Image provided by: Washington County Cooperative Library Service; Hillsboro, OR
About The Forest Grove express. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1916-1918 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 27, 1917)
MEN OF THE NAVIES LIKE BIG FAMILY American and British Sailors Best of Friends, Says Writer. line the Old-time Sage Tea and Sulphur and Nobody Will Know. JACKIE LIKED IN ENGLAND Gray hair, however handsome, de notes uilvunclng uk «. Wo all know the advantage of a youthful appear ance. Your hair la .y ou r charm. It maki-a or nmra the face. When it fad<-a, turna Krny and looka atroakod, Juat a few uppllcatlona of H hko Ton and Hulphur onhuncoa Ita appearance a hundred fold. Don’t atay grayl Ix>ok young! Either prepare the recipe ut home or Kct from any druK atore a COcent bottle of "W yeth's Hake and Hulphur Compound," which la merely the old- tlnio recipe linprovud by tho addition of other liiKredlenta. T'louaunda of folka recommend thla ready-to-uae preparation, hecauae It darkena the hulr beautifully, bealdea, no one can poaalblo tell, aa It durkuna m natur ally aud evenly. You molalen a apotiKo or aoft bruah with It, draw- I iik thla throukh the hair, taklnk one aumll atrand at a time. Ily morning tho kray hair dlauppiaia; after an other application or two, Ita natural color la rcatored and It becomes thick, Kloaay and luatroua, end you appear yeara younger. Wyeth'a Hag'1 and Hulphur Com pound la a delightful toilet requisite. It la not Intereled for the cure, mitiga tion or prevention of dlaeaae.— Adv. SKIN-TORTURED HARIES Sleep, Mothers Reat After Treatment With Cutlcura— Trial Free. Bend today for free aamplca of Cutlcura Heap and Ointment aud learn how quickly they relievo Itching, burn ing akin trouble«, and point to apeedy healment of baby raahea, eczema and Itching*. Having cleared baby's akin keep It clear by ualng Cutlcura ex- clualvely. Free aamplo each by mall with Hook. Addreaa poatcard, Cutlcura, Dept. L, Hoaton. Hold everywhere. — Adv. ’fifNF* Granulated Eyelids, # __ 0 « . Sore Kye*. Eye* InfUirx d by Sun. P u i l i n J W in d quickly relieved by Murine. Try It In you, Lyes and m Uahy’ » Fyc». LY t O N o S m « l i n f , Joit EyeCoadort . ____ TUUR C Marine Eye Remedy t y e S a l v e , If» Tul>ml t f c . P „ r Unuk o f t * o h w * - fro m , Aik M a rin e E ye H o n t d r C o., C h icago j M ONEY FOR YOU. Thouit«ii<l« o f train*«) young |M*opl® n«**«l<*l. I t«'in ik<* Wit liter Huain«*»» Coll»*»:«. I ’orlUnd, pUreH *tu<l«nt« In position*. Knroil any limn. Ki C ttalogu «. 200 Room« lOO Baths Near Both D epot* Absolutely Fir« proof I Hotel Hoyt C orner Siath and H oyCSU., Portland, Oro. L O U H O CKS, Manager. H A T K S .-7 ÍC to C . SHIP S PB C TA L -W ro k or Month Voal, Pork, Beef, Poultry, Butter, Egga and Farm Produce. F ig h t A m o n g Th e m s e lve s and A ll T h a t Sort of Thing, Says Charles Daw- barn, but No Happier Crowd* Could Be Imagined. London.— Writing In the Dally Chronicle on "The United Htulea Fleet In Ilelng” und dlacuHHlng America's In valuable services, Charles Dawbarn aays: "It la not the American way to fear publicity. Uncle Sam likes to act In the broad eye o f »lay an»l to have his deeds emblazoned for Ills own encour agement Hut the English nro secre tive— perhaps ibis Is one o f the revela tion* of the war. In any case, a veil of silence has been dropped over Ameri can niival action In the service o f the nl I lea— In conformity with British trn- »lltlons. Being In Borne, the g<>»>d Americans do aa Borne does. In tills particular Bonn* liohls Its tongue an»l looks wise. Not the least o f American services to England Is her readiness to become dumb arnl anonymous, because that Is the Immemorial way with the British navy. "And yet It would cot 1J 0 t0 pui>p°.HC that our cousins nave not contributed very sensibly to the reduction of the peril which uwults us on the water round the must. Sir Eric Geddes paid banilaome tribute to them In his maiden speech iih first lord In the com mons. The United Stutes 'Jackie' Is a fine fellow, and one of Ids finest at tributes Is Ids speedy adaptation to the n»>w conditions o f service In European wafers. He has become our own Juok Ta r’s firm frlcrnl. The Family Feeling. "Gratifying examples o f co-operation between the two services are fur- nlsbe»! every day. Officers nnd crews of the two fl»*ets like each other so well that they 'get mad' at each other, as the Am»*rlcanH say - Just ns If they were members of the same family. "In courts o f Inquiry both services participate when both nr»* Involved. Perhaps the senior officer will be Itrlt- Is'i an»! the two juniors American, or the senior will be American nn»l the others British. The unify Is such that British ami American destroyers swing at the same buoy and follow cnch oth»*r In their sen practices. At sea they exchange signals; on shore they use the sume eltibs and huts. At one bnse a converted cinema ball Is now a rend»,zvotts for the bluejackets o f the two nations. There they fraternize In tho most cordial manner. Between scenery painted by sailors nnd In front o f tin orchestra of destroyer musicians English ami Amerlenn artists sing their songs nnd deliver their monologues to tln-lr brothers o f the sen. "Tho Incessant work o f the destroy ers nnd patrol honts In convoying troopships or merchant ships, or In chasing fhe submarine, bus not blunted the edge of the sallorman's keenness. I f you speak to him about his present to tho OI<l Reliable Kvnrdln* houar with a recorrí of 46 jrreri of Square Ilenllnca. and be m u re d of --------M TOP AR kR K K E E T T PRICES. F. M. CRONKHITE 5-47 Front Street Portland. Oregon HIDE8, PELTS. CASCARA BARK WOOL AND MOHAIR. Re n i t ill you kin. Writ« fir pi ices i»d shipping tigs Tm H. F. N orton C o . on.; se«ro«, w» \ WE W A N T YOUR Poultry,Veal and Hogs NO COMMISSION] PROMPT RETURNS HENNINQSEN PRODUCE CO. Portland, Ore. B U Y DI RE CT Æ M ir ' i l Do Your Own Plumbing | Py bujrtna direct from na at whotcanl« price* and aare the plumber's profits. Writs ua to day your needa. W e will giro you our rock- bottom "dlrect-to-you” price*. t. o. b. rail or boot. W e actually aave you from 10 to 06 por sent. All good, guaranteed. Northwest headquarter, fot tender Water Syatema and Fuller A Johnson Engines. STAR K -D A VIS CO. 1 1 2 Third Street. P. N. U. Portland. Oregon No. 51 , 1917 . Little Itock, Ark.— W. E. Hale, a farmer, appealed to the local draft exemption board to dis charge his son, W. P. Hale, be cause tho lad Is "Just naturally too tnll for the army." But the board rejected tho application. Tho young soldier Is 0 feet nnd 7 inches from the soles o f his feet to the top of his bond. REAL CITIZENS live. It nsk* enlistment for this spe cial servlco which works directly with llie unasslinlle.tod Immigrant, Ignorant at or Indifferent to America’s history, customs and laws, unpledged to sup port our flag, rearing a family with un- Affierlcnn views o f life and reading only foreign language papers. Young Mothers I C O T T ’C J e m u l s io n J MATA-HARI DIED AS SHE HAD LIVED »•ntared the automobile, which started i for the rifle range, this time escorted i by a squadron o f dragoons. On the range all preparations for the exeeutl»»n were ready. A detach ment o f Infantrymen In their blue-gray uniforms were drawn up, forming a hollow square— the targets being at the further end. The firing platoon of zouaves wns In the center, the men standing at attention. The automobile Gaze* Calmly at Execution Squad stopped at the entrance to the square Awaiting Order to Fire Fatal Vol nnd Mnta-IInrl stepped out. She gazed ley— Confe**e* She Was in unmoved, almost disdainfully, nt the setting prepared for her final appear the Pay of Germany. ance, in much the same manner as Pnrls.— In the gray dawn of a Tues she hnd regarded *he audiences that day morning a tall, graceful woman had applauded the exotic dnnees with stood erect b, fore flic targets on the which she hnd startled Paris. In the Vincennes rifle range. Her unbandaged background stoo»l a group of officers eyes gaze») calmly at a squad of from the Vincennes garrison, many of zouaves from u Moroccan regiment. A whom hnd been witnesses of the con- signal from their commanding officer demnefl woman's stage triumphs. With and the shnrp crack of the zounves' her lawyer on one side and one of the rifles cut the early morning ulr. The nuns on the other she passed un woman fell buckwnrd to the ground, shaken In front o f the silent, waiting her face upturned to the sky. Mntn- ! troops. Arriving In frent o f the targets. Hurl, the dancer whose chnrrns had captivated fhe capitals of Europe, had Mata-Hnrt hade these two good-by. pnM the price of being found out. She embracing the nun ns she stretched died convicted of being u spy In the out her hnnds to a waiting gendarme service of Germany, of having be who held the cord with which they trayed for money the country thnt hnd were to be bound. The commander sheltered her an»! had applnuded her j of the platoon raised his sword nnd the volley rang out, the corpse wns art. Matn-nnrl died ns she hnd lived— taken to a mllitnry cemetery and mistress of herself and her emotions. hurled In a section set apart for the Interring of executed criminals. When awakene»l on the fatal morning Mnta-IInrl. whose name wns Mar In her cell at Saint Lnznre she knew guerite Gertrude Zelle. gave Pnrls a that the end was nt hand. She quick new sensation to talk nhont when ly attired hers»df In n dark dress some fifteen years ago she made her trimmed with fur, which she hnd worn first appearance nt the house of a nt her trial. Putting on a long coat well-known opera singer, where In a nnd a large felt hat, she announced mystic dance she divested herself of a that she wns ready. The little proces number o f veils which were the only sion passed through the dnrk corridors garments she w o r t She wns a re to the office of the warden. Here markably handsome woman, tall and Mntn-Hnrt wrote two long letters. She dark, with a skin thnt wns almost was tho lenst nffected by the suspense bronze In color. This gave rise to the of any In the pnrty. statement that she was a Javanese, Says Last Good-Bys. but she wns o f Dutch parentage nnd nnnding the letters to her ,’ awyer hnd married In her youth a Dutch she hade the prison officials good-by army officer, from whom she wns di and, escorted hy the prison guards, vorced. she entered a military automobile ac At her trial her guilt wns so conclu companied hy the two nuns and Cap sively proved that she finally con tain Bourchardon. Arriving at the fessed she hnd been In the pny of the fortress of Vincennes she calmly German secret police for n number of stepped out of the motor, turning to years. She had utilized her wide ac help one o f the nuns to nllght. Then quaintanceship In France to collect In the condemned woman was taken to formation of mllitnry value which she the office o f the governor, where the transmitted through secret channels to Inst formalities were quickly gone Berlin, receiving In return large sums through, nfter which Mata-Hnrt again o f money. I Dancer Convicted of Spying for Germany, a Stoic to Last Moment. EYES ARE NOT BANDAGED They hope to bring about the day when the alien, becoming naturalized, shall take the oath o f allegiance to the flag Itself, not to the man administer Americanizing America Feature ing the oath in a court room ; when a ballot Is put into bis hand nceompnnled of D. A. R. War Work. by nn American flag, with full respon sibility nnd honor of ownership; when Calls on Women to Make All-American it Is obligatory that he learn the Eng lish language; when he shall be com City or Town of Place Where pelled to send his children to public They Live. school; nnd when eertnln days o f the year slinll be called Amerlennlzntlon A new opportunity for women to dnys, on which resident aliens shall help In tho war Is offered by the Na take the oath of nlleglnnce. tional Society o f the Daughters o f the Many of tho "Daughters” are work American Revolution, through their ing seflously on this project, giving Il war relief committee, of which Mrs. lustrated lectures In settlements and Matthew T. Scott Is clinlrmnn. It Is schools. sending out a cull to the women o f the country to muko nn nll-Amerlcan city She Stayed at Home. or town of the plnco In which they MAKE HIGHEST MARKET PRICE 18-20 Front St. 6 FEET 7 INCHES NOT TOO TALL FOR ARMY 1 of the traffic, British and neutral. In the sea lanes lending to these Isles, the United Staten navy Is performing a duty essential to our existence nnd re Reserve strength for mother affirming the old maxim—consecrnted hood is of two-fold importance 'metier,' nnd compare It with his once before at sen—that blood Is thick and thoughtful women before peacetime labors, he will declare that er than water.” the latter were heavier to hear. There and after maternity take was tho eternal maneuver for the ac DANCING CURES HER NERVES tion which never came, and, after It. officers had to annlyze the theoretical Woman Testifies In Alimony Suit results. Navigating and engineer staffs That Phyalclana Pronounce Her lived Iri an atmoaphere o f paper prob- Improved. lent*. Nowadays they are swept nway. There Is no time for them. And the Atlanta, Gn.— “ I have undergone sev spice »if danger has given z»-*t to the eral operations nrul become very nerv •lally round. To understand that, one ous, so I was Induced to take dancing It supplies pure cod liver oil must understand the psychology of the lessoi s. In the ho|»e that my condition for rich blood and contains sailor. woubl be Improved,” sal»] Mrs. Hattie Danger la Real. Green, a dancer, on the stand In her lime a n d soda with medicinal "Ills danger Is real enough. H ydro glycerine, all important ingredi | planes nnd other appllnnces have not own behalf In an alimony suit. “ Phy sicians have Informed me that my ents for s t r e ng t he ni ng the proved a sufficient solution. Tb».- only reul solution Is man and ship power; nerves have been greatly Improved nervous system and furnishing the pollci-ninn on the spot to catch the through my dancing. Counsel for the busbund wns closely questioning Mrs. abundant nourishment. thief. It is free from alcohol. "A hit, n palpable hit, perhaps, nnd Green u* to her dancing. yet the result Is uneertuln. This Is the Insist on th e genuine. Miner Earns $348 in Month. common experience o f submarine chas The N orw egian cod li»e r oil in Somerset, I ’ m .— L awrence It. Flnzel ing. You are never certain of your Scott’s Emulsion is now refined in our own Am erican laboratories w h i c h bug. But whatever German apologist* ng»-d forty-five years, <it H»x>verHvllle makes it pure and palatable. inny assert, the number o f 'tin fish’ dis j near here. Is believed to have earn«-»! Scott tk Itowne. Bloomfield, N.J. 17-43 posed o f by our ally steadily grows the highest wage during the last month greater, an»l the sysfem o f convoys—a ' of any coal miner In the history of th» SIGNS OF DANGER number o f ships ‘In a bunch,' surround Itnlustry In Pennsylvania. Flnzel, It ed by destroyer*— has at least this ad was announced, received $348 last vantage, that It brings the enemy to month. With a 100 per cent car sup Women Should Prepare Them the defense force nnd thus obviates a ply it Is said he would have earned selves search for him. And In ‘tuklng care' even more. AMERICAN TO REBUILD TOWN — Dun-Sur Meuse In France Is Promised Restoration by Man of Same Name. This nation will require a great deal from Its heroic women. They will assist the wounded in the hospitals or in many cases they will suffer at home in doing their duty by the nation. Thousands of women who are now blessed with robust health cannot under stand why thousands of other women con tinue to worry and suffer from ailments peculiar to women when they can obtain for a trifling sum Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription which will surely and quickly banish all pain, distress and misery an.l restore the womanly functions to perfect health. This old prescription of Dr. Pierce's Is extracted from roots and herbs by means of pure glycerine and Is a temperance remedy of 50 years' good standing. Send 10c for trial pkg of tablets to Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo. N. Y. W rite Dr. Pierce for free 136-page book on woman's diseases. You may also have confidential medical advice without cost. —Adv. Dr. Pierce’s Pellets are best for liver, bowels and stomach. One little Pellet for a laxative—three for a cathartic. Cynical. "Miss Cynthia is such a sensible girl.” "Everybody knows she is. That is why the men keep away from her."— Exchange. Nothing Doing There. The seedy looking man took his seat at the table and scanned the menu. “ W aiter, I ’ve only 30 cents on me. Now, what would you recommend?” The waiter gently removed the card from his would-be patron's grasp. "Another restaurant,” he said.— Ex change. GLASS OF SALTS IF :T Eal less meal if you feel Back- achy or have Bladder Lrouble. Meat forms uric aci l which excites and overworks the kidneys in their efforts to filter it from the system. Regular eaters of meat must flush the kidneys occasionally. Y'ou must re lieve them like you relieve your bow els; removing all the acids, waste and poison, else you feei & dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment; the channels often get irritated, obliging you to get up two or three times during the night. T o neutralize these irritating acids and flush off the body's urinous waste get about four ounces o f Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take a table spoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys w ill then act fine and bladder disorders disappear. This famous salt* is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia. and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys and stop bladder irritation. Jad Salts is inexpensive; harmless and makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which millions of men and wo men take now and then, thuz avoiding serious kidney and bladder diseases.— Adr. Paris.— Tho Inhabitants of the little town of Dun-sur-Meuse are convinced that, after all, there Is a lot In a name. For, thanks to the fact (bat its pat ronymic happens to he the same as thnt o f a wealthy nnd generous Ameri can, the ravages caused by war will soon be made good. The municipal council o f Dun-snr- Meuse has met In Paris to be present that make a horse W heeze, ed to its “ godfather” who has under Roar, have T h ic k W in d or C hoke-dow n, can be taken to rebuild the town. reduced with Sees Belled Buzzard. Martinton, W. Vn.— The belled bos- znrd wns actually seen near here by Winchester, Ind.— Mrs. Sarah J. Sea- Jnsper D. Dtlley while at work on his graves o f this city, who has Just cele farm. Dllley heard the tinkle o f a brated her ninety-third blrthdny, has bell, the sound apparently coming from lived In Winchester since 1850, and overhead, and In looking up he saw a since 1807 tins not been In the business large buzzard sailing over, with the district of the town until the other day, bell tied around his neck. The bell when her grandson took her In an au tinkled at every movement of the bird's tomobile for a ride about the city. body. THICK, SWOLLEN GLINDS ^ B S O R B in e also other Bunches or Swellings. Noblister, no hair gone, and horse kept at work. Eco nomical—only a few drops required at an ap plication. $2 per bottle delivered. Book 3 M (ret. ABSORBING, JR., the antiseptic liniment for mankind, reduces Cysts, Wens, Painful, Swollen Veins and Ulcers. $1 and $2 a bottle at dealer* or delivered. Book “ Evidence” free, f . F. Y0UN6, P.B.F., 403 T*mpl. St., S*ri«ffi»ld, Has*.