1 OUR MAGAZINE r 'J SECTION TH E LOST BUTTON Dy JAM ES F D W Y E R Interesting Features for the Entire Family by S h a n S to ry P u b v V ) The sport fascinated him V\ to it n. discovered the melai disk tic spun i up and again started in pursuit i n. leaden hours rolled I'.v slowly, hut tin game continued t.llflllut, hless.nl th* button, lie begun to feci a love loi It He called to It »h en it hbl troni hit- lu the cracks helween th* cold .ion, . and he cried hysterically over II «hou he discovered II after a loug search. |i seemed alive. It became a companion to him In that horrible black vault Ini. »h ieb not ou* tlugle ray of Ughi cam. (o pierce th* darkness It was on Ih* «vvulng of the sixth day that Nemesia clinched with (ill filian The prisoner had. op to that moment, thrown the button up a thou sand time* and found It on caci oc<ii slon hy laboriously searching on n..i, •• and knees, ltut on the evening of tin sixth day a peculiar Incident hupp.-i.ed M ARKET PORTLAND PRODUCE j I ! I ! | VAUDEVILLE PHOTO PLAYS H M 2 ME P o rtla n d , O re g o n . Cimpl.lt Citing i Saturday Aduli*, W erk d s j Matinee AX'. Kvetting«, Il&o I « jii I iiwu « 1 tu 11 p tit OtiUlrvtt 10 t'vtiU «II tint»« Better Franklin Service— Storage and General Repairing Portland, Ore OMEBODY has defined crime as ItKsMkJkkwy* « 70 » 'th e momentary victory of a I ANDERSON & RICE. 404 litu i Htivari «I Ninth hereditary crawug o\»r common sense.” In the case of the two j tillfillans, the saute craving maultest Pepsin Production. CUT HüWFIS I KLOKAL DESIGNS cd Itstlf ln euch man at the same mo | The bureau of animal industry says U U r h « » r « n F W r ls lA . I f f U m rri— m » t ment. 2 hl* was peculiar. The de By D O U G LAS M A LLO C H * that pepsin Is procurisi lu lite fe llo » sire came upon each o f the brother* . *********************** to possess two blooded horses belong T h « i>rLflotu>r t h r v w tlu » b u t t o n u p ma manner young pigs uro . tukidi W e S p « c l « U x « In and cunftucd for several days, then, ing to a neighbor, and common sense \ J I7 i: ARE so careful of our speech I n t o t h « blsvknrs». h u i U «SUI noi • u n i r after being alarvod, they are killed * * When strangers listed, teat we » a s routed In the struggle to suppress down légalo. HUek Palli. Wadl. Mofea. the craving curarely, » e would find that most of V IA L S O F H A T E GtlfllUn waited * lth aching car« to and thè «tomuch» rstnoved. The idi* say The Gltfltlans got the horse« and. hour th« tlnkt« of th« metal on the m g« of tlu» «tomuch« are «cruped ami Ttllxw, l avvìi k Oiry** the sorrows and upheavals which Some word unkind. Our tips we Incidentally, the sheriff got the Gli- «ton«, but h# heard uv» sound. The thè poplin eitructed from thè mutoii» (gip* Rasi. Casi Stani. A MONO the many poisonous thing» gnaw away our peace and happiness, teach * * \>hloh w# humans are pmn» to are directly traceable to thla common T o guard themselves hy night and ftllans. A stern Judge conducted the button didn't fall, and tlu* alien re final meinbraite by thè use of a «alt «olii 1 Han* Hur Judicial inquiry and, unable to see tilled tit« cell aa It« etm»d llvt« iting rarry about us. and uncork with more scourge. day. flou It I» then purifltwl and tr«*ut«’«l Win. I m . St.iy.J. « 1 ms a X M CrU» IM In all grades o f society, among ail For fear some careless, thoughtless that the brothers «e r e victims of s hurt hint. 11« clenched Ida teeth to ar loss frequency, are the diminutive craving handed down from a horse- •trangl« a «cream of terror Hint fear in a vacuum people«, hate Is ever seeklDg new vic rials of hate. »o rd P ortland H io i a W ool C o . tim « Hidden In the heart, these banes puttied to hi« lit»«. W lint « n t wrong? May by the passing throng he beard loving- ancestor, he sent them to En How She Kn«w. lota penitentiary for seven years. i m N N « i « M l ««ava, p s a v u a a m n m It lifts up its flattened head like a ire brought forth when the heart T h « prisoner'« trend ling knee» guv* Tlu* forni hiinhand wua dre««ed ami This vvss unfortunate. The younger « a y under hint anti lie sank t« th# heats a little faster than Is Its wont deadly anake and shows Its frightful But with our own 1—wife, brother, Itraiw -a Al I' m a I r II a I J r I m Gtlllllan was consumptive, and En- »a ititi« tor hi« wlfe. ile «topp«»d par* j friend. under the pressure of some Imaginary fangs at every opportunity, spitting . door tils hand« tnov«d oul Ini Or husband, sister, mother, sire— lo ta « Little Hell was not uti Ideal dsrkn««« nnd commenced to feel the Ina back ami forili long etiough lo Iti wrong. 10 be scattered broadcast, venom and striking from unexpected three month» ufter „tone flooring, but every nerve » » quirv ' l'h nty of tini«* And Just j julte regardless o f »h e re they may pi it ecs »1th the swlftucsg of a rattler. Words that old friendship nisy offend. health retort. That burn the heart of love like •«ntent's th« boy v m *eut to the Jail | tliut fall or whom they may Injure. Character quails before Its terrlhls how do voti know we bave pieniy of W H Y Experiment! hospital, and became firmly Imbued , , u • , 't v#ry .h e n he tifiler* III« wlfe caltuly applled Ih « 1 fire . I f we could measure the truth sc- h is « r y 0|h„ Y s WTA In I»* «*• «•-tiMil |»rAs II«« lit l ’« x lU n d M Y««TA with the feeling that he would uot re hail toosed up th« button he had heurd Ifhmes ir e darkened and sorrowed We sow like thistles ev'r)where. powder and an«were«l: **Of courso we 1 ■ I I “ • 4 ..... H u i s i | « t u iliilit« in rlx«« cover hl» health. The sentence hud It fall diatlnctly, hut lie « » * certain i IB liuxti. a I*W tMsv.ialtfta I M hurflla A*vl All hy the plague It carries through the And kill life's roses with the tare. bave A « to how I know. (h a i'« «Itti . k iw a w If k l |i >uu •mashed up th« lust punie of vitality jjm WM9 not the «tlgliti «I »«»und hack door, to find Its way to the drsw lit* uivlN l In U a ta u fk pie Voti haveti't start ed to «wenr yet, I Yet how Important words o f ours that was holding the fort against the <n. r ,,l# 8|UI< |1# wuUld ing room and the bedchamber. B rriltlin g , D . C. T o those who love us 1—ev'ry disease, and th « prisoner wus aluking >€>rvh. bave youT** Some one has uncorked a vtal of «1« l'r>«.!«»•> Hkitf p * x t)l phrase rapidly. S»vn flit« I' ain I hate when blaring bugles call to war The hot hand« crept over the »tone« ; Makes life's hard highway bloom with Now. prisoner* In jail hospital* re eagerly, feverishly. Th* finger* »o rb ed , Destroying A n ts and nations are turned from their “ Great pleasures are flower* celve no tobacco. Whether the prison j madly, but th* bar* floor mocked tlielr j The use of carbon disulphide Is peaceful pursuits to face the killing much less frequent than Or drifts the snow across their C r«o lN » Not Colortd medico believes that th# brand sup search. There »# # no button Again n-oommend'-d to destroy ant« I’ our guns: some on# has uncorked a vial —, great pains." _ w ays; (died to the numbered Inmate. Is s and again the prisoner searched a little of the disulphide Into the open of hate and ruined the chaste name of t’ reole I« tht* tinme given to people We make their summer, make their compound that can uly he safety con Through th* cold hour* o f the night hlll*. and then . lose them born ami nuturulUetl !u tlu* W e«t tu HE man »h o uttered this expre* a lovely maiden. spring. sutued hy the phyaleally atroug Is not erawled backward aud fnr»arvl tUI u|, All along the pathway o f life, hate Blon was a philosopher, whose T h e vapor» from tlu* dlnulpliide UU’ » or the tropical countries of Am«*r Their winter, autumn—everything 1 known, hut the weekly supply allowed , Joining tetween thee# tollihstolli*• philosophy U marked by the rather leaves nothing hut sohs and team, I p«*netrate alt tlu* chamber« and kill lea hut of Kuroiteati iu«ualty Krem h to a prisoner on the “ works Is Itu- i 0f hope seemed familiar to Ids Idlnd ereped d oorw ay« curtained window« serious view of life which is to bei | The passing stranger may not hear. | larvae a» well a» nilults, If enough ha« J or Spanish i origin, a« ill«t ingui«tu'«l crated minds and bleeding heart« Or stranger bearing may not heed mediately cut off If he Is taken to the fingers But there > u nothing on the noted In the phrsse quoted above. door. The button hail net fallen after ..... u* '''1 lrv*tm ent often does front th « offsprtBB of n ls it i hlflod« A fter all the human emotions have Hut when your word cuts some one hospital. The dearth of tobacco * f L ife to David Hume was a sober «u« h « « mulatlot'« ami tiuutlnHin«. from fected the consumptive Ullflllan. He j |,e had Jerked It Into the blackness' lh,> »o rk thing— a thing to be taien with serf !>een mustered to the front, carefully near utlfillan tHed to think. Why : .1 It tiegrin*« ami from uhorigiue«. Tlu* ousoess and regarded as a stepping weighed and Inspected. It will be For endless days some heart may craved a ''chew.” and In distress lie ac-qualuted the brother of hla craving ' no, returned? he asked Idmself. What Surely Out of Luck. name ha« no conned loti with the color stone to some future existence »h e re found that hate Is the most treach- bleed— by what Is In Jail parlance known as i,nj happened to It? There » * « m-th "Eunice says «he 1» the unluckle«i one's status would he determined by eroua. the most persistent, dangerous How many know the torture of 'T w j i U g In Shad« bis conduct here, "Great pleasures” and destructive. The knife that s ta b « tn hands thoy a "stiff.” With a pin the sick man I |n| above hlru but hare walls, and girl In the world." “ What's the mat scratched h!« want« on th« lo o «« leaf I y «t— . j l Where « « It? Again nnd I ter now?*' “ She was Just about to When» w win If we suspect that we have a via] of love were scarce In his life and not nearly What Is tin* hottest day on rtn'ord* of a hymn book, nn ! In i!u«.tliue the MfNln he whI«i*er«Nl the queathm .»f the so frequent as “ great pains.” In fact, hate hidden in the pockets o f our marry a traveling man when he was it is safe to say that great pleasures heart« or beneath our tongue« let ua Love gives no license, friendship right. pitiful note, after |>«*»!ng through the thick black pafl that «eeined to heave - atlmltted to tlu* firm und now he will T F llaye«. well known B«m«b«*r, T o hurt because they love us so hand« o f a ik**en priw.ner», reached 1 around him. 11« «»b ed It In a louder say» that during the sututn«*r of 1917. were viewed askance by nun of the proceed without another moment's de the healthy brather. \%bo a a» learning ton# I j e » « reamed It. Then »mue* t»e at hum«* all th** time.“ New York at a p ia «« «ailed Samarra in kh'oopo- school of David Huiue, who retained lay to find It and fling It away, so that But greater duty, more delight. To guard from wounds the ones we to manufacture bo*>t» lu the prison thing like a laugh came fr**i;s **re c«*r j Globe. tumlu. the thermometer In a railway the Idea of the Puritans— that pleasure we may preserve our good name, the know— workshop. ; ner of that brain deetroving pit of was an intention o f the Devil and most tranquility o f our home and our coun station r»*a« bed I3S degrees This was Police Magistrate Poet. Kind not to travelers alone. try and perhaps the salvation o f our The elder Ollflllan had deep pool« horror, and UllAlUn was (»ante stricken be Indulged seldom. In the sbadì* He »a y » the tempera soul« But In our house, and to our own. of sentiment beneath a rough exterior. 1 luisglnatton. contrary to the opiuiou Henry Jumcs !*>*• who was appoint Hume Is best known as a historian « 2 b y M eC Tur« N A W «p«p«r 9y n d lr « t« .> i f i b y M c C lttr* N » « i |» p « r S y n d ic a te . I Furthermore, he took no heed t*f con , t»f scientific experts, lies In f?»e «tom t-d poet laureate of FtiKl.ind In 1790, ture remained around 13* degrees for and philosopher. Ills best known sequence». He pictured the sick | aeh, and the bread and water diet that became a London police magistrate a fortnight. works are an “ Inquiry Concerning the brother, waiting tohaccole«« In th« 1 GUflllun had b«*vn receiving a « « not two years later. Ills most pretentious Principles of Morals.” and a “ History Good Work Com pl«t«d. dreary hospital, and he took a chance «ufllclentljr weighty to keep It d » » n work 1» an epic |H>etn entitled “ Al of England.” the first written in a to supply him. The chance a a« a The prisoner began to see things I he philosophic vein while the latter U fred.“ which lie published In 1*01. “ Hmthnh Johnson/* «ahi Baraon risky one. While passing the tarred thick nave« of cur»e encrusted dark purely historic. In the year 17N4 Hume White, "A h ’d lak to git you to cunie hospital yard he dexterously Jerked \ ness welled up frotu the corners and published the first part of his “ His Underground City. to ih u '«h " "W hy, parson." eid alm ed small cube of tobacco to the white- smothered him. lnvluible hands tory o f England.” hut It was not untU An underground city of :I0 non Inhab Mr. Johnson, shocked, “ dry alti* no faced brother, who hspi*ened to be grusped his throat and «trungled him 1761 that he completed It. Ills "Inquiry walking up and down Inside, and he i f « kicked at the d«M»r leading Into the itants. constructed uuder the sands of need fo' in«* to «'oiui* to chu’cti, Y o'all Into the Principles o f Morals’' was breathed a tremendous sigh o f relief * dnrk corridor opening tut•» the main the Sahara desert, not far from the don** converted tn«* la»' Angus * " I*o» written and published In the year 1752. when he l*ecnm« certain that the war* ! wing, but Warder Tomlinson of the Mediterranean const, was recently vis Angel«'» Tittles. The publication o f the "History of der In charge of the »quad had n<*t . night watch was slightly deaf und did lt«d by a Swiss traveler. It lie« u few England* brought considerable fume to noticed the action. The elder Gilfll- n*»t hear him. He raced round ihe cell hundred feet below tlf»* desert level. Heavy Sarcaim. its author and he wag well rewarded !an was not afraid of any punishment with T e r r o r gr a aping, gibbering T er financially for his work. Ia addition A publisher otic« made some altera chat might fall upon himself; he was ror--at bit heels, and the stone \ault Bleaching Beetwas. to the royalties he received from the afraid le*»t the morsel of tobacco would echoed to his wild »cream« of agony. tlon» In a manuscript submitted by publication of the hook, he received a Beeswax may be bleached hy run he taken away from the sick youth When Warder Dun worth opened the Arteinu« Ward Ward made his r«* pension from the government because who craved the delicacy. door on the morning of the seventh nlng In thin ribbon« through a ,l,n sentiment va ry plain. "T h e n«*xt Issik o f the reputation It made for him. But Nemesis was galloping on the day to acquaint GlIflllMn of the fact thine and ullowltig it to remain in I write," he wrote, "1 am going to Hume was born April 26. 1711. reck heel» of the two GUfillans. Warder that hla term In dark cell w «« over, the sunlight. Som«* Iteenwax blenches get you to writ«»." oning the years by fhe old style calen Hulstrode, looking down frmu hla the hands of Terror had completed more readily thun others It will take dar then in vogue. In 17-11 he became perch on the south tower, saw the their work. The prUouer's face w « i several weeks to blench It. secretary to General St. Clair and trav Take Name From Farm. movement and Buistrode uaa a con lettered beyond recognition where lie eled with him to the courts o f Vienna In Norway aud Sw«Hb-n many hlr«'«J scientious officer. F h e minutes after, hud dashed again«! the walls In hla Religious Diasentienta. and Turin on behalf o f the British gov men and girl*, and sotnetlmrM even th«* the younger brother was stripped of mad !*«• «, und he shriek««! wildly when ernment. In this capacity he procured R«*«*u»anta, a term used under the son or «luugtHer of the farmer, take the miserable gift and the giver wus the warder attempted to drug him Into much valuable material which was dragged before the chief warder and the light. p«'nal laws o f Knglnnd, were those the nnme of the farm they live on later used in writing his history He sentenced to sev**n days' dark cell for Eleven years afterward, when an persons who refused or neglect«*«! to died In Edinburgh, Scotland. th<- year a breach of prison discipline. In Jail, enlightened prison controller did away attend the divine ««•rvl«** on Sundays Dust a nd T e m p e ra tu re . that the American iK-elaratlon o f In- charity Is a virtue that Is promptly with the durk cells, the muton«, teur or holidays in the established church dei>endence was signed.— Wayne D Flouting Uunt a «'ill to high nltitud«'» smothered when th « powers that be Ing down th« black vault at K uM s McMurray. or to worship according to its forms. by volcanic ac|l«»u Intercepts so much become a w ar« of Its existence. found a Jacket button aecurely fas fcy G « o r t * M a t t h r w A J u rr.a) of the sun'» heat that the earth’s t«*m It was the eider GUflllan's first In tened In u thick cobweb near the cell Honeybee on the Job. troduction to the dark cell. When he ing of the cell. But In the criminal perulure I h redacts! for laflg periods A honeybee spends more time In the was pushed into the wlndowlesa cham wurd of Knlota In «mu* asylum a prU following sever«» eruptions. hivo than sh«* does outside and makes oner still spends hi» days und nights ber, the horrible, Intense, suffocating only about thirty two honey hunting darkness closed In upon him like a hunting for that button. Undoubtedly. «mothering pall. Blind and stupefied, (rips in her lifetime. Science H«*rvl«e. Little Brother (in audible whisper) F l o w e r in the cran nied wall he groped his way around the hare Com p re hen sive 1 plu- k you out o f the crannies. Wouldn't It b«* more exciting, auntie, walls, the horror pier« ing him through Pencil’a Composition. An actress who wus compiling her j 1 hold you her«, ro o : and all in my if they christen«»! babies like they do und through like an Icy sword. After* autobiography sprinkled It plentifully hand. The first bad pencil was mude in ships, by « racking them over the nos«* L i t t l e flower— but I f 1 could understand ward he fluiur hluigeff on the atone phntogruphs which hud little tn W h a t you are, root and all, and a l l In floor and lay like a tnan »tunned by d„ with the story. Among them was t Kt.Klat».l I*.the KlUabcpinn ,-rii. hut us with n bollle? all, one o f the Matterhorn. » matter o f fuct. It wus not a lead I ahould know w ha t God and man la. pineapple. Fry by spoonfuls In deep ful of whipped cream. Then add fine terrific blow. fat. ly chopped pineapple und candied — Tennyson. Some hours later he thought o f the There You H s v « It. “ Why this?” asked the prospective pencil ut all. hut a graphite pencil cherries; freeze as usual. button. A medical student, who had publisher. > «u<*h ns w<* writ«* with tcxlny, I asked If any of the children In my Pineapple With Cheese. L U S C IO U S P I N E A P P L E once undergone a term of Imprison "A s you see. I have luheleri It T h « class could t*'ll what ti vac uum Is, und Blare a slice o f pln«*apble in the Pineapple Cake. ment at Enlota, had promulgated a Mstterhorti, which I one« partly Sudden Change Fatal. one little fellow aQ»w«r«»d: "It's a center o f head lettuce, put a ball of Make nn angel food baked In n theory t,y which the mental agony pro climbed.* ** 'p iN E A P F L K S like other fruits are It«*ep- m «* u Hobos, such as the r«‘U place where the ujr isn’t, and nothing * never better than when served cream cheese In the cavity o f the pine sheet. Cut and put together In layers, duced by dark-cell treatment could he •*I see. And while we sre about if snupper. when they i»r« brought up els«* Is." Chicago Tribune. and eaten fresh. But we are glud to apple fdlce, sprinkle well with French using a filling o f whipped cream considerably relieved. He advised all we’ll Just run In on«» nnd label It sweetened nnd flavored with shredded prisoner friends who might vlalt “ the •The earth, where ull this took place.* * from rr«*nt depths too quickly burnt, have a few cons during the season dressing and rlced egg yolk. pineapple well drained, added to the doghole" to toss a button Into the air, as the sudden change Is too great for Broke All Windows. when they are not In the market to cream. Pineapple Dessert. the capacity of tludr uir bladders. and while away the time by searching P a in f u l P o p u la r it y help out In the menu-planning. Immediately after being s«*rve«l with Arrange on Individual plates a slice fur It on hands and knee* In the dark A.» a salad there I» nothing more de Mrs. Langtry, the former actress, d ivorc« papers, Ikiuglns Fleet Gold In the ness. The student understood the who has been publishing her memoirs licious than crisp hearts of lettuce of pineapple for each serving Fights for Her Dog. ¡\ u ju ~ t vctifL smith, nn flncflon«*er of London, went • enter of each slice place o cone of value o f little things, nnd he recog. whs once the Idol o f London »orlefy. with the Juicy diced fruit sprinkled (<25. 1S2S. WAlterB N « w » n p « r Union ) A woman walking with her dog In ------------ o ------------ nixed the fact that u continuous limit So Intense wus the excitement »he lla rb sib n . Knglund. saw It run over to Ills mother in law's house and brok<* over it dressed with a gt**j French I e cream and sprinkle with chopped nuts. for a mlhSlng button would drag the nrouiied that on one occasion u girl and kilb d by a motor hu*. Screaming, all the windows lu It wli«‘U h«* was re or mayonnaise dressing. fused admission. mind away from the black abyss of neiited In Hyde park, being mintjtkrn she pulled the driver from the »«'at Frozen Pudding. Pineapple Fritters. Insanity. for her, was so badly hurt by the at Make a custurd o f h pint o f milk, i (illfillan. groping blindly In the dark tentions of the crowd that »be wus and gave him a brut ing. Then nob Prepare a fritter butter, using one Day and Night Air. hing, sh«» fell down In the street by «•upful o f flour, one half tea spoonful three egg yolks, a cupful o f nugar and ness, remembered the advice. Ilo taken unconscious to the hospital. There |a very little difference In th. the «log’s body. of baking powder, a pinch o f «alt, two { <i pinch of e a lt; strain, add a ten- ripped a button from bis striped Jacket purity o f Ihe sir. except that there Is well beaten eggs, one-half cupful of ipoonful o f vanilla and almond ex and tossed It Into the thick air. 1.In M a k in g a L o n g E vening less wind ut night than In III« day. sugar and one-half cupful o f milk. tract mixed, then fold In the whites of toning Intently he heard It fall In a Old Alabama Church. W ife— Next time you spend an pv«*- and also lesa traffic, und therefore Beat well, add one cupful of shredded ■ the eggs beaten until stiff, and a cup* far-away corner of the cell, and on nlng at the club please let me know Iluhnmu Baptist church, in Enat hands and knees he started to aearcb If I am to keep breakfast waiting lor Bake, lllrmlngltam, claims (o he the less stirring up of the dust anil dirt ++++****************+******************************** for It. you.— Klods Hans (Oopenhagen). oldest In Alabama with a history hack of the alrert*. S OUR OWN OMETHING TO THINK F. A . W A LK ER S' ABOUT L lu d 1DHO SAID I T 2 ¡ S C H O O L D A IjS fl 2 ITolhcrjCoolvBook 'HE YOUNG LADY ACROSS THE WAY of It of 106 years. li Your Last Name T , _ „ 4* 4* *5* *5» -fc 4» 4* •>■$*« 4* + ❖ <• •> « 4* •> ♦<* Pleasant for Brides. In Spulit It I h the custom for the Canned Peaches In Demand. Canned pearlies from the United bridegroom to present his brille with The first tahles of beautiful design design until It was no more than an States are shipped to 10U different her wedding gown and as many oth*r and real tiscfulneas were thuae made Imitation o f the aaerlflrlal altar from dresses us his means allow. countries. by the Grecian craftsmen, fur they which It originally evolved ninny bun are mentioned many Him-. In the writ dreds o f year, before. This In.omnlou. Age. Scenic Food. ing. of Snphocle. and other Hellenic Ht lente says that sleeping will some Still, If you slow down to enjoy the men o f letter*. W i l l F o u n d in O ld S h o t scenery, pussing curs will makn you clay lie unnecessary. I f * almost Im During the reign o f the pharaoh, Frank t'alto of I’ ltt.hurgh was possible now. Dayton News. the table became Increasingly popular eat It. Quincy Whig Journal. wealthy. When he died several years and It. magnificence >*f design and • go relative* searched for hi* will Ir umamenfntlon developed erinrmim.ly. Jewish Wedding Custom. There are 107 aperies nnd Huhspcelc. vain. Recently It was found In the We know that from the time when The breaking of glass Is one of the of bird* found In Klurtdu. — Science »ho# o f a dead son that he had trea. the history o f Borne was set down by ured characteristic features of n Jewish R g„ve gKXSSI t,, |i!s wife ' If Service. authentic historians the table was a wedding. I would die without explaining this rerogrilxed pier* of furniture In the paper to you, I hope our beloved aon Vou W ant a Good Position palaces o f the t'aesara and of their In heaven will help you find It,” It V e ry well— T e k e the A n r * iin t .a c y s n 4 V illage. Without Street.. henchmen. When the Itoinan empire Huslnese M anagem ent, P r iv e t » g»c r# ta f 1 - read In part. There are no streeta In the villages was conquered hy the Goth* tallies and • I, C s lrn la tn r, C o m .le m e U r , I t M e g i a phle. pe n m a n e h lf. ur ( m w et at T e a eg- of U tile Russia. nearly all other typea o f furniture <re‘ C e u rs* a t M i l l i o n » W o r i h i p L am a disappeared for well over five cen More than a hundred million Chinese turies. The rnrion. thing about t?ie table I. worship Ihe I'anchan lama, the Tibetan that, although, ns has been stated, all living Buddha. This religious leader T h e torero set fluelnoa* f'nfiege of th* Made From Old Carpel« "W ear Lilt* Northw eet w h lrh he# woa .» » r e A ccu ra cy Iron." kind, o f household furniture were for »n s onee a poor hoy of the streets ami A w a rd s and rjold M e d a l, than an y other |>* a I I>ir*H*t w ith Ih»* Mnnufarturpr. Ahaoltite erhool In A m e rica, fiend for our Hllrceae 37 year, ago he was elevated to his gotten after the conquest of the Ro Snttnfiu'tinn C!uArAnt*^w|. in Y o u r M a C a ta log F o u rth Street near M nrrl •«•riul or Writ»* for I ’rir««*. man empire, the tnlde w h s the last present eminence hy rites known uni) P bitlai infl. * O ~ r. iM ir M P tpr WKHTFItN KIM) UOMPAN1C to reappear, and when It’ w a. agalr In the Inner Buddha circles He Is M M If iiion Av«*mio Nor. Port I And. Onfon Mo. 33, P. N. U. brought Into use It had receded la worshiped a. a living god. Greece Given C redit for the M odern T able «4» IS I T S E A T O N ? | S«-atun, Ijorn In 1785, In King William 1 county, Virginia, was one o f the first American Journalists o f JUtlnctlua. HE Seatons sro of Scotch origin, n , wa, „ rou, ln o f ,.atrlcU „ enry It was Henry S.-aton »h o came ,,n,| though he » a s horn too late to from Scoiluni] In 10!*,1 and settled In [>artlr1[mte In the,» Revolution he Gloucester county. Virginia, where he , ho wed himself to'he possessed o f the Diarrled*KJl7.abeth Todd. There Is little kind o f patriotism out o f which our known of hint but from the meager «evolutionary heroes were made, records » e call see that he possessed For many yenrs he lived In Wash the «»»lid characteristic« of thrift, for«- ington, from 1S40 to 18.V). He was sight and godliness that usually dls- founder o f the Unitarian church In tlngulshed Ids countrymen. Washington, and when lie was seven Allhough the Scotch were not so ’ .v nlne years of nge he acted as » numerous In the South ns lu some of i P ir a te In defense o f Washington the Middle state», Henry found fellow vvben It was attacked by the Southern countrymen among his neighbors and | Ynrcea. ' l l i # > o u i i g | m i J> H c r i i s * H i # w u y m ,)* s established a line of S«*nt<»ns that may The meaning of the name casts an be regarded ns one o f the beat of !nier«»stlng light on the early history th# Inium# tm Un l hrlnglng In h . Scotch Southern families. | the family. It Is said that In Scot- | much a . It wu. anil .h# .iippo.#. the government won't have much money One ..f his many descendants was " " “ V * * lv,,n ‘ ° mrn who ua ham] until the next horn] laxue la Augustine, who married Mary Wins- I " V' d 1,1 * ,OWn- or 0 ,own bT the paid off and It get. the actual cash, tun. And their son. W illis « Winston | w «e s n | t© k r M c C la r. N . * n < H I * x i i d l r a t .> Behnke-Walker New F lu ff R u g s