Image provided by: Scio Public Library; Scio, OR
About The Santiam news. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1897-1917 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 3, 1911)
/---------------------------------------------------------------- N WH4UK TOU OO To rorrtANDl STUF AT TMt NEW HOTEL FOSTER Ihri iJ Dira SkrvU Tea D*p»t ? Wealth Not Always Advantage. Advantage. opportunity, cLatice. luck’ They are all on the side of the boy born In obscurity, brought up In poverty Provided hs b endowed with the will that brooks no obstacle. with the mental ability to conceive great thoughts, to plan great undertakings the boy Is all the more bl. ssed who la not handicapped b weal’h HE D(Y OLD GOLD • t prix-ra pati t> r Sfidar. OM hiw«^rv. <«4»l<t h. f<« M\ » ► .a . I\*rtland. 71 Sixth lwt*wn (>ah and i’»na. ÂTENTS p 1 ltWMl G,VE llt Y0U „M •S I k IS ■ NJ 0 0 MARTIN. 4M »•«« •«•«■ k»Mi* ’.r- KODAKS :S“,,KLo?ii Write for catafraruma and Htamtwra. and prtntln* Mad unlwrw r»«n prompt aitwitkun Portland Photo Supply Co 149 Third Slrwl F u RA a ND i ORIt. OW arii r. Hl RTLIN M 1 1.••eJv.il«- iMivr .«4 < «.. ro.l«». j-r»« •*» Is id, ¡Ma«1. fl <»■ ¡4. oU«*r .‘w Gold. -••».- / »« rr t « I per 41 Mailiag »««♦«•:. a »d full j-fi e l a ■s-n’ on ar • h at >oa i««air«'l » 4 r«ni> r* «orte ao lUHvd. Iu torwuiw CaftoaiU« Mattonai Ba««te. BOYNTON FURNACES Miaul ecunom><**! an-! rffwetiv« fur hoUM an«1 rc I ua J bestir. J. C. BAYtR tUKNACL CO. front sod Market Sts. Portland, Or. SEND FUR CATALOGUE REDUCED RAIES on all lin«** on account • -.'.J'S ¡■Xi— ■MH F GILLESPIE -i »W * SCHOOL OF SION. T EXPRES A training In the ' speech arte" It rvimlnfe to be regarded as an eeien tlal preparation for many vocation« In life, out only In social, educations, and professional lines, but also It th« Industrial and commercial world Th» training offered by thia »choo will be found tu paring for teacl to I fitting themselvi either as lead* likewise to that a<>ns »-bo do n prv>fessl«nal, • Ider field < to a fuller <! herent power The course of •til cal, ph) steal ar.d Ul! I ■n * md ati ring, Ivpertnlrc, with the rlticlam; character sketch ic and oratory; life study i and dramatic art. nd la regularly graded in*c t are In »«-salon four hours um Tuesda)» to Satutdnys Individual work Is don* and evenings, either with the (Irlnclpal or with her assistants A public clam, to which all Interest ••d are welcome, m>ets In the atudlc every Wednesday evening The method of Instruction dlacour ages both cramming and copying and la n>t hampered by adherence to any set system, but strives, by the uae of old •) stems, or by mean« that are new and original, to pro mote. In a iiaychologhal »ay, n distinct Individual growth and dcvel opment. Good library facilities, Instrucllv* and ent« : readings and lec tures, ati recitals mid ample op portunity public appearance ar* provided all regular aludenta Thcr«- 1« an organised club. th* >r the practice of de iraneous epi-akfng aud Wes Equal to ths Occasion. Ths elder Futhern. the creator of the 1-ord Dundreary fame, was ex- tremsly sensitive to interruptions any sort flee I ng a man tn tbs a< t of leaving hie box during the delivery • one of the actor’s best speeches he shouted out ”HJ. you sir. do you know there la another aetT" The of fender was equal to the occasion, how ever; he turned to the actor and an »••red cheerfully: "Oh. yes; that’s uby Im going”*—tn Lighter Vaia. THE TRUTH ABOUT BLUINQ. Taik No. I. Avoid liquid bluing. Every drop if water u adulteration. Half a rent's worth of blue in a large bottle filled with water is sold for 5 cents or 10 cents in many places. Always u»c RED CROSS BALI. BLUE, the blue that's all blue. A argc two-og. package, alt blue, sells for 5 cents, or 4-u*. fur 10 cents. He ights the laundrin. AT ALL GOOD ¡ROGERS. Our Life’s Work. We are not sent Into thia wortd tn do anything Into which we cannot put our hearts. We have certain work to do for our bread and that la to be lune strenuously; other work to do for our delight and that is to bs done heartily; neither Is to be done by halves or shifts, but with a will, end what ta not worth thia effort la not to be done at all John Kuakin. Y. M. C. A. EXPANDS. New Booklet Just Out Can Be Had for ths Asking. Chris The Portland Young tian Association la abc cuter upon a nrw era In its In ■ i tending the ndvantag ;e I educa entile l tonai departmfut i to While a state, great It) of the 1100 . ■ i :• Y-.• r enrol •nd day are Portland, yet a la numbe r are ne w nnrol Mir and eitle k oiitpld** of » <<f. s - | 3n The <1 fT« r«*r t «•>’) ojudo a full Cotninvrcl*} ruurwe. British Agriculture. comprising Shorthand, Bookkeeping Nearly li per cut of the people of •nd related •ubjecta; a rolle«t4> prt** Britain live by agriculture. ¡isratory i rourAt*. a cour*r In elementar: y Bubjrctp for t.oi a ami vocational cour I A« > ril< h a 4 I'i'HIlblnK. carpentry, ahn «*t metal, bricklaying, electrical »ori ’k, automobile repair Many »tudrntp trained clasp«*« ar«* now occupying • E arge nf R.ef»re <f ht J<-h» lïr e tion« In tbe bu«ine^’ Cejlaftaba, Ara4eaaie aafl BieaaaaSary C-epartaaaaU Maale. Art BlewaUea. • jeia»l«w For eauU.-g a Wr»w» TH» «I« I I H «I 1*1 ItlOM <»rfV»jr«<- 11-I* «sa Hall ASTORIA CENTENNIAL PAGEANT A«k tour iu-kr- semi fur Wtòttemore's Shoe Polishes ’loeflt in Quitl ty. Th«*y flollehl:.* »hi Largost In Vnrlafy • t.»-i»< f<>r cf— 1 ndota SENI) FOR I A’/ / FIRST LESSONS I U»e r’ • a»e»e > IbO pe tai» ■ •• Br««aira. ■ 1- .G olden W est trs GILT KDUB U>« «»7 Wiw« «S e Sr—«ta» at «MMlUvaly v-elahi« 1 IL Wv'»• •»■• IvSIskes 11»,- an i .-»ill.lrva a Savia a l akors, akinra II Saal rwbkins. nr -rr»wr» «>l.ea'• l v. I> « X II 1 ' < , . —a. W- -« Ul II K )' IIIT« i"«*-1 Huy «saia» .w.«-« rlraa aa l «abllr. In II ,- Il t rm II •• l-a «alrkl« an i mall« aM.li. I * «tvn.- In «•»«» 1^. I.« alnaj« renài f « «•«. •!«-• IS •n-l » renta It »nur «Iraler d.« «•! »rep Uw kind »-.« want, »rnd ua hl* al Irras and Iba prisa In ll*»h tot a full *llr I«. k »«r. ____ WHITTEMORE BROS. & CO., SO-S» Alb«»v »«., Cambridge, Mase. S r • / ÿKut i’uluhrt la (As liiwld. •- ¿5. J rTcOFFEEFTj ' fEA SPICES 1 BARINO P0W0CR I -» fXTHACTS 4 , JUSI KIGHT <Ü33E3EXS2>- cwssnaocvEis eoafisao oat. I --------------- —__ J WHAT YOU A RECKON DAT Depends on Whether Vcu Are Astronomer or Something Else. • n What ta a day* in the sens» th abb h the word Is commonly aised "day” Includes the period of light as distinguished from that of darkness The period of light to people In the middle states means merely a certain number of hours out of the 34, but tt may mean any length of time under six months, according to the latitude of the observer and the sc.ison of th year. Another popular meaning la the space of 3 4 hours. Including a period of light and a !»rlod of darkness Thia, again, is not th« same all th« world over, as the time of the com- MOt cement and termination vary in •Jlffcrent countries Horn» reckon from sunset to sunset, some from dawn to dawn, while modern civilised nations count from midnight to night Astronomer« also have their lous days; tie absolute solar ranging from about half a minute under to the same amount over 34 hours at different times of the year« the mean solar day being our common day of 34 hours, the lunar day of nearly 35 houra. and the sidereal day cf about four seconds short of 34 hours IL- r: ..f day aid night de pends on the rotation of the earth on Its ails, and since the earth Is of a globular shape, tt la evident that the whole of Its surface can not be turn ed toward the sun at one and the same moment, In other words. It can not be noon all over the earth at pre- ct«ely the same time A little thought will ehow that whenever It 1» noon at any one place It Is midnight on the cppoelt« »Id« of the earth, und at the of day ar« at one and the sume uient to be found • Ths True Equality. ’ I he I .• l. 1. .’. r I — I- ••• said a Washing' ll editor, owed a great part of his success to his thorough under- «lending of th« American character. “He understood the American peiv and syuixithU'd pie and he admired I i’ll ni-ver forgot an with them, after-dinner speech of h!» un equal tty. “He said that In America derstiMid t y equality not that were nil equals In learning. In teller t I and so forth, but that were i all equals In the power to good and honorable and generous "And he told, by way of Illustration low a Fort !*x|gc church once gave a •harlty concert where the beet talent volunteered the city’s leading sing era, elocutionists and actors '* "At the etid of the Concert the -hairman went up lo the organ loft id said to th« Ulti» boy In patched rlothe» who had blown th» organ " ’Well. Freddie. what do we owe you for your work this evening?* ”Th» little boy looked at the chair •nan In genuine astoishment "’Why. sir,* ho said, "didn't tbr -est of the talent give their •vrv res T* “ No Sharing Profit». Paul waa a grocer In a French town, Kata overran the place and a price of two sous a head was placed upon them by the town council. M. Paul's errand boy, working early and late, managed to slay *0 rats in the The cellars and attic» of the »hop boy took them to the town hall. and. returning jubilant to tha grocer'», showed M. Paul the nine francs he How Woman Buy Cigars. had gained Tbs grocer held out hla When women buy clgnrs they often palm. "Hand the money over." hs «how more common sense and n liner said. "You knew very well those rats I llserlrnlnntlon than the average man.” • ere mine, not vnurs!" writes Carl Werner In Harper's Week ly "Woman la. by nature, a better Constipation causee and sygravstes In buying neck many serious diseases. It is thorough shopper than man ly cured by Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel ties or shirts or sllptwrs or suits of 1 lot has fur her buys, fur instan<e. she lets. The favorite family laxative. has a mnn beaten forty ways And Before end After. those articles are not tn women’s Why is It that It pleases a married sphere by any means tt all com«« woman to be called "Mia»" and makes town to the fact that woman, first by a single woman mad to be called instinct and second by constant prac "Mr»*" What do tha girls want— tice and experience, la a better all- Cleveland Plain Dealer round shopper than her mate Hhe has learned how to a«k Intelligent Precl »a questions of the •aleapeople has Mrs Hoyle—Who was the beet man Icarne-i. in short, all the little tricks at your wedding* Mrs Doyle -There and turn» that enable one to get ths were only two In the wedding party, best value for the least money with •nd eo It le proper to call one the the least possible waste of time better man words " A HEALTHY, HAPPY OLD AGE May be promoted by those who Ctly cleanse the system, now and n, when in need oi a laxative remedy, by taking a deserts[*oonful of the ever refreshing, wholesome ■nd iraly bepefiaal Sjrup oi Fy and Elixir of Senna, which is the only family laxative generally ap* [Xoved by the most eminent phy sician«, because it acts in a natural, strengthening way and warms and •iicn^iiK~iuii^ way aJiu waiins anu tones up the internal organs without weakening them. It is equally bench- hculfor the very young and the mid- die aged, as it is always efficient and - -- - - - -z — free from all harmful ingredient«. To get its beneficial effects it is always necessary to buy the genuine, bear ing the name of the Company— California Fìg Syrup Co.—plainly printed on the front of every package. If You Want To Win Back Your Health TRY HOSTETTERS STOMACH BITTERS It is a great help in cases of Stomach and Bowel Ills or Malarial Disorders. Try it today A Lost Art. Another art has bean loot! There was a time wh< n the elegant woman took a legltlmsto pride iu her manner of ascending a stair In Ibis day of »levators. If there still eilst women • ho bar» " » , -« are t«w stairs worthy to serve a» • stage on which they rosy exhlidt It OSTEOPATHIC SANITARIUM IlMig 1'1 I. Worth More ALLEN & ÎEWIS Distributer*, i'PgrtUnd, Or. 'r * The Dawn oi Scientific Knowledge lz«m a Profession where the de mand is greater than the supply. Honor «ibi«*. Dignified, lucrative Writs'f-»r J.It era tu ft at». I iiif-.rmatkm. It wlD ba tn YOt’R atlkafttatfw. Invalid» and *»th*rv rwadtn« atetfUd trcatmmt. writ« f«»r part u - u U m . 409 ( o.nmunwr.illh Bldg., 1’ortktnd, Or. -, |.«K*1 i <5 B elle ' «•sedi __ _ Rtuatwasr peU Drug Q Rummaging In a Moyal Attic. How treasures of bygone kings and queens were discovered tn Castle Froh«dorf, the seat of the Carllst lead er. I *>n Jaime de Ilourbon. la told by (James F. J Archibald tn Harper’s Weekly. The author waa invited to visit Don Jaime, and the two ex- plored the treasures of the castle Among relics found were the last of the French Bourbon flags, a chair em- snd a little note wrltten by her In prisco and rolled Into a pellet; thè sktrt and suspeoders som by thè Duke of reima on thè night of hla ss i Dtivrs awav Flitrs, Mosquitoes and Gnats •assluatlon Thouasnda of miniature» It prdtcct« horase and cattle from attack* and portraIta and countless other of insects, enabling them to feed and sleep in peace. It prevents lues of weight ‘tl’ t>r°Ught “<hL an<l strength from worry caused l-y ghe Knew | attacks of insects, and from the irritation There is a oa« day. when Molly waa about 1 <>f their biles and stings satisfaction In the relief it affords f 4r yea-» aha waa »ent to feed domestic animals from the scourge of I •> Ui» - pigs When »he came back »he maddening parasite« »nd flies, be«ides the ■aid "That •tuff Isn't fit to give to profit in returns. Horses do more work I on less feed and *•>«•• yield move and otes " "How do you knowF* asked her ' better milk when rsheved from the freery inkited by constantly fighting a swarm ® < th er of voracious, insatiable insects. ’’Cause I -sated tt!"—lineato». Four size», sjr, jne, yjc and |r»5- Ask roer merchant for it. U ovt L nkmilal C o . Fort Is nd, Oregon I