f 5" El ; : all: ill I Vl 21 in " ill - : rj. T Mi!?- Id.;;? Jl 5 ' 3 ) '; - i' , -- ' '! i' ' ' k ' FOUR ROSEBURG NEVS-REVIEW ' lMudl Dully exeiX 8nndy by Tht NwRvlv Co.. Iiw. .Mi t Th. , AaaealaU JFraaa. ' h. CB1111MI IV liw r IT. i fepuoiic n,j A-Mitd Press la exclusively cnlltltd to tn ro tlon ofMI dlia" " errtlua to l "."'"tlf f1. 1 tbU papar and lo all local nawe pubiuhea haraln. All fisbte ! Uon ot special qiapaunaa BKRT U. BATES- freaiaui and Managm .Secretary-Treasurer Altered M Second Class mattW May 17, M20, t the port Offlc ( Kosetranr, Oregon, under the Act of Maoh 1, t7. . . UB8CHIPTI0N HAT tit nrtv ner vear. by mall Daily, b 11 months, by mail . Daily, three months, by mall .. Dally, single month, by mall Oatly, by carrier, per month Weekly News-Review, by mall, per year. J.M 100 .61 M . t.W HOSEBURO, OREGON, MONDAY, OCrOBEHJmt. CURRY COUNTY APPEALS TO VOTERS. THEiV LiVii Iti Dlr1. -FERENT WORLDS By Wlckes Wamboldt ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, ' MONDAY, OCTOBER 25,. 1925. . :"" i . . , ' n . ncr.- fWl 'TX'nr' '" T1.a frond neonle of Curry county are appealing to the voters of the state to support a referendum measure on the November ballot entitled, '''Curry County Bonding or Tax Levy Amendment," and the News-Review is glad .to .give support to the proposed bill, , Jriere are tne iac on ui ww . . n.'nMUUntii hv fiiizmiH of Currv county: ' ' ' ? ; Curry county found it necessary to its development to nnatnirt certain roads and assist the state in building the . Roosevelt highway, which is an asset not only to Curry coun 1 ty but to the entire state. In financing its road building pro gram, the county made the same mistake as a good many other counties in issuing warrants instead of voting bonds, and the warrants exceed the constitutional limitation for such indebtedness. Outstanding warrants aggregato approx imately ninety thousand dollars and arc held by business houses, banks and other innocent purcnasers in yu? " The people of Curry county, realizing that it was to K,f mfflwsts f.ri sustain the credit standing of the couri- tv and get back on a cash basis, endeavored to correct the error two years ago oy voting Donas io buso up um " The bond issue carried by a vote of three td dhe, but it was found that bonds could not legally be issued to retire invalid warrant indebtedness, making it necessary to pass the ' amendment to the state constitution J The purpose of the amendment is merely to' permit Curry county, by a .Vote 6i its people, to discharge its honest debts and protect innocent purcnasers oi us securiHCBr , . .r , m. ,..! 1 Only tt few months ago the Oregon press censored in no uncertain terms the cities in the state of Washington which failed to validate their improvement bonds, resulting in enormous losses to investors, many of them residing: in Ore gon. The Oregon counties With outstanding warrants ex ceeding the constitutional limitation are in practically the same position as the Washington cities, except that our coun ties are asking the opportunity to pay their debts while the Washington cities are evading theirs. ' ' , .-. TTnfWttinsiteiv. ft cood manv voters are inclined to vote 3 tin m nil amendments and measures without informing theih'- ' selves as to their merit, and to overcome this! vote the. com1- missioners of Curry county are talfing' such action as jinuieu finances permit to preseht their l case to itho: voters; of thi may VThey ask you to vote 311 Yes, ill ordof that tho county r liquidate its honest debts. '''T; ',. NOT A CREDITABLE EDITION. i i1 ' . fl'ho Oregon history book now'in use in the sixth grades of the public schools outside of Portland is assailed by the Oregon Historical society on Hie ground that it contains In accuracies and misstatements, is pdol'ly .arranged and too complicated for ready understanding by the pupils. Among the objectionable contents cited is reference to Oregon pio neers as drunkards and gamblers. The book should be cither completely revised or eliminated f om the schools, the unrintv contends. , : .. . There will be general commendation of the stand taken by tho society. A history of the state intended for pupils nrotind 13 -Years of ace should not only be easily comprehen siblc for immature minds, but devoid of such references to the character of a small per cent of early settlers as are cal culated to engender false estimates of the character of the vast majority of the pioneers, who woro men and women of cournuo. energy and sterling worth. Oregon's memorable progress toward statehood and immediately afterwards suf ficiently attests tho high qualities of its citizenry in those periods, and this fact should be impressed upon the minds of the coming generation, to the exclusion of uncalled-for character comment of a derogatory nature. Certain motion pictures dealing with frontier episodes and the "Days of MS)," shows that now and then appear somewhere in tne state irive sufficiently exaggerated impressions upon childish minds as to general early day conditions, without addinff the Official stamp of .text book authority.' If ulicxpurgated edi tions of Oregon history must bo taught in our schools, let us at least confine the effort to students who havo reached art nice. when they are capable of balancing their learning with 'proper discrimination, based oh their undoubted appreciation of tho "chaff and grain" properties that comprised tho hu man elements of practically all American frontier settle ments. ' ' ' -Recently a woman who had lived a careful orthodox life; and who never baa had nut one and never will have but One, upoke In ievere and relentless denuncia tion of a certain actress wuu- no crowded five husbands Into the first 30 years of her life. I nn mien ueouiu, buo -ai.i r animals unmoral am- mold I Those are harsh woras; um u her. point of view they were Just. Kvnm thn actress's Dolnt of view they were cruel and without sym pathetic uixiereianoing. "Ynu flOQi jtnuw wiMvi. " " "r against," the actress migui iiu and her nrotestatlon would ha without, nolut. Stage-folk live in umereni Orom the rest of the folk. Stage- folk have to meet amicuiuuu temptations W a major degree that the rest of the folk meet . In a minor degree. , ; ' Stage-people live in a wunu m emotion. They cultivate ..emouoa. They praeUce Doing emotion. They most learn to give themselves over to' emoUon. taut is what they are paid for. That is what you and I pay thein for. An, nfni- nr nn actress who can't Jump into an emoiion uuu e" " y" get our $3.30 more than once. it 18 an undeniable fact that the .., ,hn ml ft DlUCtlCe ' Of giving way to emotion Is very like ly ,to become the victim of emo tion. The actor or'actress who can ttor amotion art the stage, 1 rery apt to be mastered by ohio don off the stage. Stage-people do not live under the same restraints and protections that the rank and filo live under. When Mr. and Mrs. Average urn .fen marry, they settle down in their little homo on Ornuge Illos som Avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Pinky live on one side ot tnom ana mr. and Mrs. Llttloberry live on tho other Bide,- Mr Bird Mrs. Coster Doom ; live Just aurosa the street. 1'hey all belong to the same church, , u snmn fli. Im: and they Ko In the same set. They know each oth er's kinsfolk. Mr. Average uiuzeu urnrfca in the bank-or owns the bank and everybody Is keeping an jye an everybody else. And the hnhimi noma alone: and It Is all onlte regular aud even though Mr. and Mrs. Average . Citizen grow rather' tired of eacn omer ai umes they are la a system and it Is. not Annv in -break out of It. But with stage-ioia ib uuioi tmt. if they1 have a home thoy can't stay in It as much as Mr. aud Mrs. Average Citizen stay in a uuioi. Constantly they are chudglng en vironment, ' making new Mends, rhoBtlni aew influences.- Their work oftbn takes them apart; and If they lose interest in each other their work is more apt to take them apart-ahd keep them apart. ... The lonely, disconsolate, - , noma- less husband is working on one aide of tho continent. The lonely, disconsolate,, homeless wire is working on -the -other-side ot tne continent, .There are no tlus to draw them' together. And that isn't all. The lonely huBband ie con stantly thrown Into tho ompuny ot beautiful, charming anU emo tional women. The lonely , who 13 nonstautly thrown Into the com pany of handsomo, attructlvo aud emotional men. Coneidcrlng tholr dtmcumos, coiiBiderlna their templutlous, con aldering the conditions, under which thoy are obliged to nvo, it seems to mo that the . majority of the stage-people do pretty well. OREGON WEEKLY - INDUSTRIAL REVIEW. TCiioorto University of Oregon ipendd 20',000 a year, on students' health service. Molalla Bnslern nntl Western Railroad builds first nnlts of ma china shops. Oold Hill State line piiiill nr-ing moved, lo Grant's Pass, for mining company. ' EiiEono bullilliis tins yenr, ex pected to reach ll.KuO.OvO. Oregon City "isntorpriso uu- serves 60th anniversary, wmi uih cottages ,and, fchool, for, Piute In-. uians nere. ' - First log drive of the year. Is made on North Fori of Coquille lilver.i Coos County spent 76,07,055for; road work, during. September. 5 i ' New hotel and summer resort will be built nt Terwlllger Hot Springe, on South Fork of McKen zle Illver. - Baker - County has 820,089,770 valuation, exclusive of public utili ties. . .v.. Roseburg $40,000 Douglas fun eral home opens here. Astoria iTwo Clatsop (joumy drawbridges for 1927 will cross John Day and Sklpanon Rivers. , Klamath Falls Potato snip ments break all records, mostly going to California. Pendleton Surfacing of Heppner highway to he completed this fall. St. Helens Steamer "Ervikcn" loads 1,300,000 feet lumber for Mon treal. Wlllamlna Clay Troducta plant reopens, after . shutdown for : : Condon city starts program oi vock-ftui-raclnc. streets. Central Point-4New $50,000 high unhnnl dedicated. ; Antnrin Sanborn cannei y ! will rim until February, on carrotB and sauerkraut. ' - -; Astoria County contracts for grading and bridge on Hils slough road. - ' Northwent mills wilt have market for 1,000,000 feet lumber daily, thru new Wigging Terminals, In Do3ton. Medford First issue "Daily, News" comes out October 18th. Union County orchardlsts- ahlp 12 cars prunes, after first neavy frost. ..... :-i ; Newberg Coos and Curry Tele phone Company secures control of Newberg Telephone Company. Astoria Now factory will handle nn Columbia Hlver cannery offal for 1927. ' AaWla raising $200,000 foT stock In nronosod 100:ton. pulp mill. Wnahlnetnn County assessed valuation Is $21,610,290, oxcluding nnhllc utilities. U. S. Forest service uiiiiuu" plans or two new resorts on Odell 1 .nlf o. . - i 1 r.i,,,i,in Divei- norts1 ahlnttod 11,116,869 bushels of wheat In past three months. : Ashland will have an emergency mnllrtlnnn nlrflOTTIR. : ' " ' ' Salem Trainload of npplos and mimnkins being canned here this fall, . ' - , Northwest District prune yield set at 60,000,000 pounds. Salem The Lake Labtsh celery growers shipping 10 . to 12 cara celery a day. . '. ' ( ' v Marshfleld unm ou ieei. nig.i being built on Sixes River, to run big .Inman mills. . . i ; ; j Baker-W. B. Riley buys 30 heacl purebred Angus cattle, i Tn wn WORKS. 40 JSftatBril wuw"r working concerns have inquired fpr Port hind ncatlon. ao nrms raieu above. $100,000 each. ' 1 1 i"' Oi'ccon apple crop tor i:ui, is tf96,00(S boxes above last year, vale M. C. Imler starts musk- rat farm on Snake River, near Oa- taiio. . .j.;,. ', .... , - ... Ai'llnulon A. E. Duncan, nplnr 1st, will have 16,000 pounds nouoy tl ', WILL BE Man Arrested Yesterday Bound Over to Federal Court Woman Held as Material Witness. W. R.! Wright, aged 24 years, of Phllsburg, Montana, was held to day for violations ot the Mann Act and the Dyer Act and bound over to the federal court at Portland, ball being fixed at $2,000 on each charge. Mrs. Lena Craddock, aged 38 and her daughter, Edna, aged 15, were held as material wit nesses, ball being fixed at $500 each. - , - !, Wright, accompanied by Mrs. iCraddock and the letter's two UaUgniCIS, Uio juuubbi uuubuioi being 8 yeurg of age, were arrested at sutherlin yesterday by Deputy Sheriff E. E. Leas. Tney are want- ted, in Phllsburg, Montana, and a telegram was sent to Sheriff -Star-nior from that place, giving a full description of them. . The descrip tion was telephoned to Deputy Sheriff Leas, who a few minutes later saw them going by in an auto and Immediately Btarted In pur Biiit, apprehending them In Suther- llp. Wright, when arrested, was found to be heavily armed, but did not attempt to use the weapon., j ; According to information given Sheriff Starmer, Wright and Mrs. Craddock left Montana together, went Into Idaho and Washington aud then into Oregon. They were accompanied into Washington by a young man, who. was arreBted at Pullman . and :taken back to Mon tana.-and it is believed that Infor mation has been received from him sufficient to hold the party on a white Blavo charge, j Tom Word, special Investigator for the department of Justice, was in Roseburg at the time the arrest was made, Investigating the auto theft case against the two boys from Oakland, iCallfornla, picked up Saturday, and he Immediately made an investigation of the charges aguiust Wright. He obtained a full confession, It is stated, ot illicit re lations between- the man and the woman, and also obtained an ad mission that they stole a Star car in ; Montana, wrecking It in Idaho, and that they stole the Nash car. in which they were riding, at Pull man. Washington, Mr. Word filed an information agalnBt them and they appeared this morning before U. S. Commis sioner C. F. Hopkins, who ordered Wright held for the federal court at Portland,' and instructed tnat the woman and her older daughter be held as material witnesses. A deputy (J. S. marshal will arrive to morrow to take them to Portland. KITCHEN! Ill: ; I , ; CUPBOARD US L i U ! ; ; ' By, NELLIE VAJCWftt Seasanabfe Good Thingi FOR those vhd ;do no: calre tor the luscious mince pie of our New Englund grandmothers ' this may be liked: , ' Nut Mince le- Mir together hi order given one-half cupful each of rhooDed walnut meats, and. raisins. one cupful, of chopped apple, one- itnll cupiur. or anra corn bieui fnni.th Mmitl inch of elder vlnegaf. molasses and hny kind: ot conned fruit Juice, one-half teaspoonful each of allspice and cloves, and one feta8peonful each of cinnamon and salt Add enough, crushed crackers to make the mixture of the right consistency snd All n large pastry lined plate. Cover with pastry and bnke slowly In n moderate oven. Luncheon Croquettes. : Take three-fourths of a' pound of cottage cheese, one cupful of chopped car rots, one onion chopped hue, ont tnblespoonful of flour, two eggs, salt nnd pepper to tnste. .Iloll the car rots and onion until fender. Season Hie cheese, add on egg well beaten, rhen the cooked vegetables. Mold Into croquette shapes, roil in com ment, dip into n beaten egg nnd fry In deep fat until crisp nnd brown. Serve with or without settee. 1 ' Fig Marmalnde. After washing One pound of polled ngs. SOfiK them overnight, then cut line nnd put over the Are with the witter in which they were cooked. Cook until tender, add tlte, rind of a lemon, rnted. .two ounces of chopned can dled or preserved ginger, then the Juice from one lemon nnd two cup fills of sugar. Simmer until thick. Pour Into sinnll glasses.. , , Steamed - English Currant Pud ding. Prepnre a rich biscuit dough, mil out one-linlf Inch thick In n Ipng strip. Spread over the dough a inyer of preserved cnmint. roll up, Inp the ends, lay In n cheesecloth nnd boll or steam for nn hour. Serve with erenm and sugar;.: . . (, 1836. Western Newspaper Cnlon,l i A NICE FOREHEAD Nice" may be faint praise, but have you nice forehead? .11 It is that, it is well enough. White hands have inspired poetry and a per fect nose, the' sack of a city, grace r,,i fiiriiren have made sculptors lmmottal-i-but no one has ever ex-1 pected more. man nneui forehead. So, what about yours j y If it's that, anoj your iacu i . - w tv Blender i'and well ' formed,. . try sy, combing your hair Btralgnt back. It's an attractive i style- i and .one. which few women dare experiment with-it brings out tne Deal, puiuu. ot i good face, and all the weakest of a bad one;, u.is.yuur taw -posed to criticiBm on ite own merits,- without anything : to' soften It or to conceal 1U .flaws. But if you , it nt all. vou gain by showing ine enure iiutuou. iraln leneth. and give your eyes denth and lustre, you gain a cor tain' riinitv too. which suits many tvnes. A fringe of. hair waving Hnwn tntn the levebrows, may be soft and may make the face look younger, but It has no uignuy. A Rlll-ntlV OlUmu lauo luuna oiwi- der hen the forehead .snows, but a realy round full moon face gains nothing. A slender face snows an Its graceful outlines when the fore head Is bare, but a hollow cheeked face must be covered with ts much fluffy hair as possible. Perhaps you eari eomnromise by showing half vour' forehead, elthet" by a' stdo- parting with the whole height and halt the width of tho forehead showing, or by a sof.t fringe f cov ering it about-half the way to tl)e eyebrows. .: ,- ; . If. the. forehead' Is; low rand broad, try -the first way. if high and narrow, the second. AvM Hto vinr - Umapine farmers are sewing me fmirih fi-on of alfnlfa at $-13 a ion. ' Portland Northwestern Electric Plfle. Power and Light, and Port. land Gns and Coko Corporations plan office bnildlng to cost $1,800,-000. Portland Powerful new Western Broadcasting station wilt bo ou the nip. hv .Tatinarv 1. nnntl receives lnce trophy for best fire record in American cttien under 15,000 pupolntlon. . This Is Bend's third win, anil rropny nwnorshln is made permanent. Portland west-Maue uesa com pany will add 30 men and big plant annex, for growing ousiueBu. NOTICE Tennhor's annual Inslltuto of nmii'iiiit cnimtv occurs October 28 29 at Roseburg. Teachers please bo noitaln to secure attendance cer tificates to hand your district clork3, that the district may avail Itself of the $5.00 from the Institute fund. MRS. EDITH S. ACKERT, Co. Supt. of Schools, I Worried: Plucking the.halrs from your brows will not affect your ap- Can you brush your hair this way? pearance in after 'years; as tho hairs will grow right out again In the-same piauea. oa nr., merely breaking tho hair off below the surface and never removing the roots. " : ' . - - , . Use cold water over your chest every morning and then stimulate thei circulation -by trains a coarse towel but be carerul not to overdoi this or you will be apt,, to bruise yourself. "! ' ' ; ; f Deep breathing is also another healthful method to build up the muscles of the . chest Including those 6f the bust, i Tomorrow Answered Letters. of them Were shot down by wall guards using riot guns loaded w(t)i buckshot. .The rest were. sprinkled with shot as. they retreated to the shirt factory. , The. five convicts were taken from the factory build ing after a two-hour sioge in .which tear gae was used without effect. HOUDINI, MAN- OF MAGIC. COLLAPSES ; WHEN SHOW ENDS , (Araoclstcd fm leaarf frlrc.) : ., DETROIT, Mich.; Oct. 25.--Har-ry Houdini, magician, collapsed at the close of his opening ' periorm ance last night.:: ,t i A consultation of physicians win. take place today." The'huspital re ported Houdini. to' be ; suiinring from abdominal- Injuries suffered duringlone' of his performances. Dr. Leo Dretska said.he believed Houdini 1b Buffering from appendl-i CltiS. .!' ".' Houdini completed1 last nlgnt-s performance although his tempera ture was 104, according to George H. Atkinson, his manager.- . ; 1 ', , . Lrt- i'!--f:-: . . J -I -J X State Press Comrhfeht " ? A Premium For Destruction.' - Our present system .si , . ANSWERS TO INQUIRIES , front of tne oress tprougu tne steam coming from - Are- spout of a tea kettle. (This will cause the goods ,to Wrinkle iup... like (Serpen tlrio crepe.) 1 Then press the crepj de Chine at once with a moderately hot-Iron, hnd you will find that the water marks have disappeared. Bride Reader: "Hw can I take. gelatine desserts from an nluinin- ! j TdMOftROWS. MENU ; r. ' : '..-..- Breakfast ' ' , Left-O'vfr Apple, Sauce Cereal' ' ' Codfish Balls - .. Muffins Coffee Luncheon . Vegetable Hash Lettuce J'Dlnfisrt il.i -tvLnmh' 'tlftoTis.-'. fi t . ! Mashed '.Potatoes i - i f ) 5 Peas i - ; Cold Slaw U M)nbe Pie . : x... ?2 Coffee . . , beven Convicts r oiled in Attempted Break When ,' Guards Penetrate Barricade. - (Awociatwl TrcM Leased Wire.) ' JEI-THRSON CITY, Mo., Oct, 26 Missouri's state penitentiary today was recovering from the shock of tho riot and attempted break yesterday afternoon by sev en convicts. One guard nnd n "trusty" negro prisoner were stubbed, not serious ly; two other guard3 were beaten and bruised;-an usher was slug ged; four of tho convicts were shot, two bolng wounded seriously In - a withering fire of buckshot, and tho penitentiary was in an up roar for about two hours while bt , taxing timberlands Is, fn effect, , offering a nremluin for hurried' and ruth less destruction ot our forests, with an attendant discouragement of re forestation, Excessive taxes taree the timber owner to get rid of his hotdings as quickly as possible by dumning on an overloaded market. With the trees removed and taxes eliminated, there Is under present i conditions no Incentive to Begin growing another crop of timber. When the wheat or corn grower harvests a crop, he has but a year tn wait before another will be ready to turn Into money.- Own ers of cutovcr land must wait forty or fifty years boforo they can real ize on a crop that follows the one now being taken off the land. As an economic proposition It is absurd to expect the owners of these lands to replant them and ray timberland taxes until another crop matures. Both ot our neign- W. E.: '"Kindly tell. me how to remove, a grease .spot iroin.. uu. evening"" gown?"- -"'' ' - :' '-' ; " ' Answer:'.' YGU railed to mention what material the. gown is made of- hnt It Is safe to use chloroform on tin kinds of fabric, and this fluid fflqver leaves' a- ring' wnen ui,. Gasoline or naptha also removes grease spots, but are', hiprel likely to leave a ring. NEVER use these re-agents near heat or flame. Distressed: "I have Splashed wafer on the front ot a new trepe de thine dress. Is there any way to remove the spots?" : Answer: Yes. Simply pass the mjmbld.witlmut breikklng, em?" Answer':!-Sink! themrild'up'tb Its rim In very, hoti wafer for several seconds and the dessert will slip from it easily.- The - hot: water mets the film of gelatine touching the" mold, thereby loosening the dessert, yet it docs not melt enough of the mixture to matter. .. Troubled: "How can j cloansb my matting porch rugs before stor lug them away for the winter?" - - Answer: Scrub them with salt, and water. Dry in a shady spot. Mrs. C: "Please publish a menu for 'd wedding breakfast.". Answer: Send a stamped, self addressed, envelope to me In care of this paper, and I will send you my two-page multigraphed article on Wedding Breakfasts (including recipes for Wedding Cake, Brides' Cake, etc.,) ' Tomorrow .Good Cheese Dishes. COMPARISON. Flashes of Life NEW YORK Maria Jerltza Is Out with it challenge to Mary Gar den' to find microbes In the care fully groomed heads of women for tunate enotiKh to have bmutlfiil long hnlr. Short tresses, says Ma rin, are becoming pnsso. nnd Mnry makes lief tirod by ' raying that women who hare hng hulr nre fools. - CHICAGO Mmo. Schumnnn Hcink tells tbo world nho will novor bob her hnlr. nor dous she consklor herself a fool.; NEW YORK Mary Lewis, scln tillnliug star of song from tho southwest, has long tresses. , and have brought prr-Rflntfi valued at 16.000,000 francs. Attor tho heir ; tn the HiiHnn Is perfumed by slaves Wednesday ho will be married tn tho daughter of El Cflad, I'ssha of Marrnkoch, nnd will see tho brldo's face for the first time. NEW YORK Count Felix Von Lm kner, who, fn command ot a fishing smnck. raptured 13 allied ships dnrlng tho. war, can double up a qnnrtor with his fingers. Por haps Ihey mt strong when ho whs a (initio washer In San Fran cisco and a hnr shiner tn llnbnken yearn ago. Tho count, who Is visit ing us, nnys he gave all his cap tives a iniod time; let them kovp tholr whiskey. aUERBl.NGY, Franco Of a population ot 31i In this hamlet 12 persons have passod 80 years Their roclpo Is hard work In the Homo, plain fond and red wine, ' MAnnAKRCII, Morocco Thou sands ot mounted sheiks in white silk robes are here for a weddlug The Untvcrslly of Michigan was the first state university to admit woman matriculates. flvo of the seven men. With three ptstnlR, werq biirricaded In a shirt boring states, Washington and Cali fornia as wen as miiiiieaoi", wa siana aud Wisconsin, will vote next There wore great and noblo bards in tho clays of auld lantr syne ; thoy were loaded to tho guards with afflatus most divine. They were men of stately dreams, in whose heads no screws were looso, and they handled nil the themes that the nc ea can uroduce. There is nothing 'noath the sky that these bards did not embalm ; every topic, low or high, was tho sub ject of their psalm. Oh, all matters, gi-cat and small, tney embalmed. witli deathless wit; so they spoiled the game for all who should follow, when they quit. Now tho poet takes v; ivms ti-hleh hn Inner been Iviiur mute, and he sings, with throbbing fire, of a damsel with a lute; or he sings a splen did song of the stars that wheel on High, or ot rignt suoau ing wrong, or of drenms that do not die. He is thinking, as ho cools, that he's nobly come to bat; only morons, only fools, can ignore a song like that. But the critic's eye is stern, on the poet's message bent, and the words, that -smoke and burn, do not jar him worth a cent. "It does very well," says he, "as an oxercise in verse; Homer's version you'll agree, ivasn't just exactly worse. Virgil also touched this theme, and his verses were a whiz ; yours seem rather short of steam when we line them up with liis. Even Ovid, took a fall from lis topic ill his time, and his song, which I recall, makes your effort seem a crime. Coining down to later days, straightly, as the raven flies, Old Dill Shakespeare wrote some lays ( touching women's hair and eyes. - While my taste may be do-. cayed, made corrupt by bootleg drink, I prefer the rhymes lie : made to your offering, I think." So it is no use to soar, it , is useless to aspire; for the blamed old bards-of yore fenced j -things in with hog-tight wire. - factory in lite southern part of the prison grounds. Armed with three . revolvers, two ot which thoy took from gunrds, tho seven prisoners fired a dozen or more shots during the two-hour melee, while guards, nnd civilians recruited for tho emer gency, relnllatod with scores of bullets.' Aflor holdln out for about two hours Inside the shirt factory, tho five convicts who sought refuge there, finally surrounded when flvo prison officials, led by Clyde Irfine, guard, went Into tho building and poured shots nt them as they crawled under piles ot shirt ma terial. Trusty Shows Loyalty. Armed with knives the prlsonors attacked and overpowered J. T. Wynes and A. K. Wekcnborg, cell house guards, and after securing a pistol from Wynes. leaped through a window to a corridor lending to the tuberculosis hospi till. Hero they ' attacked J. L. Freeman, another gnard, who was stabbed In the shoulder before the convicts obtained his pistol. A ne gro trusty, who tried to aid Free man, was stabbed after he knock ed one ot tho men down with a chair. The prisoners then opened fire on other guards and trusties who appeared In the corridor and mn to the south stockade where two DietHealth iwl , .1, Hi in I'ftters.riU'. ipmnvAinv . m-i-- - - - MATOiAuTY sr.. rT)--j JMHI. mr) maltm Children lUUlOt BJ JWr' " "- ' READY FOR ROASTING? June I wrote the promotion of health is our mot- uear jjuuiui. - - - . . ,,,. mrl.h ,, rn,io. letter about a catarrnai cot- " - - - ----- for 'a long "6 - nunureu tellers on uie auwjei;i. DR. NERBAS DENTIST . Painless Extraction Gas When Cssirad Pyorrhea Curad Phone 4SS Masonic Bldg. month on constitutional amend ments which will permits of a more equitable system of .taxing forests. In these amendments the laud is not oxompt from taxation, but there is exemption for the growing crops of trees that otherwise would not be plnntod. No business, agricul tural or Industrial, can continue it It is hampered by a tax in excess of any Dos'sHilo profits. The levy ing of such a tax simply Kins me business, and it is this principle applied to our forests that has re sulted in millions of acres of cnt- ovor land lying idle which under proper laws would bo producing another crop. It has been demonstrator; In the old world and to a lessor extent in this country, that our forests can bo renewed, but the first move to be" made toward the perpetua tion of the Industry Is to pro' Ide a satisfactory taxation law that will encourage Instead of penalixe the man who Is willing to under take one of these long time invest ments. Oregon with such a large propor tion of the standing timber of the Nation, has been slow to recognize tho necessity of conservation of this great resource, but Immediate attention should be given the mat ter. -We ! should not wal unll. he Industry reaches the condition of lAhaf of Wisconsin, Minnesota and '.Louisiana, all famous In their day for the seemingly inexhaustible Islands ot timber, and now making ja belated attempt to lock the stable ; door after the horse has been stolen. Portland Telegram. vou llln I have had this time and am in very bad health on account of 1L I asked you for some home remedy, but you haven't writ ten anything ou the subject ' yet. It seems to ma that something of this kind is a3 important to the, general public part, of the time, as writing on reducing all the time. Those fat squabs tnat are too iaiy to do anything but sit around aud eat, don't need any sympathy. "Please give nie some advice? I ard five feet,-four inches tall, and weigh 98 pounds. Sirs. J." . I'm giving your little roast to the squabs and to me because I know that they will all got the treat of a good laugh, as I did. : Now let me defend myself. First, when you wrote me In June, I was cavorting around several coun tries la Europe, visiting hospitals and sightseeing, anu sunns a gtor of reducing to one on other sub jects; second, by writing on reduc ing, and getting the results that 1 do, 1 am preventing such things as mucous colitis and other lutes-" tlual troubles, also, preventing dia betes, heart and kidney 'diseases,'-: high blood pressure and apoplexy, gout, skin disorders oh, a whole materia niedtca of troubles. " Be sides improving the health of these numerous afflicted, 1 make them and their families happy. You sto? , it's not a bad plan, after all, is it? ' However, we'll forget the squabs for today and tomorrow nnd writo again on Mucons Colitis. (Notice I say again? I have written on It ; Several times.) ' -, 'jiiucous colitis means an inflam mation of the colon (the lower part of the large Intestine) which is ac companied by larger or smaller ious time mie you puor near, Quanuues of mucous. Sometimes apparently were suffering. My med-;liie mucoU8 will ost be tho com ical column I had written up nine;plete ca3t ot bowel ana other weeks ahead. (Doing this and some, tlmes the shrellg look t0 tho extra magazine work left me with: Uent uke worms. There is usually so, little sleep that I undermined &i00g the course o the my own resistance and came down and there wlI1 be both constipation, with a right smart spefl. of. sick- an(j aiarrhea ' ness myself But that's another Causes. The causes of mucous 1 u"? 1 I colitis are usually wrong eating rJ,Tlt' LtT . 7h v"y,habits-either too much, or too lit- - much on subjects that need tho tie. Or unbalance in mho, v. fnTZ, ..",,; fK? Ph's'ci.a- Ut has been found experiments ly for that is not the object of the thot ts i. . column. Prevention of disease and1 (Continued on page 7.) lose My Dear rollowara: .nM'a1 r.'Slr'A?".?". "' ramemba, to addreaa. Tna DaDhl.J n V.aV'"' '.?' " " ana which ro mint .ocloa. f. T. i5 r.l-"'.nJ? . only on a for Address your letter! which yo muit eoclcue tea rota In t&n.rT.