The Forest Grove express. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1916-1918, January 19, 1916, Image 3

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    FETTERED
BY
CASTE
AM ER ICAN W R IT E R C R ITIC IZ E S
6 Y S TE M IN B R ITA IN .
Too many women struct*
under pains and aches.
They are not sick—but weak,
ncreous, irritable.
High Governmental Places Reserved
for Members of the A istocracy—
Fitness Considered a Matter
of Little Moment.
Such women need th a t bloody
stre n g th th a t com es by taking
S c o t T’S EM ULSION. It also
strengthens the nerves, aids the ap­
petite and checks the decline.
In an old and stable laud, governed
by a monarchy, with social standards
as lived as the social foundations, the
conventions played an euortuous part;
and tlie conventions In England were
t f w ife or m other tire easily
all
against hard work, it was the lei­
or look run down. SC O T T 'S
sured class that ruled, that made up
E M U LSI O N wdl build her up.
society, that held all the positions men
naturally covet. Time and again have
H-43 SHUN SUBSTITUTES.
l beeu assured by Americans, Cana­
dians and Australians that what most
impressed them In that England which
has beeu killed by the war was the
and
prevalence of the caste system. They
were quite right, Syduey Brooks
FEDERAL Free TIRES
AND TUBES
writes In the North American Review.
Tire Service.
The caste system was beyond doubt
" THE HOUSE OF SERVICE.“
the outstanding feature of the British
MOTOR OAR S U P P L Y CO., Inc.
33 B r o a d w a y N o.
P ortland, Ore. structure. It was the caste system
that made the West end of Londou the
governing center of the empire. It
WEST COAST of MEXICO was the caste system that In every
Best Land in Mexico. Two Crops Year w ithout British ministry reserved an excessive
Irrigation. Reasonable term s. price low. L iter­ number of places for the uristoerucy,
ature and particulars.
whose title to them was based plainly
nouesseutiuls of birth, mauuers
MEXICAN NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CO. on and the social
position. Nobody pretended
PORTLAND. OREGON
275 Pine Street.
that they were the best men for the
offices they dlled or that the country
Double
Tread
Puncture
Proof
Tires
received from them unythlng like full
Made from your old on#»s. L ast lonjf value for its money. They were there
| as Brand New TIRES W rite us.
chiefly because they were born in the
OREGON VULCANIZING CO..
550 W ashington St..
Portland, Ore. purple and could not be got rid of.
Hence politics in Eugland remained
LEA RN W A T C H M A K IN G
Pleasant, profitable work not overdone: few an affair of friends, and the national
m onths' learning; positions guaranteed: w rite for business, as the war has shown but
references and particulars. Portland W atchm ak­
ing. Engraving and Optical School. 218 Common r too clearly, wns too often entrusted to
wealth Building, Portland. Oregon.
u set of charming, wealthy and conde­
scending amateurs. But it was social­
Practical Lessons in Hypnotism 265 Page Book. ly and Industrially rather than politi­
Contains full instructions for developm ent and
practice of Hypnotism ; T ruth of this wonderful cally that the caste system worked Its
Science, $1.50. Purack Publishing Co., 328 Cham ­ gravest barm. What was it at bottom
ber Commerce. Portland. Oregon.
that made the English atmosphere be­
W ANTED—Men to sell L ittle W onder Gasoline fore the war so difficult for an Ameri­
lights. Big money. Exclusive territory. W rite can to breathe in freely? It was, I
today for agency proposition. L ittle W onder
believe, that he felt himself In a coun­
L ight Co., T erre Houtc, Indiana.
try where the dignity of life wns lower
than In his own; a country where a
Not Much Tim e To Spare.
man horn In ordinary circumstances
The conversation at a recent social expected, and was expected, to die in
affair turned to the subject of narrow ordinary circumstances; where the
margins, when Senator Robert L. Owen scope of his efforts wns traced before­
of Oklahoma recalled an am using in­ hand by the accideut pf position;
where he was handicapped In all cases
cident along that line.
crushed In most by the superin­
Some tim e ago a circus drifted into and
a rural town and announced the prices cumbent weight of convention, “good
of the perform ance at 25 cents, child­ form,” and the deadening artificialities
ren under 10 years of age 10 cents. At and traditions of an old society.
the afternoon show a small boy lead­ That unconquerable buoyance which
ing a little girl by the hand advanced infects the American nir like a sting
to the ticket whgon.
challenge, and brnees every Amer­
"Two tickets, m ister,” said the boy and
ican
with the Inspiration thut be has
with a business-like air; a 25-cent one a chance
in life; that here are open
for me and a 10-cent one for this little opportunities,
unreserved possibilities,
girl.”
"A 10-cent one,” returned the tickst- no battering nt locked doors, no floun­
seller, sizing up the small m ite of dering down blind alleys; that here, In
femininity. "Isn't she 10 years old?” short. It is the man himself who makes
"Yes, sir,” was the prompt rejoinder his career—is something which Eng­
of the boy. "Ten years old today, but land before the w ar had so disastrous­
she w asn't born until 5 o’clock in the ly lost as to be hardly capable of real­
afternoon.”— Philadelphia Evening izing It The number of things that an
Telegraph.
English “gentlem an” and still more an
Keep Hanford's Balsam in your English “lady” could not do without
losing social caste was so prodigious
home. Adv.
as to form almost a schedule of forbid­
Real Conversation.
den Industries. There were some
"I hope you don’t indulge in gossip." trades and professions and occupa­
"I’m afraid,” replied young Mrs. Tor- tions that were “respectable” and oth­
kins, "that I like it. Of course I don’t ers which were n o t Only an English­
try to make up any for myself, and I man knew which was which, and be
don't care much for w hat my friends knew It by an Instinct which was born
now and then mention. But I m ust in him, which he never examined, and
say that Charley was never so Inter­ so could not define. These factitious
esting as he was while he was serving |
conventional gradations ex ist of
on the grand jury.”—W ashington and
course, to some extent everywhere, but
Star.
nowhere were they so stereotyped, no­
where did they strike so deeply as in
Tireless.
Man a t door—I’d like to see the the ante-bellum England. There was
not a single Englishman who bad Dot
meter.
Housewife—Well, it's pretty busy, the social privilege of despising some
but I suppose you can see it for a mo other Englishman, and the lower one
ment.—Boston Transcript.
penetrated In the social scale the more
complex
and mysterious and the more
W hy Dads Go Dippy.
rigidly drawn did these lines of de­
"Pa, was Joan of Arc Noah's wife?” marcation become.
(A moment later:)
"Pa, does ink come from the Black
El Paso Uses Goat Milk.
sea?”—Boston Transcript.
El Paso, Tex., has one of the most
Interesting milk supplies of any city,
rem arks a correspondent of Farm aDd
Fireside. A considerable am ount of
the
milk Is goats’ milk produced by a
F ü r s number
of goat dairies, one of which
has a thousand goats. These goats get
Ship Direct to Ne w Y ork,
the International F a r
their living from the surrounding hot.
Market, and Secure the
dry territory, deficient I d grass and
Highest Cash Prie
only moderately covered with sage­
brush and cactus. A cow would starve
Why «kip to the i_
BUM eveetuellv «rii _________
death, but the goats, though fed
Now York Ina m.tr hjs profit out to
neither hay nor grain, give on an aver­
m j m i wepuytke hitW m erk*
P°“
* liberal. We 04 sever
r *du'«
*" age about a quart each.
OSuejmlly
clune
Monamobile Oils and Greases
J£ £ L
m oiT im 'vi.. p m
you f a i ,
tar your Kira.
Write (or < r Price Ikt and tpee,l
oCtr.
DAVID BLUSTE1N & BRO.
i <•» / w f
M Seim to r à
Pmmtomi G n n *
u r Houma
IM W. 27 tk SL Neu Tack. R. T.
P. N. U.
N o. 4 . 1916
Record Onion Shipment.
Recently 155 cars of onions were
shipped from Sacram ento valley. Cal­
ifornia, to eastern markets. The ship­
ment Included several special trains.
Geography of Efficiency.
Definition of a successful business:
A small body of well-dressed men
entirely surrounded by stenographers.
Im itation Ivory.
Im itation Ivory la obtained from the
nnt of a kind of palm which grows la
South America
PU BL,C VÛICE N 0T
hushed
Western Idea That There la Lack of
8elf-Criticlam In Japan la Al­
together Erroneous.
The view Is assiduously cultivated
In certain circles that the Japanese
press is one mass of self-glorlousness
and that it Is always a unit on great
public questions, but nowhere Is self-
criticism more freely Indulged, and
many as the sands are the variety ot
opinions—very much after our own
home fashion. East and West says.
For Instance, nothing would seem
more a subject for egotism than the
progress of the nation in learning and
science, but long editorials are appear­
ing daily crying out that educational
reform should be the great cry of the
day in Japan. Then the standard of
living is another bone of contention.
Some hold cut for the old standards
that produced the great race capable
of making the history of the last fifty
years, but the Chugwai Shogyo of
Tokyo, after citing European and
American efforts to raise the people's
living standard, says solemnly:
“But, in the Orient, the governed are
considered by the ruling classes as so
much dust. The conditions of living
of the people are neglected. Conse­
quently, the m ajority of them are suf­
fering from difficulties of living. They
are emaciated and sickly frb'o. lack of
nourishment. Since Bismarck’s social
policy was executed, the condition of
the German people has Improved con­
siderably. The value of German labor
has increased. That is a chief cause
of the national strength of the Ger­
man people. In Japan It Is different
The strength of the people for lack of
proper nourishm ent Is decreasing.
How can we expect to win in the
struggle for m astery in the world In
competition with others? The bad
taxes and the excessive Issue of con­
vertible notes are responsible largely
In bringing about this sorry state here.
On the part of the people, they are
rather getting reckless in this expendi­
ture. They make unnecessary ex­
penditure, neglecting to save money
for necessary things. We should dis­
courage as much as possible the habit
of borrowing and not paying back.
Loans for business undertakings are
all right. But loans for extravagant
living should bo discouraged. Some
people shun labor and seek easy liv­
ing. How can they expect to be a
self-governing people? How can we
win in the field of competition under
those circum stances?”
Japan Furnishes Playing Cards.
There are many commodities which
have been exported from Japan for
the first tim e since the beginning of
the war. One of them is playing cards,
for which large orders have been
placed with Japanese makers. The to­
tal value of the orders was estim ated
at a recent date to be in excess of
$7,600,000. Most of these cards have
been consigned to Europe, the greater
part to be used as gifts for soldiers,
while tiie rem ainder are put on the
regular m arket through English mer­
chants.
Turning M eanness Into Joy.
One does not often envy m illionaires
•—the galling of their golden chains
Is too evident In their faces—but one
recent exception stands out. Three
days before Christm as the Pittsburgh
Bank for Savings was closed by the
state officials, and among its deposi­
tors were over 41,000 school children
who had about four dollars apiece to
their credit. The bank had had an
arrangem ent with the board of educa­
tion by which collectors visited the
schools every wee*' and got the chil­
A i
dren's pennies. When the hank closed
all the children had for their pains
was the chance of a 50 per cent divi­
dend some two months later. But
Henry C. Frick came forward that
same day and said briefly th at the
kids were to have all their money at
once. So the storm passed by for
those young depositors and their faith m a k es____
in men was justified. Mr. Frick has
a stately and expensive house on Fifth
and g o o d hair
Avenue filled with works of art front
many lands, but we doubt If there is The regular use of Resinol Soap for the
anything in it more cheering to the toilet, bath and shampoo, can usually be
soul than the memory of that abrupt relied on to keep the complexion clear,
kindness. Sometimes it pays to be a
the hands white and soft, and the hair
m illionaire!—Colliers.
healthy, glossy and free from dandruff.
KM
\
The Very Latest Chart and Instructions In Palm
Reading HIc. Purack Publishing Co., 328 Cham ­
ber Commerce. Portland, Oregon.
Where the Strong Are Weakest.
In view of the deadly inroads of
grippe and pneumonia and the w arn­
ings in this connection issued by the
public health authorities, p. word ad­
dressed especially to the strong and
well may not be amiss. Though seem­
ingly rem arkable, it is a perfectly logi­
cal fact that both grippe and pneu­
monia find their greatest number of
victims among persons who are tr.
normal health. The latter disease, in
fact, seems rather partial to excep­
tionally robust persons, and, in every­
day parlance, the stouter they are the
easier they fall. The reason for this
is simple. Frail persons are accus­
tomed to take extra care of them ­
selves in the knowledge of their weak­
ness and liability to sickness, and thus
escape some of the ills that overtake
the stronger ones. The robust ones,
especially the man who "never had a
sick day in his life,” come to regard
their health as being immune from at­
tack and so expose themselves reck­
lessly. Also they are inclined to in­
difference after having contracted a
cold or even more serious affection,
relying on their usually rugged health
to pull them through.—Pittsburg Ga­
zette Times.
For Galled Horses.
When your horse is gaiied, apply
Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh and you
can keep on working. Try it and if
your horse is not cured quicker than
by any u:her remedy, the dealer will
refund your money. Adv.
The Shortest Day.
‘Mother, what is the shortest day of
the year?” asked little Alfred, who was
studying his lessons.
"December 21. I think, but ask your
father, to be sure,” replied his mother.
"December 26 is the shortest day in
the year,” affirmed Alfred’s father,
who was just then reckoning up his
Christm as expenditures.—St. Louis
Post-Dispatch.
Her Preference.
Judge (in divorce case)—Whom do
you prefer to live with, my child—
your father or your motber?
Child—If you please, sir, whichever
Used Compressed Air.
gets the motor car.—Case and Com­
The owner of a granite-cutting estab­ ment.
lishm ent in Los Angeles has success­
fully used the compressed air starter
A Clear Saving.
on his automobile for driving the pneu­
"Yes,
I’m
engaged.”
m atic tools used in lettering on monu­ "Has the lady
any dowry?”
m ents. Air was conducted by hose "No, but she has
appendix
from the air reservoir on the auto to removed. This puts had me her
$500 to the
the pneum atic tool and the plan worked good.”—Louisville Courier-Journal.
adm irably, saving considerable time
and expanse in the work of lettering For poisoned wounds use Hanford's
on a monument standing in a cemetery Balsam of Myrrh. Adv.
far away from the shop.
I! the skin or *calp is already in had rendition, a
short treatment with Res.noi Ointment may first be
necessary to restore its normal health. Resinol Soap
and Ointment are sold by all druggists. For samples
free, write to Dept. 18»P, Resiuol, Baltimore, Md.
Men ivith tender f,ices find that Res­
inai Shaving Stùk prevents irritation.
The Old and Reliable
Dr. Isaac Thompson’s
EYE WAtER
is both a remedy for weak, inflamed
eyes and an ideal eye wash. Keep
)our eyes well ¿ad iky will help keep you.
OCr at all bragxtst* ai sent by
Mai! epaa receipt ot price.
WRITE FOR FREE BOOKLET
JOHN L. THOMPSON SONS & CO.
^
143 River St.. Troy. N. Y.
WEEKS’ BREAK-UP-A-COLD TABLETS
A guaranteed remedy for Colds and
La Grippe. Price 25c of your druggist.
I t’s good. Take nothing else. Adv.
Going to Headquarters.
Karl Fred Bondy answered the tele­
phone. An excited woman was on the
line.
"Is this the New York Railways?”
she asked.
“Is the general m anager there?”
"This is his office, madam.”
"Weii, you know how warm it was
this morning, and how terribly cold it
turned shortly afterw ard?”
"Yes, madam.”
"Well, my daughter Nora w ent
downtown early this morning and she
wore only a light waist and skirt.
You know how the people keep the
car windows open in the summ er tim e
and I'm afraid she'll catch her death
of cold coming home. Can’t you issue
an order to have all the car windows
closed today?”—New York Railways
Employes’ Magazine.
To remove soreness use Hanford's
Balsam. Adv.
Disappointed Maid.
“My bride is disappointed about
housekeeping.”
“ W hat's the trouble?”
"She can’t get a maid who will curt­
sey as they will do In the musical com­
edies she goes to see.”—Kansas City
Journal.
•VT
Disappointed Expectations.
Figures in Africa's Favor.
A group of explorers and adventur­
ers Just back from Africa report that
during the six years of their wander­
ings they employed perhaps 20,000 por­
ters and lost but one man killed, a rec­
ord which might give pause to people
who have thought things about the
com parative safety of that continent
and Europe.
Take Your Choice.
The Standard dictionary defines
"sable’' as black, especially as the
color of mourning, while it may also
mean of the color of sable-fur, dark
brown. W ebster tells us that the ad­
jective sable means of tbe color of tbs
sable’s fur; dark; black, and If an ar­
ticle Is sabled It Is darkened or mads
black.
Where the Cranberry Flourishes.
It Is claimed that Massachusetts
leads I d the cranberry output with
an average crop of about 400,000 bush
els annually; New Jersey Is a close
second, with about 350,000 bushels,
and Wisconsin ranks third, with an
average of shout 100,000 bushels.
Territory Rich In Minerals.
Prospectors for gold, who have been
locating claims In the Rice lake dis­
trict, 100 miles north of Winnipeg, r»
port that the territory Is rich In tuln
era Is.
Aluminum Pistons Satisfactory.
Aluminum alloy platona In motor­
car engines wear excellently with tbs
usual lubrication.
"Uncle Mose, your first wife tells
me that you arc three months behind
with your alimony.”
“Yes’ jedge. Ah reckon dat am so.
But yo' see it’s Jes' dis way: Dat sec­
ond wife of mine ain't turned out to
be the worker that Ah thought she
was gwlne t’ be.”—Detroit Free Press.
As Advertised.
««S. v ^ 5 \ *"<•« I
T
"Say,” said the man as he entered
the clothing store, “I bought this suit
here less than two weeks ago, and it
is rusty looking already.«
"W ell," replied the clothing dealer,
‘I guaranteed It to wear like Iron,
didn’t I?”— Detroit Free Press.
A t D rn fgfet«*
■rvl Feed Stona,
_
10c to d |1 U0
DATAT ASSOCIATION
Lyo4on*ill«, ? t.
CO. •
C 3 to a 6 doses
t a often r r cure. h a l F e v e r
One 50-cent bottle SPO H N ’S guaranteed to curs a case.
Safe for any m are, horse or colt
Dozen bottles t&. Get It of druggists, harness dealsrs or
direct from m anufacturers, express paid.
SPOHN'S Is the best preventive of all form e of distem per.
Itnl
SPOHN MEDICAL CO,
N ot
Grmy
Hairs
bat tired
Eyes
Make
us look
older
than we
are.
Old age
and Dull
Eyes —
tell-tale.
M a r t « « I f . I m S , C a s p a *? . O t l< «| .. I m 4 . Seek i
Goshen, lad., U. S. A.
After the
Movies
go home
and
Murine
your Lye*
Two
Drops
will rest,
rrfre .b
and
clean