Image provided by: The Willamina Museum; Willamina, OR
About The Willamina times. (Willamina, Yamhill County, Oregon) 1909-1972 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 15, 1935)
J Page 7 IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL RAVENS BACK IN THEIR LOOKOUTS ON BLUE RIDGE When Edgar Allan !*<>« was a stu dent nt tin» University of Virginia and i hi «»<•<! holidays tramping tn the Blue Itldge mountains, the gloomy ravens perched on the ledges added much to the supernatural atmosphere of the remote hollows which was ab sorbed by the young poet. They were among the most abundant birds of the area. Within a few generations they had been exterminated, or driven into the fastnesses of the Alleghenies to the westward. Now they are returning to the Blue Itldge. Five rnvens have been observed tn these mountains wtrhtn the last year, according to Ituskln H. Freer of Lynchburg col lege. who previously had seen only one In nine years. The first appearance of ravens in the Blue Itldge area was reported by Austin II. Clark of the Smith sonlan Institution two years ngo. The protection afforded by the Shenandoah National park is be lieved to be one reason for their re turn. For the last half century ravens have been quite rare In the eastern United States, although In Colonial days they were so common In New York and New England that bounties were placed on them. The raven was especially obnoxious to farmers because of Its attacks on lambs. It would pluck through their eyes Into their brains. Because of the persecution to which the ravens were subjected, ac cording to bird specialists. It Is re markable that any of them survived In the East They are notably birds of low mountains whose crags af ford them good lookouts during the nesting season. — Cleveland Plain Dealer. UNDAY I school L e s s o n lest longer, give more light. Lowest coat to use. Just the right else, shape and weave for longer end better lig h t in g service. Coleman M a n tle « ere alw ap a fresh: g u a r anteed q u a lity . Deelere everyw here recom m end them T h e nemo “ Colemon" stamped a n th e m antle protect« you against eubetl- tu tea. Bend etam pa tulta. OVI1U IOS •V*W In w e or coin to cover portage and handling Y o u ’ll Set y o u rtw o eampfs* Coleman“ m an tle* prom ptly Send today. T H E C O L E M A H LAM P ( r STOVE C O . Pwtory a OOw. Wicniva. Karn.. Dept. WÜUI R odent«* F o re e ig h t Many believe that rats and mice trill leave a house before It burns * Q uick, Safe Rolief For Eyes Irritated By Exposure To Sun, W in d a n d D ust — NEW S FLASH Stom sch, R ectal and Colon Ailments cured w ith o u t a h o sp ital su rg ical o p era tio n . DR. DEAN CLINIC CALL Ok WRITE FOR FREE BOOKIET Do ft now — Do not wait Cast ■uraaW a and Brand Avenue PO RTLAND. ORK. PAe«« P " ' J9IS DoesYour Mirror Ref led. Rough,Pimply Skin? Use CUTICURA A n o in t th e affected parts w ith Ostlew ra ©Intnaont. Wash off after a short time with Cutleorn Soap and hot water and continue bathing for several minutes. Pim ples. rashes and other distressing eruptions are quickly soothed and a condition established which con duces to healing. Otntmant 25c and 50c. Soap 25c. P a tte m Ü H B y RKV. P. B . P I T 2 W A T E R , D . n , M»rnb«r o f F a c u lty , M oody M lbla la s tltu ta o t Cliieaga. • . W eatarn Newepapar Union. Lesson for August 18 MARTHA LEBRON T E X T —L uke lt : » - 4 > : John 11:17-2«. GOLDEN T E X T —Jesua loved Martha, and her sister, and L azarus.— John 11:1. PRIMARY TOPIC—A H om e Jaaue Loved. JUNIOR TOPIC— A H om e Jeaoa V is ited. INTERM EDIATE AND SENIOR TOP IC— How Can I H elp at Hornet YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP IC— A Home T hat A ttra cts Jeans. Ths Ideal U fa In H tlaw a. K A VEI.EH , novelist, naturalist, poet and philosopher h a v e dreamed consistently of a ‘'lost land.” They haven't wanted to find It be cause It would then no longer be “loaL" They merely wanted proof of Its existence. There would be the set ting for flights of Action and fancy. There would be the locale of romance supreme and undiluted by fact. It would be peopled by the fabled “lost tribe." It may be the valley of Halawa, on the Island of Molokai, right within the boundaries of the United States. Few have ever seen It but It Is known to be there, a walled Paradise, almost as virgin tn primitive peace and plenty as If It were the Garden of Eden re discovered. What la known aa civilization tins L e g e n d D isp ro ved not yet dawned there. Step- have been An old legend that beautlfnl birds taken to prevent It from dawning. Even the birds have not learned the are never line singers has lieen ahaP tered by an eminent ornithologist almost universal lesson of animate who has for the past ten years tieen life— that the struggle for existence conducting hundreds of experiments leads to natural enmity, pitting one with canaries. He haa now, by Jo- species and one tribe In a conflict dlclous mating, produced colored against another. birds which range from copi*r and An Isolated Brien. orange to slate-blue, and they sing The people are In the same blissful sweetly. state of Isolation. They want nothing from outside and no one yet haa shown a desire to get what they have. Im passable walls of rock shut them out from the land. A rift gives them an outlook upon the calm Pacific. Ships pass hot do not atop. Occasionally an airplane biota the blue sky but never lands. a LAST LO N G E R Buffalo and deer are the only S M ADE STRONGER strangers that have ever Invaded thia • G IV E M O R E L IG H T quiet valley since Its known history E N D for 2 genuine H ig h Power first began. The people, so far as they Coleman Mantles. Use them on your can tell, came with Nun, the Ila gasoline preeeure lam p or lantern. L et wallan Noah. Nuu brought very few them prove that they ere made stronger, S Versatility Here, and Also Comfort T abhora a vacuum and even a lost land had to have protection from being found. Borne weak spot In the Halawa walls might have developed but for their recent reinforcement. Mr. and M ra Paul 1. Fagan, of Cali fornia and Hawaii, decided that the valley of Halawa must be left. If pos sible, aa a legacy to the future. They have purchased the 9.000 acres for the purpose of maintaining It In Its prim! tlve state without exploitation. On the table lands above the territory haa erected another harrier agnlnat In vasion by creating a forest reserve of thousands of acres. No Money Used There. One of the remarkable customs that Is being preserved by the tribe In the Halawa valley la to live without money. There wag no currency among the native Hawllana before they were discovered. The cynic If not the econ omist may see In this fact alone a sufficient reason for preserving even a small [»art of the strange domain In Its original state. Peace, plenty and contentment are the unique characteristics of Halawa, almost mythical In Its contrast to even the remotest parts of the known world. There are no pIcLlc grounds In these Elysian fields. It Is a place to be spoken of with awe and wonder, not to be visited. The title may change hands but pos session has so far remained with the little handful of aborigines who still vaguely l»elleve that the heavens and the waters and the earth were created for the sustenance of mankind, with out benefit of deed or abstract of title. Ita lia n C ity Designed fo r A v ia tio n “ C en ter” Italy la building a new city— Gol donis. Recently. U ttorla, Sabaudl. The lesson committee designated Martha as a home-maker. That she was a home-maker la to be conceded, but to view this lesson only In that light Is to miss Its vital point, for Christ's teachings here are equally ap propriate to male and female. In the home, office, shop, schoolroom, farm, etc. I. Jesus Revealing to M artha Her Supreme Need (Luke 10:38-42). 1. Jesus welcomed Into her home (V. 38) . Though Jesus had no borne of bis own. he could come Into thia home at any time and throw off the re straints Incident to public ministry. What a blessed thing tt would be If all homes were open to receive Jesus. 2. Mary sitting at Jesus' feet (▼. 39) . While this was Martha's borne, Mary seemed to have lived with her. Mary had a peculiar spiritual Insight which prompted her to sit at Jesus' feet and listen to his words. The real place to hear Jesus' words la "at his feet." Let no one Imagine that Mary did not render any service, for the lit tie word “also” Indicates that she had been serving with Martha. 3. Martha's complaint (v. 40). She was so bent on providing a good meal for Jeans that she was on the verge of distraction. Her many assumed duties had so got on her nerves that she not only found fault with Mary, but even censored Jesua for allowing Mary to alt at his feet while dinner was being finished. She even assumed the authority to command Jeans to send Mary back to help her. The sure way to serve without distraction la to first alt at Jesus' feet and listen to his words. 4. Jesus' reply (vv. 41, 42). a. He rebuked Martha (v. 41). Thia rebuke he administered most tenderly, for he knew that Martha loved him sincerely, "'hose who are supremely occupied who Jesua are anxious for nothing (Phil. 4:0). b. He defended Mary (v . 42). In this defense he declared that there was but one thing needful and that Mary had chosen that good part which conld not be taken from her. Those who choose this good part cannot be robbed of It by friends, foes, or circumstances. Pontlnla and Mussolinia, new towns which were built as rural centers, ap peared In the news headlines. Now Uoldonlu, named In honor of A'es sandro Guldonl. one of Italy's most famous pilots, who was killed I d an airplane disaster In 1928, basks In the spotlight of Italy's clty-bulldlng pro gram. Guldonla Is only 10 miles from Home, says a bulletin from the Wash Ington headquarters of the National Geographic society. Aviation caused Its construction, and according to plan, aviation will dominate Its Industries. It will. In fact, be a giant aviation laboratory manned hy scientists and laymen whose first Interest Is research and experimentation In aviation. No airplanes or airplane motora wl’ l be built there, but In Its laboratories will be found the most modern equip mein for making all sorts of expert Spearing Fish. ments on model airplanes. One part animals «adept the song birds. The of the "laboratory” will be devoted en buffalo and deer have been Introduced tirely to research on flying in the since Captain Cook discovered the stratosphere. When the city Is completed, officials Islands. The hunter has not followed them and employees will live In comfortable Into Halawa. It has been too difficult homes and work In a carefully planned and deer have been so abundant In the buildings. There will be churches, a o|ien parts of Molokai that there has city hall, schools, and construction and other shops. Most Interesting, per been no Inducement. Ilalaw a wears the purpie robes of haps, of the completed buildings are a royal domain. Sheer walls, rich In the mysterious looking towers In which varied tones, that extend from blue to model airplanes already are being orange, rise abruptly from the floor, tested. In the Radio pavilion, scientists now festooned richly with loops of swing ing vine nnd plumed with nrboreal experiment with the use of radio In verdure. Over a vertical precipice at aviation. In the three-story building the head of the valley two streams of the Superior Board for Studies and pour their crystal waters, the treble Experiments. Intensive study Is being melody of the singing birds supported made of nlr photography nnd of the many Instruments used In airplanes by the diapason harmony ot thunder in other buildings tests are made or Ing falls. motors, and the speed of hydro Purchased for Preservation. planes. The Aerodynamical galleries The few inniilies of Polynesians are equipped with ventilators workec dwelling here have maintained the by 450 horsepower motors that causs simple customs and habits of their winds of strong velocity to test ths ancestors. They are as unconcerned strength of model airplanes. with the world outside as are the birds nnd animals. They are practically un Chamois Skin aware that they have been "discov Chamois skin Is the soft pliant tenth ered.” The pineapple nnd qugar planter er prepared from the skins of chamoh passed them by In the general invasion (a smnll goat-ilke antelope) ; also fron of the Islands. Their own little Eden sheep and goats The process consist: supplies all their wants. All that Is of frizzing the skin by rubbing wltt necessary to their happiness Is that pumice, and working oil Into It to tak< the place of the astringent ordinarli) they he left alono. t 'Ii-Iilz a tio n however, like nnture. used In tanning. II. A Revelation of Christ's Love (John 11.1-36). 1. The sickness of Lazarus (vv. L 2 ). Even those who are In close fellow ship with the Lord are not immune from sickness. Sorrow comes even to the homes where Jesus Is loved. 2. Martha and Mary send for Jesus (v. 3). Because they had come to know Jesus as more than a mere man they Instinctively turned to him when this shadow fell across their home. 3. Jesus' strange delay ( w . 4-6). They sent for Jesus because he loved Inizarus. They said, “He whom thou Invest Is sick." Jesus abode In the same place because he loved luizarus and his sisters (v. 5). This mystery Is to be explained by the fact that Jesus was divine and knew all things. 4. Jesns goes to the Bethany home (vv. 7-17). His mission In going Into this home was twofold; to minister to the sisters and brother and to strengthen the faith of the disciples (vv. 11-15). 5. Jesus teaching Martha (vv. 18-27). As he was nearing the village, Martha met him with a complaint because of his delay. He Ignored her complaint and taught her concerning the resur rection and the life. a. “Thy brother shall rise again” (v. 23). He is saying these words to ev ery sorrowing sister, brother, wife, husband, child, and parent b. "1 am the resurrection, and the life” ( w . 25. 26). He Is the source of life, and all who are Joined to him by a living faith are In such vital fellow ship as to be unaffected by bodily change. 6. Jesus weeping with Mary (vv. 28-35). In response to the Master's call Mary fell at his fee*, uttering the same words used by Martha, hut, no doubt. In a different tone of voice and attitude. Her words were responded to with tears. “Jesus w ept” I I I . Jesua Raising Lazarus ( w . 38- 44). His great sympathy now expressed Itself In supernatural power. Sym pathy would be valueless without this connection with divine power. 2240 No one has ever designed any- *hing to equal the chic and comfort if the “ Wrap-around” for efficient performance of household duties And in our crowded lives today. Effi ciency plays an Important part. Per haps that’s why a bouse frock that could “go to market" to prove Its versatility has been conceived. Don’t chose big square buttons conform beautifully with the unique cut of the front?—and Joys of Joys, the wrap la deep enough to keep from -topping out at the wrong time. Con fidentially. freedom Isn't the only virtue of those sleeves— they're so easy to make. Pattern 2240 la available In sizes 14. 16. 18, 20, 32. 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 xnd 44. Size 16 takes 4 yards 36 nch fabric. Illustrated step-by-step tewing Instructions Included. Send F IF T E E N CENTS <l5c) In coins or stamps (coins preferred) 'or this pattern. W rite plainly name, lddress and style number. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE. Address orders io Sewing Circle Pattern Department 243 West Seven teenth street. New York. N O T S E E N A G A IN “What a lot of friends we lose through their jorcowing money from us.” “Yes. it's touch and go with most if them."—Calgary Herald. H e re 's th e D o o r! Mrs. Smith (showing portrait of tierself in her mother's arms)—This is bow I looked twenty years ago. Guest— Wonderful I And who is the baby on yonr arm?— Philadel phia Evening Bulletin. That’s Too Vague Heard in the Tube— How old should you say she is? “Oh somewhere In the middle tur tles ¡“— London Everybody’s Weekly.