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About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 6, 1924)
Maj. Imbrie, Slain in Persia, Is Buried in Arlington MEN YOU MAY MARRY By E. R. PEYSER »e» tiOliWn Has a man like thia proposed > to you! ’ Symptoms: «lender, slight, > hair -------- rather longish in front, > thin, knife-edged face, sweet, big mouth smile, always wears a collar which seems to hate bls neck, a four-lnhand tie, a turned up bangkok sailor, and a aoft brown, warm brim pancake felt in winter. He loves home and helping therein; he Is de pendable, fund» enough, shady, likes you to be with him at base ball and Kelly pool. IN FACT He Is game and gamer ta your companionship. Prescription for the bride ta bs: n Don’t look for lightning * flashes on a calm day. ABSORB THIS: The faster the ship the faster It sinks when it hits the rocks. <• by MeCisr. Newspaper Syndicate) copyright Reflections of a Bachelor Qirl Bq HELEN ROID land THEIR RAPS By DOUGLAS MALLOCH ' > When playing ball you often strike Who always take« hla turn nt bnt And then runs home right after that And decan t stay till Jack nnd Jim Have hud their raps the name as him. How many. whos*4ot K»«ps them outalde my path from day to day! ’ But through the distance and the dark I smile For I can love them though I see them not, FRUIT FO7 THE FAMILY fpRUIT should be served freely In any family, and especially where You see. In playing work-up you there are young children, t anned 1 irst field, then catch, then pitch a fruit ta winter takes the place of the few. fresh fruit, which Is much more de Until the boy at bat flies out sirable when It can be obtained. And then It’s your turn, turn-about. A bit of pineapple added to almost They all .should stay, the other chaps, any fruit combination Is an Improve rill all the rest ha%e had their rap«. ment. as the pineapple flavor seems to enhance the flavors of other fruits My father says that you cun tell, Pineapple is good for the digestion, as Tel) pretty sure and pretty well, ’ It contains a pepsin all Its own. Th« kind of mqn a boy will be The way he ¡days at work up. nee» He says if boy* are fair In play Fruit Delight. Mix one cun of crushed pineapple, They likely will grow up that way. or a few spoonfuls of pineapple and And I Intend while I’m a boy sliced peaches, one-fourth |>ound of To see that others have their Joy; marshmallows cut Into quarters, a And I Intend, when grown up too pinch of salt, and a little of any fruit To always try that way to do— sirup; chill. Beat one cupful of thick When I’m a great big man perhaps cream until stiff, add one fourth cup To see that others get their raps. ful of sugar and the fruit drained <« by MeClur» Nrwsp.p., «rl,.n. .(. ) from the juice. Serve In glasses gar nished with a cherry. YOU can always tell a bachelor from a married man by his responsive ness to flattery—the married man’s responsiveness. Jealousy Is the autocracy of the heart; and the surest way to lose your dominion over a man’s affections is to let him feel the weight of the scepter. A man Is always grateful for the gift of a woman’s friendship, but he regards her love more as a “souvenir” or a “premium” than as a gift Neither fear, nor conscience ever made a mon true to a woman; a man may smoke because he wants to, or drink because he likes to; but when he loves a woman It is because he can’t HELP It. Fight 100 Years for $100,000,000 Death May End Legal Bat-' the British 1 crown treasury, under wnoee management the estate had in- tie Waged Many Year*. chmm Peacock’s Dignity Is Ruffled by Sparrows Washington.—The dignified setting of Whistler's famous “Peacock Room,” in the Freer building, was shattered recently when about forty sparrows at tacked a young peacock strutting about the courtyard. It brppened when the three big peacocks, who add tone and color to the central court, left the young bird eating out of an earthenware Jar. The fledgling was helpless against the spar rows that surrounded him, cheep ing angrily. Finally he decided to retreat and tried to retain some shreds of dignity by strut ting off. The sparrows, however, circled about him. flapping their wings and nipping him with their beaka Around and around th« fountain be ran, desperately frightened. One of the older peacocks saw the trouble from a distance and came to the rescue. Spreading his magnificent plumage, he charged the sparrows and they scattered, flying away In all di rections. ,100000-«». • Doctor * *r of ‘be Saxon courts was In Berlin.—Heir to more than $100,- 000.000. lying ready In the Bank of stalled as administrator. In 1872, he England, and yet having to Uve on was relieved of that, however, because int^r^fC^arg^ that he furthered the alma of $1.50 a week ? not ot the r*al heirs, but Contrary to the weather reports, That Is the queer fate of Bernhard those of another branch. this is the time of year when an eli Goetze of Leipzig, who just n^w Is the Eng,l"h consul general at gible bachelor Is most apt to get cold principal In a weird inheritance fight ^1P»I«. Gharies Crove, took the mat feet—from skating on the thin Ice of which has strained the legal appara 1 ’ h“nd’ bnt mad« Uttl« progress flirtation. tus of three continents and has because the heirs could not agree stretched through nearly a whole cen- among themselves. " hen a man tells you that you re tury. _ Proves Her Claim. The story of this fight is told by the mind him of some other woman. It Is Erdmnth« Goetze went foolish to feel flattered;, because Neue Leipzlger Zeltung. which says U to London where she received docu when a man is in love with you, bases It on legal documenta menta proving that the Cape To^ dearie, there Is no other woman In the The fortune was amassed by three bearers of the name of Goetze who whole world Just like you. Hernan« ta b" —«J'S left Germany between 1787 and 1819. The mnn who Iles under the car try One, Johann Friedrich Goetze, went lu Tapioca Pudding. TeIchman0 at London ing to fix the engine, while his wife Batavia, amassed a fortune in lands rlw» n^P 1’raln the sirup from one can of also proved vain. and ships valued at $40,000,000. When sits back comfortably and tells him I peaches or pineapple, add enough wa In 1900 a man named Bode received ter to the sirup to make three and how things "ought to be done," can I be died he left it all to his widow. a part of the inheritance. ThisTd ta The widow married a cousin of her sympathize with all the women who । one-half cupfuls of liquid. Bring to another legal battle, in which Bade's the boiling ¡mint and add one cupful ever tried to keep house or to cook husband, Joann Christoph Goetze, who lawyer won. 5 cents a week, which goes to Goetze By F. A. IF ALKER had also gone to Batavia, had entered of minute tapioca and cook, stirring for a man, since the dawn of civiliza* and on which this heir to millions the Dutch army service and had be L n7„ triP * Berah ^ Goetze to tlon. . ..... constantly until clear, pour one-half L-ndon proved fruitless because be Uvea. come governor of Batavia and com in a baking dish, cover with the fruit, RUB OFF THE DUST In return, however, the association unable to present his claims ta a Oh, yes. there Is a vast difference mander of the Dutch troops. adding a handful of dates or raisins; la to get 10 per cent of Goetze’a in t the EnglUh C00rt’ between Get Second Fortune. knowledge and _ ----- wisdom. l>our over the remaining tapioca and heritance—If he ever geta It Knowledge is what enables a woman The couple quit Batavia and went 7 c<””C*ence clean and your vision bake In a moderate oven 45 minutes. to converse brilliantly ta several Goetze himself says only the con * cowptatat to the then PH®« Min lan- to Cape Town, where they arrived jnst Clear rub off the rust. Let no day Serve with cream and sugar. ister Balfour brought the reply that vlction of his legal right keep« him ta time to receive the Inheritance left guages; wisdom Is what enables her Add sliced peaches, pineapple or any |>ass In which you have failed to do to think In one language, and not tell to them by Johann Christian Goetae. he should employ an English lawver going and he firmly believes that some desired fruit to a cottage pudding, and some vigorous rubbing. anything in ANY. another cousin. This cousin had gone but as Goetze Is penniless, thia Is raln’ day the $100,000,000 will come ta him. If you cannot »call past Impres bake ta gem pans. Serve with the to the Orange Free State, had dug for service. (Copyright by Helen Rowland ) ts In the most vivid way. your mem- fruit sirup, thickened slightly and with ----------- O- a<Wed t0 ca” by the gold, and had found 18,000 pounds of Bobbed Hair Trouble ory Is rusting. Seek the rust spots, " bit of butter nnd a dash of lemon fact that documenta ta the files show it, all of which, in blinking bar gold, Juice added. Chattanooga. Tenn.— A. Chattanooga Che yourself no rest until they, have now went to the former governor of Mrs. Telcbmann had died in the mean ex-service man decided to get even Shortcake need not be confined to been found and rubbed out. time. Goetze maintains, however, his Batavia. The need for diligent action Is im the strawberry season, for many fruits i sister is still living as wife of a hank with his wife for bobbing her hair, so he went to a barber shop and Instruct mny be delightfully served ta that k cnM’8U8 d**' ‘n Cape Town ta director In Stuttgart. perative. And this activity must be | 1831, leaving his Immense fortune ta ed the barber to shave off his hair. He way. Even canned fruits are well your own. No one else la qualified to Waiting and fighting for his In gold. In lands, ta ships and mtaes to further insisted that her hair cutting liked, and when thinking of something do the work. his parents and brothers and sisters heritance, Bernhard Goetze meanwhile had completely emancipated him from for a change, try sliced oranges; they If there be an Impoverishment of has grown to be seventy-nine years in Germany. But these never learned the chains of wedlock and he proceed By Jan« Do« old. thought, rub off the gathering rust by are delicious. Pour the Juice and all of their good fortune. ed to get gloriously drunk. He wound over the hot buttered cake. He la supported In his fight by a reading instructive books, t,y calling Finally In 1867, a sister, Mrs. Erd- up in the hospital, and as soon as he Brown Betty is another pudding “ Goetze association," which wu up acenes from other days, by taking muthe Goetze, who had married her recovered from the effects of his li solitary walks along hillside paths and which need not be reserved for the WHAT ANY WIFE KNOWS cousin of the same name, learned of founded in 1911 and consists of about bations cried weakly for his wife to apple. Any fruit with crumbs, sugar thirty members. Every member paye In the lenfy aisles of the woods. notlciberl,'nCe througb a ncw»P«Per come and get him, “bob or no bob." As you go from place to place keep and seasoning baked in layers, makes 'T'HAT all her rose leaves have a most tnsty dessert. turned to tea leaves. your eyes open. Train your faculties Immediately, the hunt after the In to recall what you have seen so that heritance began. More than 317 bear That married life has not proved so ers of the name of Goetze laid claim you may be able at some other time to wonderful after alt. describe the mental pictures to your <©. i»14. Western Newspaper Union.) to It. After years of legal battles It friends. • ■“ o----------- was decided that the heirs were Mrs That she would give anything to live Erdmuthe Goetze and her children of Stop in the fields of daisies, pluck her life all over again. whom two were still alive. Bernhard Pulpit I* Made From Top ( to build wlnd’ng stairs from the el one of the flowers, pall It apart, con Goetze and Mrs. Louise Telcbmann. template Its exquisite formation. Its der's home to the house of worship, of Old Bar. The government of Saxony took a dainty coloring, and let your thoughts That It Isn’t so easy to he a success f “ tan<1-r«“ a coil formerly and ta the case. In agreement with ful, loving and Interesting wife. run free with n h>ose rein. Do not utilized ta making beer. Durango, Colo. — The old Greek pause until you have become fully im The two steps that lead to the en- saying “out o* bad wood good smoke pressed with the perfect handiwork of That she Is no longer so pretty as «* a ?IC<KOf the ,aben»acle were formed sometimes comes” was applied here KEEPS FARMER POSTED Nature—with never a blemish or a she was. of timbers taken from the dance hall when a "community tabernacle" and speck of rust. Its parsonage were built out of tim One of the boards carries a bullet Listen to the music of the birds I That she knew her husband was go bers and materials taken from a once fired from a “.45,” evidence of one of There are no rusty notes In their Ing to propose long before he knew it notorious gambling resort and dance the many shooting scrapes that en- praiseful songs that glint nnd shine himself. livened the old resort. The heavy ball and from an erstwhile brewery. like streams of gold ns they flow from timbers comprising th« supporting col- The tabernacle, built by the Ere« their swelling throats. That she also went halfway to meet Methodist church, was recently dedi umns and the roof beams were taken Think whence the tuneful melodies him over It. The church cated. Its altar rail was made of from the dance halls. come. Rub the rust off your Intellect seats 700. part of the bar against which the until It shall gleam like n mirror, re That her children are really per “I think,” said Rev. F. F. Stewart, lumberjacks, miners, cowpunchers, flecting the beautiful nil around you. fectly ordinary. Mexicans and gamblers of forty years .the presiding elder who conceived th« It will do you good, stir your Imaglna- ago used to lean. The bar’s foot-rail idea, ’that it was In the nature of an tion and make of you a nobler being. That her courtship was the most was converted into the hand-rail of act of Providence that we were able To mnke ourselves better, to make ordinary, matter-of-fact affair under the steps lead’s» Into the church. A to convert these places of disrepute ourselves worthy of respect, we must the sun. Bible now rests on the polished wal Into a house of worship.” fight ngalnst the rust that dulls minds nut where the liquor of the early days and darkens visions. Without active That her husband does not love her was placed, for the top of the bar has Didn t Need Bloodhound; minds nnd penetrating visions, we have quite so ardently and passionately as become the pulpit The altar was con- no real existence. Let us* raise our of yore. 7 Hi* Own Nose Know* structed from other parts of the bar. eyes to the heavens nnd think I Olean, N. Y.—The local constabulary The church rests on a foundation I/Ot us try to vision the vastnesa That she would give ten years of of stone, heavy timbers snd Iron did not require the use of the police- of space, what Iles millions, billions her life to be as pretty as Lillian Rus- beams taken from both the dance bloodhounds when he went to capture and trillions of miles beyond. Let us SClla hall and the brewery. The window ^burglar at the borne of Mrs. C. H get away from the eating rust and sills and ledges were made from the dank decay. That her husband frequently shows After surrounding the house in an heavy oak bottoms of huge beer vata And nhove everything else, let ns signs of boredom. swer to Mrs. Miller’s call the con The building occupies the site of thnnk God for the wonderful things WLS of Chicago was Installed by the former brewery. It is situated at stabulary emptied the entire cylinder which human greed and selfishness That she would rather be an Inde the Sears-Roebuck company to keep the foot of a bluff and Is overlooked of his six shooter Into the carcass of cannot control—free as the ambient pendent worker. the fanners In close touch with the by the parsonage of the presiding a skunk. whose hesd hsd been caught The young Indy across the way says air tff the humblest creature of His dotage of the city. AU the latest quo- elder of the district The parsonage in a milk bottle. the best way to secure the currency creation. The tapping of the glass bottle had That she will always love her hus tatlons and topics of general interest once was the office of the brewery and la to keep It In the bank. <® by McClure Newepeper Syndicats.) Miller to to bella' believe that band, whatever happens. are broadcast under the direction of haa been made Into a modern cottar* caused Mrs. Miner (® by McClurs N,wap.D,r Syndicate.) Harry D. Saddler, who la shown above. I. u H«M to »m, m JS ïî* ”” "T1"« to Something to Think ^4bout Through the Qlad Egei of a Woman ! J?1! DANCE HALL TIMBER IS USED FOR BUILDING TABERNACLE «T S