Lottie Hedges McIntosh
Teacher of Piano and V oice
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MORE LIGHT ON STONEHENGE
Colored M aid Confides to Em ployer
the O nly W ay to Get Rid of
the Blemishes.
"R estoratio n" la Revealing M any
the Secret* of Famoue S tru c tu re *
on Saliabury P lain.
Mrs. Newlywed is learning all
sorts o f things from tiussie, her cul
t-red maid o f all work.
Soft of
Announces the re-opening o f her residence studio Sept. 26. A limited
voice, comfortable, slow and ad
-number of pupils accepted. Phone now for class reservations. High
dicted to strange mutteriugs * and
school credits given.
•
*
stlf-coiuniunings is Gussie, observe*
the New York Sun.
Studio Monmouth and 7th Sts.
Phone 4821
This time it was peach stain*
Mrs. Newlywed looked with distress
at her lovely napkins, marred in
ilieir first using by large, assertive,
and, it seemed, evergrowing pencil
“ Appeal to O’ IN el 11”
stains.
Gussie regarded the beautiful
Eyes Tested and Fitted.
Lenses Duplicated.
blemished linen wisely.
“ What can I do about it, G ih -
sie?” asked Mrs. Newlywed. “ TIov,
can 1 take the peach stains out?”
Gussie shook her head.
O p to m e tris t-O p iic lu n
“ Ma’am,” she finally admonished
“ you can’t get peach stains out, not
BUSH BANK BLDG.
SALEM, ORE.
now, you can’ t ; got to wait ma’am,
PHONE 8 2 5
twell the peach season’s over. When
they ain’t no more peaches them
-tains’ll go ’w jy all be theirselves •
you don’ have to do nothin’ . When
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the peach season is over the stains
disappear jes as quick!”
“ Th at’s very strange. Gussie,”
?
commented
Mrs.
Newlywed.
“I
i í
can’t understand that, "quite.”
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“ Yes. ma’am,” insisted Gussie,
i
•‘yes, ma’am, you wouldn’ t think
Ï
them peach stains got so much sen-e,
but they has.”
I
(Affiliated
i
LEAVE PEACH STAINS ALONE
with Northwestern Conservatory, Chicago)
Dr. C. B. O’Neill
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Hot Stove Sale
I
The Stove Sale at this store is still i
hot. 1 he approach of winter has § §
s
caused many to th in k of hot i
stoves and their comforts and 9 i
§
they are coming ’round to learn I
§
about our hot bargains in stoves. I
H
There is still room in the store I
I
for many more prospective pur
chasers.
WILLARD E. CRAVEN HDW.
INDEPENDENCE,
OREGON
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GOT HIS METAPHORS MIXED
E d ito r
Probably
Knew
W hat
H<*
M eant to Say, but R eader* M ay
H ave Gasped.
“ When I was teaching in an Iowa
town,” says an eastern man, *‘ I used
every week to read a little country
[taper published there, whose edi
tors metaphors were an unfailing
joy to me. Once, I remember, this
editor wrote o f a contemporary:
‘Thus the black lie issuing from his
base throat becomes a boomerang in
bis hand, and, hoisting him by hi«
own petard, leaves him a marked
man for life.’
“ He said, in an article on home
life : ‘The faithful watchdog or his
good wife, standing at the door,
welcomes the master home with an
honest bark.’ In an obituary o f a
farmer he wrote: ‘The race was run
1 at last. Like a tired steed, he
. 6
* «
«! crossed the harbor tear and, casting
* aside whip and spur, lay down upon
that bourne from which no traveler
ever returns.’ ”
Ì
L E A R N IN G
When little Mitzi Hajoa first
starred in musical comedy “ on this
side,” she could speak but a few
I words of English, but she was a
| willing student.
One night, in a dancing number;
Tom MeNaughton. the story goes,
happened to tramp on M itzi’s toes,
and the fiery little singer went up
1 into the air like a skyrocket.
When the curtain fell Mitzi
j pitched into MeNaughton with an
avalanche o f American slang that
amazed the comedian. Finally, Mc-
\ a lighten replied :
“ Well, I must say, Mitzi, you are
getting on in your English. Where’d
| you learn all o f that stuff?”
With a show o f pride Mitzi re
torted : “ I pick him opp from ze
stage hands.” —-Youngstown Tele
gram.
SEE YOURSELF IN AN
UP TO DATE HAT
Hats for rain
Hats for shine
Hats for sport
B L IN D
Hats for all times
Moderately priced and up to
the minute in style.
Mrs. L. G. Curtis
Masonic Building
125 N. High St.
W hen in need of
Job Printing
E N G L IS H .
Salem
M A N W IN S SUC CESS.
j
of
The first stage in the “ restora
tion” of Stonehenge la now com
pleted, ami the lonely landmark on
Salisbury plain is now free from
scatfolding and cranes.
A report
on the work has been published by
the Society o f Antiquaries, whose
experts have been in charge o f the
excavations,* and the report states
that many relies at the base of the
monoliths,
including
roughly
worked Hint instruments, and frag
ments of pottery o f the bronze age
and the Romano-British period,
were discovered. A t the base of the
slaughter stone they found a bottle
of port, left there apparently by a
previous investigator, Mr. Cunning
ham, who examined the stone in
1901. The latest discoveries ap
pear to bear out the theory that
Stonehenge was built in the latter
part of the Stone age, between 1600
and 1800 B. C. This theory o f the
date was advanced by Professor
Gowland, who was in charge o f the
restoration of Stonehenge in 1901.
He based his assumption on the
fact that a largo number of crude
flint tools were found at the base
o f the stones, as if left there* by
workmen.
No bronze implements
were discovered at the time. The
absence of any tools other than
those of flint is again noted by
the later investigators.— Brooklyn
Eagle.
WATER POWER SAVES ITALY
In
the Absence of Coal, It Is Being
Used for A ll Kinds of Indus
tria l W o rk.
Italian water-power stations soon
will be developing 1,500,000 horse
power. One-half o f these stations
have been erected during the last
five years, while present plans an
ticipate the construction of 57 more
stations which will generate 359,-
000 horsepower.
Before the war Italy had 328 wa
ter-power plants which produced
835,000 horsepower. During the
war 58 stations were constructed
and these were able to develop 217,-
000 horsepower.
This
immense
amount of power has been used in
all kinds of industrial work. Some
is used for the electric power need
ed on the electrified railroads.
The biggest plant now in course
of construction is situated in Sar
dinia. A colossal water basin with
a capacity o f 400,000,000 cubic me
ters w ill serve to supply the station
with power.
“EAT MORE
BREAD
And reduce the high cost of living. ”
H0LSUM
BREAD
IS TH E C H E A PE S T AS W E L L AS
T H E MOST W HOLESOM E ON
TH E M A R K E T TO D AY.
.
BUY THAT
EXTRA LOAF
Your Grocer Has It.
Cherry City Baking Co
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C STREET MEAT MARKET
LOM M ASSON & OTT, Props.
Itdependeu**
173 C Street
Phone 9211
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The Independence National Hank
Established .1889
A N A C C O U N T in a commercial bank is
most
• •moment aid to modern business. It s.\-‘ ema-
'zes payments, is a check on all expenditures and
i-'ws you just where you stand each n nth.
I on one with us today. It will pay you to do -to.
Officers and Directors
H. Hirschberg, Pres.
C. A. McLaughlin, V. P.
Ira D. Mix, Cashier
W. H. Walker
D. W. Sears
O. D. Hutler
1
SHE WAS NO T JA N ET.
One day while shopping I chanced
to run across a gentleman and two
ladies who had been our neighbors
for many years but whom I had lost
track of. A fter our greetings were
over she introduced me to her fiance,
and. warmly enthusiastic, I ex
claimed: “ You haven’t changed a
bit in all these five years! You cer
tainly look as young as when I last
saw you, Janet!” - H er gratified
«mile suddenly evaporated, and,
staring coldly at me, she stiffly re
marked : “ Thank you, hut I don’t
happen to be Janet; I ’m ‘little sister
May.’ Janet is the mother o f four
children now.” — Exchange.
TOO M U C H TO ASK.
“ In the old days a campaignei
would invite everybody to have re
freshments.”
“ Polities have changed,” replied
Miss Cayenne. “ Yon couldn’t ex
pect a candidate to have enough
funds to treat the crowd to ice
cream soda.”
A striking example of persever
ance against the physical disability
I o f blindness is furnished by James
H. Rawlinson. ex-Canadian soldier.
! who he« just left Ottawa on the first
[»art o f bis journey to FiOndon, Eng
land. where he is to assume the du
ties o f clerk-stenographer in the
DANGERS OF T H E DEEP.
[xmdon office o f the department of
immigration and‘ colonization. Raw
“ Does it require courage to swirr
linson was trained at St. Dunstan’s beyond the breakers?”
school, in England, and for «ome
“ It does. The chance of drown
i time has been working at the T o mg is not great. But the quarrel
ronto office of the department.
you’ re liable to have with the husky
lifeguard
involves
considerable
F R A N C E G E T S V A L U A B L E T R E E . peril.”
F A S C IN A T IN G SP O R T.
The trees producing the sap from
which lacquer, a «penal varnish, ir
“ What is your favorite game?”
m ad1, were introduoed into France
“ Tennis,” answered Miss Cay
front the Orient during the war,
enne.
“ It always enables a girl to
aupptementing to *ome extent the
l»e
photographed
in an effective
markets of India, China and Japan.
iAcqur-r has been found to be o f ex pose, whether she’s a good player or
treme value in airplane manufac not.”
ture, combining, aa i t doe*, durabil
V A C A T IO N FO R H IM
ity and toughness with the char
acteristic of bending without crack
“ Going to get any vacation this
ing. It takes a high polish, arid is vear, old man ?”
used especially fo i coating propeller
“ Well, my wife is going away for
blades.— Popular Mechanic* Maga a couple of weeka.” — Louisville
C ourier-Journal.
We will do it right sine.
Mr. Barnes, U. S. Wheat Director Says:
G Stands for Groceries
It also stands for Good Goods in
which this store specializes.
This is a money saving store also
and if you trade here long enough
you’ ll know it without telling.
J. G. McIntosh Grocery
HOME OF GOOD GROCERIES
Courteous and Intelligent Service
INDEPENDENCE, OREGON
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Reliable Dentistry!
■
At
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Fair Prices
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CR OW N A N D BRIDGE W O R K
A
SPECIALTY
Dr. Alt Swennes !
DENTIST
ag>TW
SALEM, ORE.
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GET THOSE
LETTERHEADS
N O W
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