tics of tile thirteenth census not here­
tofore made public. Of the total popu­
lation or 191.90» the Jnpanese number­
ed 79.C75. or 41.5 per cent Japanese,
Chinese and Koreans combined num-
liered 105.882, or 55.2 per cent From
lot 10 to 1910 the Japanese increased
52.8 per cent; the Chinese decreased
15.9 per cent
Caucasians In the Hawaiian Islands
numbered 44.048, being 22.9 per cent
of the total population. Of these 22,-
201 were Portuguese, 4,990 Porto Ri­
can. 1.990 Spanish nnd 14,867 of other
Caucasian descent. Pure Hawaiian»
numbered 26,041. a decrease of 12.0 per
cent lu the ten years. Of the Japa­
nese mates twenty-one years old or
more, numtierlng 41,718, only eleven
hud iieoorae naturalized. Of the for­
eign bom male population of Hawaii
twenty-one years or older 91.9 percent
were Chinese. Japanese and Korean.
More than half of the entire popula­
tion cannot speak English, the highest
portion being Korean, 81.7 per cent,
and only slightly lower among the Jap­
anese, 79 rier cent.
Statistics of occupation and the own­
ership of homes are not Included in the
refiort
COMPANY
IS REORGANIZED.
In d e p e n d e n t H a r v e s t e r A c c e p t s R e s i g ­
n a t io n s a n d E le c t s N e w M a n a g e r s .
Officer» and directors of the Inde
pendent Harvester company at Plano,
III., whose methods of stockholding are
being Investigated by the government,
have resigned, and new officers have
liecti elected William Deerlng Stew-
irt. president of the Plano State bank,
replaces W. C. Thompson as president
•nd general mnnager.
The company Is a $10.000,000 corpora­
tion and haa Issued approximately $7.-
000.000 of stock, hot only $800,000 of
the stock Is common or voting stock.
Absolutely Safe and Reliable
The Bankers & Merchants Mutual Fire Association
Bandit cleanup in Persia the past
year has been $100.000.
The imperial parliament of Germany
has de> ided to tax incomes from
$1.250 up.
Teu teachers in the domestic science
department of the Pittsburgh schools
have resigned to get married.
Animals In the Chicago zoo are bet­
ter treated than prisoners in the Jail,
according to the president of the coun
ty board there.
Postmaster General Burleson asks
12.071,480.000 postage stamps from the
secretary of the treasury. He thinks
he could stick out the year on that.
A seagoing dog on the steamship
Indrani, lately In New York, named
Fluffy, has sailed 210,000 miles and
passed through the Suez canal eleven
times.
O f Foreat G rove, O regon
Conducted on Economic and Business Principles. The Hi
Company That Has Made Good. Insure Youi
Business or Dwelling in The
Bankers &c Merchants
Main Street Garage
A uto Repairing, V ulcanizing and
G eneral M achine W ork. Storage
and Supplies. Phone Main 62X
W. A. CHALMERS,
Main Street, Forest Grove.
I
CAMELS SOON COMMON
IN AMERICAN DESERTS.
T e x a s S to ck m e n
P la n to
Im p o r t T w o
H u n d r e d F r o m O rie n t.
J. II. Trimble, one of the leading
stockmen of Texas, Is at the head of
an association which purposes to traus
port camels from the oriental deserts
to those of New Mexico, Arizona and
California and the seuilarid wastes ot
Texas. The association purposes to
import 20o camels and place them on a
ranch on the Itlo Grande, about 150
miles south of Cape Verde.
The areas mentioned, although they
offer great possibilities to the seeker
after valuable metals, are little trav­
ersed either by railroads or wagon
roads, such as would be suitable for
motor trutUc, for the soil, which Is
largely drifting sand, makes the con­
struction of durable roadways Impos
sible.
The camel, with ills thick padded
feet, seems to have been expressly de
signed by uutifre for Just this sort of
travel, and, added to Its ability to trav­
el over these sandy wastes without Ur
lug, the animal's other characteristics,
its swiftness, burden bearing power
and the fact that it can go long dis
tames without food or water, make
It as available for these American des
ert regions us for those of the orient
This Is not the first occasion on which
an effort lias been made to start camel
culture In the United States. Jefferson
Davis, when he was secretary of war
In President Pierce's cabinet, was the
originator of a project for the raising
of camels by the government That
experiment also was made In the
neighborhood of Cape Verde, and the
old buildings, modeled after a caravan
snry in Asia Minor, are still in exist
ence, although now dilapidated.
With the idea that the camels would
be useful in Indian warfare because
they could carry dispatches more
swiftly than horses and that In other
ways they could tie made useful In the
deserts, the government Imported forty
camels, with twelve Armenian drivers
nnd their families. In 1856.
But Just when tire camels were about
to demonstrate their ability to be of
service In the new land the breaking
out of the civil war and the election of
Davis to the presidency of the Confed­
eracy Interfered.
SINGING FISH THE LATEST.
B e llv ille
B u ll P o u t B e c o m e M u s ic a l
a n d A n n o y N e ig h b o r s .
Ringing fish have caused all sorts of
excitement In Bellville. O. The llsli
u variety of bull pout, live In the sub
terraneun streams nnd come to the
surface and sing.
They gather at the surface of cis­
terns and quiet pools In the gathering
dusk and chant In chorus what a prom­
inent poetess of Bellville calls a sweet,
sad. haunting melody, which she likens
to the moaning of night winds through
lonely, brooding piues.
She also believes that the pout In
the subterranean darkness keep track
of each other by their cries and that
the droning sounds nre their cnlllngs
to their mates. But plain citizens who
are kept awake are tieglnnlng to say
harsh things about the singing Ash.
FIFTY CENT FUNERALS.
G o ve rn m e n t C a n B u ry Se a m e n
C h e a p ly In C a ir o , III.
is something every business man
desires when he orders station­
ery. Neat appearing business
letter heads, envelopes, state­
ments, bill heads, cards, etc., are
what can be had from the Press
Publishing Co, Neat printing
Is Our Motto
and we endeavor to live up to
it at all times. When we fail
to deliver a job of printed work
which entirely satisfies, we are
prepared to make it right. A
job turned out of this office
must be correct in every par­
ticular. Bring your work to the
Press Publishing Co.
and be assured of securing some­
thing which is typographically
correct, tasty in construction and
neat in appearance.
WASHINGTON - OREGON
CORPORATION
will
Beginning June 1st give to its
patrons in Beaverton, Elmonica,
Orenco, H il 1 sboro, Cornelius,
Forest Grove, Gaston, Dilley and
all country lines a
M oat
The cheapest place in the world for
a sen man to die is Cairo. 111., where
bis funeral will cost him only 50 cents,
according to contracts let recently by
the United States public health serv­
ice, covering the entire country.
The cheapest place for a seaman to
he sick Is Bridgeport, Conn., where the
government has secured a contract for
medical attention and nursing at 72
cents a day. The cost elsewhere
ranges from $1 to $3 a day.
The cost of funerals varies from 50
cents In Cairo to $36 in Philadelphia
and $50 In Ketchikan. Alaska.
F o s s W o u ld P a r d o n A ll.
Neat Printing
Governor Foss of Massachusetts.
who has pardoned 300 convicts In
three years, declared recently that he
favored pardoning all convicts, to give
each of them another chance to be­
come a good citizen.
4c
Electric rate
on all cooking and heating ap­
pliances and small domestic
motors.
Phone Main 9 2 2 HilUboro for particulars and
our representative will call.