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About The Forest Grove express. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1916-1918 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1916)
* — W. L. D O U G L A S BATTLES IN PEAKS " T H I SHOE T H A T HOLD9 I T * SH APE '* 93.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.00 & $ 5.00 S a v e M o n e y b y W e a r in g W . L D o u g la s ■hoes. F o r s a le b y o v e rO O O O s h o e d e a le rs . T h e lle e t K n o w n S h o e s In th e W o r ld . L. ! lULmr *ivi the retail price 1 « Mainprd un th* but- ’ ’ torn of ail »hoe a( tit* factory. Di. vaJo. 1 » £ oar anted ami tie wrarer pdKrttriJ againat high pne« tor inl«rtor ihcwa. T ie mail prur. arr tie Iain, ererywler*. I ley net no mor. in San Francuco than (ley do in N et York. T'lvey arc alwayi worth the price paid tor than. 'T T e quality of W. L. DougLaa product ia guaranuai by more * than 40 year» .apmatce in making (in. »luea. The amart •tylea ar. tie UaUr» in tie i;aaluon Centre# of America. ¡ley are mad. in a wclkaiuippai factory at Brockton, Mata., by the luglett paid, ilullad aruemakrra, uncW tie direction and aupeviaum of aapruamal man. all working with an honor determination to make tie beat ituea for tie price that money can buy. A » k y o u r a l i o . I w l a r f o r W I . I l o u g l » « a lioea. I f h . r a n a u y p ly y o u w ith I K . Itlm l yo u w a u l , t . k u n o o i li e r i u . l t . . W r i t , to r liilu ra a llliK iM toltl.t . » p i . l u l u . Iio w lu . l .ta o u s u t l l i . h l| l i » M » l . n T l . r t l o f < | u .llly f o r 0 » . p i It1 . «, y r . t u r u m u ll, y t o l a y t I r e . »■ >1 t L O O K F O R W . L. D ou gU . nam# *nd the rotali pries .tem p ed on the bottom. Misery in Back, Headache and Pain in Limbs. Boy.* Shoe. B.«i I. th, Naril IT r .M -n t O • * » .00 $260 l $2 00 I l i i i U l t a a lm a ( V J l n g l i U ^ J l M a W. I New Gams. "I wlah thrao llluatrutora would pick up it little gutiorel Infortniatlon.” "How now?" "In my now book the artist haa fur- nlahi'd a picture of five girla playing bridge." I.oulavtllo Courier Journal. The Landlord’* Request. "W e hope to get some September guests, Mr. Flubdub. When you reach borne, will you deny that there arc ahurka here?*' "Ilm . Do you wish to revise this blU?"— l.oulavllle Courier Journal. mu H ,S |\ I ) llllllll! mu HHIIIIIHirill H L L eader » and R epeater ” S hot S hells ‘ For the hi^h flyers, or the lo w fly e rs , “ Leader” and “ Repeater ’ shells have the reach, spread and penetra tion. Their great sale is due to these qu alities, which insure a full bag. Made in many g a u g es and loads. H E SU R E TO A S K FO R T H E W B R A N D Founding * Career. "That wfia 11 great speech you made" ■aid the enthiiiduHtic friend. "Do you think It will help me?"aak ed Senator Sorghum. "Unquestionably. It may not have much Influence In public uffalra. hut H ought to get you an engagement with any lecture bureau."— Brooklyn Clllien. Unci* Is Stilt There. " I told Uncle Tom that he was get ting too old and feeble to attend to business." "Did he take It kindly?" "H e threw me out of the office.” — A LPS COULD T E L L «T O R Y T H A T Boston Transcript. WOULD T H R IL L . THE APPETITE IS POOR Jealous. Ethel — Fancy Jack calling Miss Mountain Ranges the Scans of Many Sereleaf the apple of his eye THE OIQESTION WEAK Maud— He must have meant the Historic Encounters— Passes Trav evaporated kind. ersed by 8oldiers Thousands of Year* Ago. Couldn't Help It. THE LIVER INACTIVE "Doctor, rny brother stepped Into a I f the rugged peaks o f the Alps bole and wrenched hlq knee, and now could tell their story, there would be Oe limps What would you do In a CR YOU NEED A TONIC many u thrilling mid warlike Incident sase like that?” " I ’m afraid I should limp, to o !"— to relate; but none so strange as the ones enacted between the Austrians Pittsburgh Dispatch. and the Italians In these mountainous regions. The Itnliuria are absolutely at home In the mountains, and the Austrlnna are using every Invention of science to counteract this advantage. All the parapets on the steep roads, where summer tourists were wont to Tknr M r. E d itor— For more than a * motor, huve been demolished, and year I suffer»*! with misery in the back, beautiful pine forests huve been swept dull headache, pain in trie limbs, w u iiway, so that nothing shall obstruct Bomcwiiat constipated and slept poorly at night until I was about ready to col the artillery. Large areas have been lapse. Seeing an account of toe ^ won IT HELPS TO IMPROVE CONDITIOHS mined, and hy pressing a button the derful qualities of ” A curie," prepared Austrians can hurl un avalanche of by Doctor Pierce, of Buffalo, S', x ., I rocks und bowlders on to the heads of sent for a box, and before using tho the advancing Italians or blow up the whole box I ie!t and still feel improved. A Protest. My sleep is refreshing, misery reduced, j Papa was about to apply the strop. roads beneath their feet. From the Cottlan chain, marking the and life is not the drag it was before. I j "Father,” said W illie, firmly, “ unless most cheerfully recommend this remedy that Instrument has been properly boundary of France In the west, to to sufferers from like ailments. sterilized I desire to protest." tin* Car rile and Julian Alps, north and Yours truly, W . A . E odekts . This gave the old man pause. east of the Adriatic In Austria, there “ Moreover,” continued W illie, "the are generally a thousand passes and N ote : You’ ve ail undoubtedly heard germs that might be released by the routes of more or less note, neurly all of the famous Dr. Pierce and his well- violent impact of leather upon a por traversed by practicable roads, and known medicines. Well, this prescrip ous textile fabric but lately exposed some shortened by railroad tunnels. tion is one that has been successfully to the dust of the streets would be apt Over these roads armies marched to used for many years by the physicians to affect you deleteriously.” As the strop fell from a nerveless lint tie over two thousand years ago. and specialists of Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Mont O n ls pass may have been Han Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, hand W illie left him.— London Satur N. Y ., for kidney complaints, and dis day Journal. nibal’s route when. In the yeur 218 eases arising from disorders of tho K. the f ’arthartlnlnn conqueror In kidneys and bladder, such as backache, Dr. Pierce’ 9 Favorite Prescription vaded .taly with u large army, half of weak back, rheumatism, dropsy; con makes weak women strong, sick women which he lost amidst the Alpine snow's. gestion of the kidneys, inflammation well, no alcohol. Fold in tablets or liquid. The conquest of some Alpine tribes of the bladder, scolding urine, and by Augustus; the desultory warfare of urinary troubles. Hardened. Up to tills time, "A n u rie” has not Teutonic and Frankish hordes In the ’’Does my practicing make you ner been on sale to the public, but by the fifth and sixth centuries, and the In- persuasion of many patients and the vous?” asked the man who is learning • reusing sanguinary strife of Swiss Increased demand for thi3 wonderful to play the cornet. '’confederates" and Austrian oppres healing Tablet, Dr. Pierce has finally “ It did when I first heard the people sors. which lasted from the breaking up decided to put it into the drug stores round about discussing it,” replied the o f tin* Cnrollngtan empire. In the tenth of this country within immediate reach sympathetic neighbor. "But now I'm getting so I don’t care w-hat happens and eleventh centuries, until the crys of all sufferers. I know of one or two leading drug to you.”— London Answers. tallization o f the Helvetic republic by gists in town who have managed to »apoleon Bonaparte's act of media- procure a supply of "A n u rlc” tor their Not So Bad. utlon In 180,’t— all these till the chron anxious customers in and around this On the test paper in answer to the icles and muke nearly every practi locality. If not obtainable send one question "W hat do we mean by the cable foot of Swiss territory heroic dime by tpail to Dr. Pierce for trial plural of a word?” Lucy had written: package or 50 cents for full treatment. "By the plural of a word we mean the ground. E ditor — Please insert this letter in same thing, only more of it.” — Chica When Napoleon entered Italy he crossed the Alps wl/h an nrtny of »m o conspicuous place in yrn r paper. go Herald. .10,000 by the Great St. Bernard pass. May 15-21, 1800. Later he constructed the great military mad over the Sim plon pass, from Brleg, in Switzerland, t Douiodoasola, ..» Italy, und thence to Milan. E The Minister’s Temptation. A young couple went to a minister’» house to get married. After the cere mony the brtrigroorn drew the clergy man aside and said in a whisper: Prehistoric Man. “ I’m sorry 1 have no money to pay The life habits o f prehistoric man, your fee, but If you'll take me down as well as his antiquity on earth, are into the cellar I’ll show you how tc known almost entirely from fossil re fix your gas meter so that It won’t mains of various sorts. The data, how register."— Baltimore Sun. ever, are very scanty and Insufficient for strictly logical deductions. Tools and hunting weapons, bones o f tropi cal fauna nnd remains of man are found lu the gravel beds of western Europe. Apparently man antedates the glacial |>erlod ns this tropical is the source o f most sickness because drugged fauna there was previous to the ice age and because remains of glacial pills, syrups and alcoholic mixtures are fauna, together with human remains, uncertain and unsafe. occur In later geological deposits. Thus, the antiquity o f man becomes r ques has been relied upon by tion of the date o f the Ice age, and physicians for forty years as the safe and sensible thnt occurred 00,000 years ago nt least. The Implements o f prehistoric innn remedy to suppress the cold and build up the form a basis o f a division o f early In enfeebled forces to avert throat and lung troubles. dustrial development Into the stone age, the bronze age, and the Iron nge. 1 A Carelessly Treated Cold acoTT-a IÎIUL 8108 osinrno* S co tt's Em ulsion scon;"o.w Don't tolerate alcoholic substitutes, but insist on the Ccnulno S o o t f s L m uM cn. One bottle usually lasts longer than a cold. Every druggist has it. » 75 Dearie Me! Ethel— IIus Tom proposed yet, - r r r r a g w .a a t - t - n n a r n.r.rurrr-rg.Twx Maud? Maud— No, not exactly. Ethel— Not exactly! What do you A Time for the Two Bears. mean? W e have a friend who is fond o Maud— Well, you know, he always (oiling how his elderly mother took used to knock when he came to our SCHOOL him nslde when he was about to b Our gra d u a i«« a r « occupyinir «nvfabl* posi- 1 married and advised him always t house to visit me. Well, last night he lion*. The teachintr procoaa ia different from keep two bears in his home If he wouli came with u ring. ordinary busin ?»■* Ach<x»i'«. Thorough. Practi be happy. cal. Individual. .SCHOOL FO R M KN O N L Y . AddrecH T h e K ««i»fr a r , Y. M, C. A ., Portland. Can White Cats Hear? When he asked her what slio meant O regon. Hiui get detailed information. she explained tlint the animals slu The acuteness o f the average cat’s had In mind were "bear" and "for sense o f hearing is proverbial, but It bear." Is ¡1 proverb that needs qualifying. For The homely story Is one that wi Americans might well lay to hear: example, many white cats are said to Just now. In both our foreign am be absolutely deaf, nnd though the œ = C I V I L W A R ^ h = = domestic relationships grout forbear Idea may appear absurd nt first sight. aiice may soon ho necessary to avoir It Is believed by some students thnt Net* law giv e« title when married prior to quarrels, nnd quarrels are Invariablj the color of n cat Is associated with June 27, 1906. Remarried widow* again a widow «1*0 benefited. W rite for blank a. Ask ruinous to happiness, disturbing t< Its sense of hearing. Among severnl about Confederate «ervie* Byington A W il business and nearly always lead us son, Washington, D C. Kataldinhcd IHtiA. Imported Persians, or long-haired cats, do many things that we afterward from abroad, not one white one In the gret.— Commerce and Finance. number has been nble to hear the slightest sound. Of course there are W ill Tickle Him to Death. Mrs. A.— I ’ve planned such a de white eats that can hear, but they have been ns much to the short-hnlred pets lightful surprise for my husband. Mrs. B.— What Is it? o f the fireside ns to the aristocratic Mrs. A.— H e’ll bo getting his fall sul long-hair of the shows. out shortly and I ’ve put a quarter li one of the pockets.— Boston Trans Blunt Insinuation. crlpt. A fashionable pnlnter, noted for his prosnlc output, wns discussing at a studio tea In New York a recent sonn- Eye« inflamed by expo sure to Sun, Dust and Wind dul In the plcttire trade. "Look here, W rite about vour wants in this line to [uickly relieved by Murloe old man,” said a noted etcher, "do you “I ye Remedy No Smarting, paint all your own pictures?” Ju*t Eve Comfort. At do," the other answered hotly, “ and 183 Madison SL, Portland, Ore. Ymir Druggist*« 50c per Bottle. Maria« Ey# with my own hands, too.” "And what Salve InTube« 25c. For Seek elibeCyerreeaak do you pay your hnnds?" the etcher Druggist« or NurlM Ey« Beaedy Ce., Ckksfc No. 42, 1918 P. N. U. Inquired. " I ’m thinking of starting an art factory myself." BUSINESS AND STENOGRAPHIC WIDOW’S PENSION Sore Granulated Eyelids, FINKE BROS., E yes?; = TRY = HOSTETTER’S STOM ACH BITTERS JnDalidé Now in Good Health Through Use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Say it is Household Necessity. Doctor Called it a Miracle. A ll women ought to know the wonderful effects of taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound even on those who seem hopelessly ill. Here are three actual cases: Harrisburg, Penn.— “ "When I was single I suf fered a {Treat deal from female weakness because my work compelled me to stand all day. I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for that and was made stronger by its use. After I was married I took the Compound again for a femalo trouble and after three months I passed what the doctor called a growth. lie said it was a miracle that it came away as one generally goes under the knife to have them removed. 1 never want to lie without your Compound in the house.” — Mrs. F r a n k K nobl , 1G42 Fulton St., Harrisburg, Penn. H a r d ly A b le to M o ve. Albert Lea, Minn.— “ For about a year I had sharp pains across my back and hips and was hardly ablo to move around the house. My head would ache and I was dizzy and had no appetite. After taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills, I am feeling stronger than for years. I have a little boy eight months old and am doing my work all alone. I would not be without your remedies in the house as there are none like them.” — Mrs. F . E. Y ost , 611 W ater ¡St, Albert Lea, Minn. T h re e D octors G a v e H e r U p . Pittsburg, Peun.—“ Your medicine has helped me wonderfully. W hen I was a girl 18 years old I was always sieklv and delicate and suffered from irregularities. Three doctors gave me up and said I would go into consumption. I took Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound and with the third bottle began to feel better. I soon became regular and I got strong and shortly after I was married. N ow I have two nice stout healthy children and am able to work hard every day.” — Mrs. C l x m e n t in a D u x r r in o ,.T| (»ardner St.,Troy Hill, Pittsburg, Penn. A ll women are invited to w rit« to the Lydia E. Pinkham M edi- Qtao Co., Lynn, M as«., for «peclal advice,—It will be conildentlaL