Image provided by: City of Dayton; Dayton, OR
About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1925)
Swedish Capital Is Host to Clergy Í Stockholm Happy Choice for Summer Conference. Washington.— "Stockholm, host thia month to u gathering of church rupee seiituthes, Is u happy choice us a summer conference city," says '• bul letin from the Washington hemlqunr ters Of thu Nutlomd Geographic »» “A winding dord, lending up from the Baltic aen. provides an enclmnt Ing approach. Along thu low rocky ■horea thu small stc’imer» and lumber boat», culled wood blllle* H« In Httle coves, their rigging almost tangled among the bough» of thu forest. A few wuoclen hou.se» set among the tree* and th« constantly shifting shores give a fulryllku effect, which 1» height<med a* you round n bend In the fiord und a huge stone city comes sur- »wmlngiy carved denly Into n tnste of the tnidltbmal luck of cere mony of the Swedish court. In strik ing contrast to fem rd off llurklnghnm palace, with Its red-coated guards, the Swedish royal palac« is open to the public. Visitor» ar* Invited to the comfortable private rooms of the huge edifice, which lias the atmosphere of a large English country home. “The modern quality of the city la Illustrated by the rxteu»lve nue to which a comparatively recent Inven- put. telephone has tlon Stockholm has 1U7JI79 telephones, or 25.4 for every its) Inhabitants. Stock holm also I» a great Industrial center. foundries. »hip building with plants, sugar, toba- ■'<>, cotton, leather, soup, furniture and food produHs file torles. Although within a few miles of being as far north us Cape Farewell, Greenland. Ice breakers keep the har bor open nil winter." “Stixkholm, like Venice, 1» « city founded on laliiml», but It Im» spread out Into the mainland to the north and south, where most of It» people now live. Thu early Viking» gave th. city It» »tart when they chose one of the Islands In the harbor a» the »Ite of a fort, to protect their settlements along the chain of lakes and river» It* land. These inland waterways, with the addition of several modern canal», now connect Htockbolm with the Let Portland, Oro —Two gout» lost their bleats snd a dog bl» bark nt the clinical demonstration» conducted by the American Vet- urinary Mrdleal aasoclatlon here. Dr. Frederick K. Whipple, of Peoria. 111., described a method by nbldi the same operation may be performed on other an imals ss easily as tonsils are re moved st present from s human being. Humane societies are studying the results, ho said, with the Idea of saving the Ilves of many dogs thst have made nuisances of themselves by Inno cent burking. ' 1 ( ; Honor Aged “Mammy” Macon. Ga. The body of a negresi now rests In a lot In an exclusive white cemetery after receiving all th« honor» It could be given. The body was that of Annn Jordan, ante-bellun negress. The funeral was held tr°m the residence of Mrs. K. H. Smith. with whom Annu had been '‘miÄmy* for 38 years. Where Every Scrap Is Utilized Nothing 1* wasted In the Near East Belief orphanage at Antllyaa. Syrin, every scrap being put to HUM useful purpose. A young tinsmith Is here seen converting old gasoline cans Into useful article». I» tl» atltnte a unique museum of Gothic art ana were Barnard. Canadian Vets Shy from Organization ticularly fa looking after dependent members. Haig’» Visit an Appeal. One of the reasons for Earl Haigs present visit to Canada was to appeal to Canada’s veterans to Join In a single organization. Specifically he wanted them to become members of the British Legion. His appeal for unity aroused much enthusiasm. But concrete results are as yet problem atical. So far the Incident has served chiefly to emphasize the disunion cf Canada’s veteran». The chief veterans' association is the Great War Veterans’ association of Cunuda-G. W. V. A. for short. Its headquarters claim a membership of 99,0*0. But a recent audit of its books revealed that its greatest paid- up membership was about 50.000 In the year 1920 and that at present It has only about 11.000 members who have paid their current dues. Another curious fact Is that a ma jority of veterans who are active In x’ x * • b, owrs. ow * % Hawaii Big as Japan ? Soon, Due to Quakes ❖ Z t I - Hais’» Visit Hoped to Re new Interest in League. Magnificent Royal Palace. •The laland portion of the original city, Stadeu, like It* Parisian counter part, the Be de la Cite, bear» remind on <,f It» early history. Today It con InhM the magnificent royal palace, one of the finest structures In the Utili French claaalc many of th« bustue«» «*t«l H»hn»ents of the city, ni<>»t >f them housed In handsam MOM .,f aalfenB Renulasun.« design. •The Staden Is connected with four adjacent i»itnds md the main land to thu north und south by arcbed rtone bridges. The most famous of these, th« Norrbro, Is the Brooklyn bridge of Stockholm, In respect to traffic, and Its London bridge, a* an object of sen tlmenL -To the west, on the smaller Island of lUddarholmen. rises the lofty Iron spire of tlnr mqst famous church In Stockholm, the Rlddiirsholm» Kyrka In a country of fine cathedrals, such u* Hint of Vpanla, It I» misleading to refer to the Rlddarsholms-Kyrka as the Westminster Abbey of Sweden. I’«r haps the Puntlicon or Valhalla would be more appropriate, for buried there nre Illustrious sons of !•'• nation. I he Storkyrka (Great Church), nearby on Staden, Is Incorrectly referred to ns a •cathedral’. •Terhnp* the visitors may be given New York Museum Gets Barnard Cloisters Barklesa Dog Evolves From Surgeon’» Clinic * $ T Washington. — A prediction that Uncle Sam soon will re- ceive from Mother Nature a Edwin Naulty of mld- New fair sized Fairfax continent In the York, who studied Pndfie. was has added to the earth dis movements years, cussion and many conjecture due de to clared seismic be was disturbances. convinced that recent the Hawaiian Islands gradually and quietly were being pushed upward, and within a genera- tlon would comprise a high and dry territory as large as Japan. < i Toronto. Ont.—What has become of Canada’s army? Already less than seven years since the height of its power it is referred to as 'll*« 'an‘ 4 Ished Legion.” In ail countries, in all ages. from Caesar to Napoleon and Grant annleo have lived long after wars ended, ment la not proved by official figures, sometimes as a great national re- which show the origin of Canadian en aouree, sometimes as a menace polit listments as follows: ical or social, whose disbandment was a problem. But the long continued ln- Born tn England. Scotland, 371.495 floence und power of the Grand Army land and Wales.............. 117.705 Born In Canada. of the Republic, to take a modern 37.391 Born tn the Lnlted States. 13.000 case In point, finds no counterpart In the dominion. Perhaps the great Canadian veter Canada enlisted almost 000.0» ans’ association will yet come into ex men. Allowing for casualties and oth istence. Whether Earl Haig's appeal er wastage, perhaps 500,000 of these will furnish the necessary Impetus b were demobilized und returned to problematical. Some think that a civil life in Canada. British Legion In Canada, following : Haig's suggestion, would accomplish I’robably no nation of S.O0O.U0O peo I ple ever faced the problem of reasslm- llatlng such a large proportion of the steady growth of the city at th« era think that what Is wanted Is a fighting men. The task was accom clal explained this by saying that the Canadian Legion with Sir Arthur beginning of the Christian era. Both plished Immediately and completely— majority of Canadian troops were old- the first anil second walls were stand country born anyway, but this state- Currie at its bead. too completely In the view of some. ing at the time of Christ, and the place Fall to Grasp Opportunity. of crucifixion and burial must have Had the war veterans developed a been outside them. common political or other ambition Some scholars have contended that Excavations at Jerusalem and a cohesion to knit themselves the site of the Holy Sepulcher Is Im- Into a single organization they could Raise Doubt. ¡HMisIble because It Is «but within an have achieved supreme power tn the cient Jerusalem, it being known that land, merely by a gesture. But so far Jerusalem.— Part of the wall Inclo« crucifixions did not take place within of exposure dally, were required to the outstanding characteristics of war Experts Find “Artificial Sun * Ing Jerusalem built by Agrippa, one of the city walls. Adherents of this view cure an acute case of moist eczema the last Jewish kings, and destroyed . especially a large number of the Eng | veterans' associations, although they on a large bull terrier brought to the ¿.'ne ” Beneficial. Hand-Painted Knee» have accomplished much useful work, clinic. This rapid recovery was re by Titus, has been unearthed recently ||Hh community, who have always j have been disunion and a sense of Latest Beauty Stunt About GO yards of the wall, some four tertalned doubts about the location of Manhattan, Kan.—“Artificial sun- ported In many similar cases. Chlcngo.—I’alntlng pictures <>n K failure to grasp potential opportunity. In the treatment of wounds the yards In Ud<khfSM, has b<H*n UDCOV- the Holy Sepulcher, see further con War veterans' associations appeared shlne”—light from quartz mercury- ultra-violet ray also was found bene such feminine knees us may be cred by the Jewish Exploration so firamtion tn the discovery of what ls vapor lamps — 1» being successfully em on the stage long before the close of exposed by rolled stocking» and ficial. The two doctors cite one case, clety. believed to be the third wall. the war. Perhaps that was the Initial ployed In the treatment of Injured and i that of Molcum Burr, a coursing grey perverse winds Is advocated by This discovery tins amused deep In- diseased animals at the veterinary i Situation Is Awkward. mistake. Early promoters rushed to beauty specialists. hound which was brought here for tereat In archeological and religious get Into the field first. And none of clinic of the Kansas State Agricultural treatment after having torn loose a “Painted knees are the latest The Jewish Exploration society, circles. If this is the third of the college by Dr. E. J. Frick and Dr. John them was able to command a general thing." said Mrs. Rutli Maurer. which IS conducting these excavations. toe in a race. The leg was bandaged series of walls built around Jerusalem Sd. with Dr. W F. Albright director following. Early rivalries have not Bullard. “Hand-painted pictures on the too tightly and in three days all the It Is argued. It brings Into question the Such good results have been ob yet disappeared. And most discourag knees are intriguing. Some de- bones of the injured foot were ex authenticity of the site of the Holy of the American School of Oriental Re- tained from the use of the ultra violet ing of all is the fact that a great pro signa are simple, some elabo Sepulcher, which Is thus placed out search here, that “the discovery of th, posed. light produced by these lamps that portion o, the disbanded men have rate. ^ome girls prefer a flower Agrippnn wall does not seriously affec After surgical treatment the wound side the city walls. Doctor Frick and Doctor Bullard be stood aloof from all of the competing or u group of blosaom*. Others “this long smoldering question. Doc was exposed to the ultra-violet ray lieve them a most valuable adjunct in Started by Agrippa. organizations, though there Is a feel like a portrait or u little land- tor Albright admits the situation Is and given dally treatments. The wound The third wall was commenced by ing In many quarters that If there the treatment of many animals' dis healed with unusual rapidity and with scape.” awkward. eases and have found that In some Herod Agrippa about 40-41 A. I»., and was a single association nearly every mien <>f the United Btatcs almost entire absence of pus forma “Shall we decide for the Holy Sepul cases the light treatment Is sufficient was Interrupted by the Homan gov spend npproxlmntely JG.OOO.OOO tion. cher and against the evidence, or I war veteran would Join it ernor of Syria, to be completed later There have been and are In exlst- to bring about complete recovery. In research work on animals by Dr. a day to make themselves syn- against the Holy Sepulcher and also Of eight typical canine distemper by the Jews before the final »lege of cnee at least twenty and perhaps more J. S. Hughes of the department of t het I cully beautiful, one report against other evidence of little less cases, the veterinarian« reported re the city. By all accounts there were distinct veterans' organizations in cently. five recovered in periods of from chemistry at the college It tins been asserted. Doctor Albright asks. three walls which protected Jerusalem cogency?" Last year 17.850.000 boxes of Canada. There Is one strong one— two to four weeks' time lifter a daily I shown that ultra-violet tight Increases “Neither horn of the dilemma Is neces on the north, built successively both । egg production and hatchabtllty of strong In comparison with the others rouge were u«ed. Hair dye cost sary.' The present north wall of the for the protection of the weakest side —one that was strong In the hectic exposure of 20 minutes to the ultra eggs produced by poultry and pre about S7.000.000 for the year. city dates back only to Hadrian ’ s time * of the defenses and to afford room fot vents and cures outbreaks of weak days of 1921, and then a large num violet ray. J. and represents a wholly new line of Three dogs not given the ultra-violet legs and rickets In chickens. ber that trail away to mere regimen wall We are forced to the conviction treatment during the same period all tal societies. Most of them have that archeology rarely affects the ques died. Only five days, with 20 minutes IS STILL RIDING done exceedingly useful work, par- tion of holy sites. The location of the THE RANGES AT 95 Holy Sepulcher will remain Just as certain or Just as obscure ns It Is to day.*1 Mangum Is Oldest Cowboy in Along with this discovery there has Active Service. been unearthed a mosaic brionglng to the late Byzantine period. According Childress, Tex.—Supple as a youth to the Greek Inscription on the mosaic, In muscle, vigorous and hearty, H. R. this was the tomb of a nun. near Mangum, ninety-five years old. Is still which, apparently, there also was n KI riding the range on the big ranch of small Christian chapel. the Smith Brothers, near here. He Is said to be the oldest cowboy still in Undersea Microphones active service In the country. Mangum ha» been a cow hand ever since he Protecting New York came to Texas from South Carolina, New York.—New York city today Is three-quarters of a century ago. He guarded by a new marvel of science kn >ws the history of more ranches in It» which was revealed during the Thir this state than any other person. He teenth const defense encampment on was well along toward middle life Fisher's Island. It Is the sound-rang when the famous Chisholm trail was Ing device by which the position of a established. He went up the trail with vessel at sen mny bo determined by herds of cattle many times. In his underwater sound. For the first time early life he worked on ranches in thing on a moving target, spotted on y the southern part of Texas. As the by sound, was conducted successfully wild lands of the more western parts by long range butteries. It was an of the state were opened up he went with the venturesome cuttlemen Into nounceil. Gigantic "ears" of mlcrophonlc son their new grazing territory. He was upon the frontier when Indian raids attlveness, at the eastern end of Long were common and when buffaloes pop tslnnd, can be made constantly at at ulated the unbroken region by count tent Ion to pick up the sound of any nprom hlng enemy. The war time Im thousands. l>r I G.ntil Tlppenhauer (seated) talking with (ormer Vongiessnmn less Mangum says that he has observed portance of this new device Is lues C A Korbly of Indiana about the magnetic weather precalculation sjstem of ilmnble because It is said to assure ac which he is the deviser Doctor Tlppenhauer is honorary engineer for ti e no set of rules of living. He "went the usual paces" of a cowboy In the stir curate firing on ships Invisible to the Haitian government and is visiting Washington where the ' n McClain field dairy expert of the bureau of dairying. Dcpnrt- ring early days and has devoted him ii.>. .wo of his calculations. He predicts the weather by studying thi sun John X ? t re’ has Just been promoted to the directorship of the eye. It will protect against night, fogs “Xil WaXni would have an unseasonab.y cool spell beginning self to hard work and life In the open and smoke screens, which have here ment of . tirn bureau and In the future will answer all the ‘1^,^ tofore been the enemy ships’ aid In air. extension ------- r th,, nation concerning their dairying problems. Mr. Met lain slipping by coast fortifications. about July 28. s ........................... .. produeert- INVOLVES SITE OF HOLY SEPULCHER ULTRA-VIOLET LIGHT RAYS CURE DISEASED ANIMALS Government Dairy Expert Boosted Haitian Gives Weather System