| ’• “ *rts ak-eping heavily. Don’t Let Skin Troubles Spread Crowley awakene«l while the ana "There ain't auy fraction there," tb* was atlll golden, hla joint a aching ex other averred loudly. “We own them Trivial blemishes are sometimes the cruciatingly They had slept four claim*. I told you we had everything first warning of serious skin diseases. Arleta baptist Church hours. He boiled tea on the miners' covered.•“ Neglected sain trouble* grow. Dr, 9:45 a. m. bible School. stove and fried a pan of salt pork, but “You record them fractional" Hobaon’s Eczema Ointment promptly 11 a. tn. Preaching service. was too tired to prepare anything else, “I won’t do It! I'll see you in"— 8:00 p. m. Evening services. ao they drank the warm bacon grease Crowley reached forth suddenly and stops the progress of eczema, heals 7:00 p tn. B. Y. P. U. meeting. of pimples, acne, clear with their tea. strangled him an he sat. He buried stubborn cases 8:00 Thursday Prayer meeting. As Huck strove to arise tils limbs hl* thumb* In hi* th rout, forcing him blotchy, red and scaly skin. The anti Everybody welcome to any and all of rave way weakly so that he fell, and roughly ha< k against it bunk. Further septic qualities of Dr. Hobson's Eczema these service*. it took him ninny moments to recover and further tie crushed him till the Ointment kill the germ ami prevent the W. T. 8, Spriggs, pastor. ! man lay pinioned and writhing on hl* spread of the trouble. For cold sores or their use. "Where's the best chance. pardnerT" i hack. Then lie knelt on him, shaking chapped hands, Dr. Hoboon’a Eczema Millard Avenue Presbyterian Church ami worrying him like a great terrier. they queried of the men on the dump 16 a. tn. Sabbath School. At the flr«t commotion the cripple* Ointment offers prompt relief. At your el), there ain't none very close IL a. tn. Morning worship. Druggist, Me. 1 by. We've got things pretty well cov 7:p. rn. Y. P. 8. C. E. (Continued next week.) ered." 7:45 p. m. Evening worsbip. Linn county will pave 20o miles of UloWM Huit? only FiX Of 7:3h p. rn. Thnreday. midweek eervice. county highways io five yearw. 8 p. tn. ThtirMav, choir practice. A Oil. Vol i t bohl but 1 »iS c!u1 IflH IM' Rev. VYm. H. Amoe, Pae tor. ( hdfdcter In Readinq •UHj, yr ■H wc <■in. -e rot i The You t h * m i rn i ls rAt r» t >1 tn St St. Peter s Catholic Church i than entert tin: It affords the ria 1 Foo ” Mh îqiol: Viii) re< Sunday*: > rii1'n Lal and moral tonic. t'rov 'ey'» Htmken e’en blazed Its »tori. 8 A. tn. Low Ma*». A’ 41 told, contributed L lOUiOa. in. HigbfMaa*. (me clulrn I. 8:30 a. tn. Sunday School. of stories, but they i ■'i for ai.v m.m If i t h good and 12 M. Choii rehearaal. t<»» in Week days: M om at h a. tn. tho I m ast hoime*. They do not tbr STOVEPIPE illuditi' at?" |if lanío nr over the tawdry thio Etc < fl tlw* iithor tronfi ELBOWS Seventh Day Adventist Church Rathler do they depict li re In the Shou'/.iim district now STOVE and FUR 10 a. m. Saturday Sabbath School. eotira the healthful, the »in io I annua I nr lu*vo. ; It til: Ite» six men t<> orgt 11 a. rn. Saturday j>r-a<-iiing. NACE REPAIRING 1 th« tru« life uf tlta greater uber with *r»»tu it icrovp ling group of foothills .1 Wc <> r'.unlz4-d We medi 7:30 p. m.Wednesday. Praver meeting I'm It. If you I thfir ««IvpnturpK>, their cor irtiK. of tera- electc <1 a recor«l<-r. «oHtiiry tfimi We make all kinds of chicken 7:45 p. rn. Sunday preaching. d«ndhitf Mimi if. Nfrcne. terrible In k* don’t like our rules yond er Is the <1! 1 H'rnruPht, tin ir failure* a smwwes. supplies, champion Sanitary pro|M>rt|onM. 1Kvi-n In their fatigue the. vide We've got the U, S government jin 1917 The <Lh irn panion will print 12 Fountains, Grit and Shell Kern Park Christain Church exfbiiowd h !<> back of us Hee!” »«■rial» ami story grouiM beeido Cully 250 Boxes, Dry and Wet Mash Corner 69th St. and 46th Ave. 8. E. Crowley's language lx*cnme purely I single stories ami sketches, »11 for >2.00. ■’IL' m Mount McKinley!" Hoppers and Troughs. 10 a. m. Bible School. •V pj »! Tull <---t wurt on the fnce <*f lo al but the other continued unruf The Forecast for 1917, which we will 11 a. tn. and 7:30 p. tn. preaching ser We will Make Anything You thf poiitlhfiit There’« the creek ’ <• fled vice. send on request, Udis all about the great ^o down, HIM* !" Crowley Indicated i "We knew you all was coming, so Want out of Sheet Metal 6:30 p. ra. Christain Endeavor. wutpr rotinm which ineniiflcrcil uwi we sort of loaded up. If there’s any feature* of the coming volume. 7:30p. tn. Thursday, mid-week prayer GUTTERING and ROOFING By special arrangement new sub through canyon* ami broad reacfn meeting. ground hereal>out that we ain't got Bring in Your Repairing, No Job A cordial welcome to al). W<- fuller It to yonder cron* valle.. blanketed It's purely an oversight. scribers for The Youth’s Companion too Small Rev. G. K. Berry, Pastor. then eiiNt to there." To Buck’s mln 1 There's plenty left farther out can have also McCall’s Magazine fori hl* gesture hi'ludeil a tllite.l realm n« though.” and lie swept them a mocking 1917—both publications for $2.10. A. PEARCE farrenclilng a « a state. gesture Our two-at-one price offer includes: - St. Pauls episcopal Church I Stretched upon the Imre schist, com "Help yourselves and pass up for One block south of Woodmere station. 1. The Youth’s Companion—52 issues mandlng tlie back stretch, they munch more I’ll record 'em " Holy Communion the first Sunday of of 1917. ' isl slices of raw bm-on each month at 8 p. m, No other ser 2. All the remaining issues of 1916. "What's the fee?" vice* that day. Directly out toward the mountain's "Ten dollars apiece." 3. The Companion Home Calendar Every other Sunday the regular ser foot two figure« crawled. The Herald is Only Crowley swore more savagely. for 1917. vices will be aa usual. "There they come!" And Crowley "You done a tine job of hoggin’, didn't Evening Prayer and sermon at 4 p. m. 4. McCall's Magazine—12 fashion led, stumbling, sliding, into the strange $1.00 Per Year Sunday School meets st 3 p. m. B. you? it's >2.30 everywhere else." But numbers of 1917. v alley. Boatwright, 8upt., L. Maffett, See. the recorder of the Skookum district As thia was the south and early side 5. One 15-cent McCall Dress Pat Rev. O. W. Tavlor Rector. it the range they found the bills more , laughed carelessly aud resumed bis tern—your choice from your first num i wind lean. lairren of snow. Water seeped Into “Sorry you ain't pleased. Maybe ber of the magazine—if you send a 2- Lents Evangelical Church the gulches till the creek Ice was worn cent stamp with your selection. you'll learn to like it” Sermon by the Pastor, 11 a. m. and »nd rutted. THE YOUTH’S COMPANION, As they turned away be continued: 7:15 p. m. "This’ll be fierce." the Irishman re Sunday 8chool 9:45 a. m., Albert St. Paul St., Boston, Mass. marked, "if she breaks on us we'll “I dou't mind giving you a bunch, Fankbauser, Superintendent. l-e bung up in the hills and starve I* though. Tackle that big creek about New Subecriptions Received at this Office. Y. P. A. 8:45 p. m. Paul Bradford, tore the creeks lower enough to get five miles down yonder. She prospect President. ed good last fall, but you'll have to go home.*' Prayer meeting Thursday 8 p. m. Small streams freeze solidly to the clean to her head, cause we've got ev A cordial welcome to all. Notice erything below." lot tom. and the spring waters west T. R. Hornschnch, Pastor. oEained through v oid established Notice is hereby given that the part Eight hours later by the guiding SWIFT < CO. ar« bein* quickly downward from the surface. Thus bought by Manufacturers. they found the creek awash, and, fol glare of the northern lights the two nership business heretofore conducted Send a medei or sketches and description of rtvir invention for FREE SEARCH lowing farther. It became necessary to stumbled back into camp, utterly by Harry Julian and Wilburt Julian, as Lents friend’s Church an<l report on patentability. We get pat wade In many places. They came to broken. * Julian Brothen, in tiie town of Lenta, ent« or no fee. Write for our free book 9:45 a. m. Bible School, Clifford of SOU needed inventions. a box canyon where the winter snow They bad followed the stream for Oregon, is this day dissolved by mutual Barker Superintendent. had packed, forming a dam, and, as miles and miles to find it staked by consent of the parties thereto. 11:00 a. m Preaching services. Here 6:26 p. tn. Christian Endeavor. there was no way of avoiding It with the ¡xjwers of attorney of the six. after Harry Julian will run 15c store at Patent Lawyer*. E«t«b lilt. 7:30 p. m. Preaching Service*. out retreating a mile and climbing the Coming to the gulch's head, to be sure, same location. .307 Seveath St, Washington, D. C., 8:00 p. m. Thursday, mid-weak ragged bluff, they flout, lered through they found vacant ground, but refused prayer meeting. their packs aloft, the slushy water arm to elnlm such unpromising territory A cordial welcome to all theee ser pit deep. Then the endless homeward march vice*. "We'd ought 'a' took the ridges.' through the darkness Out of thickets John and Nettie Riley, Pastor*. Buck chattered, language slips forth and through drifts they burst, while phonetically with fatigue. fatigue settled on them like some hor “No! Feller's apt to get lost Drop rid vampire from the darkness. Every Lents Baptist Church into the wrong creek—come out fifty step, being no longer luVoluutary. be miles away." came u separate labor, requiring men Lord’s Day, Bible School 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 11 a. m. "1 bet the others do anyhow," Buck tai concentration. They were half Elmo Heights Sunday School, 2:30 held stublairuly. "It's lots easier go dead tn slumber as they walked, but Ing." their stubtiorn courage and smolder P B” Y. P. U., 6:30 p m. “Wish Sully would, but he’s too wise ing rage at the men who bn<l caused Evening worship, 7:30 p. tu. No such luck for me " A long pause thia drove them on. They suffered si A cordial welcome to these services. (Copied frotn Portland Oregonian.) "I reckon I'll have to kill him liefore lently. because it takes effort to groan, J. M. Nelson, Pastor MONMOUTH. Ore., June 2«.—The Oregon Normal he gets back." Again they relapsed and they hoarded every atom of en school opened thia week . . . students enrolled 785, Into miles of silence. durance. largest on record for state Normal in Oregon .... Crowley's fancy fed on vengeance, Many, many times Ruck rej»eated a Fifth Church ot Christ how to car* for large student body a problem .... hatred livening Ids work worn facul poem. timing bis steps to its rhythm, 800 being crowded into auditorium with seating ca Fifth Church of Christ. Scientist of ties. He nursed carefully the inem rendering it over and over till it wore pacity of 550. Galleries filled with extra chairs in Portland, Ore. Myrtle Park Hall, <>r.v of their quarrel, for It bel|>ed him a rut through Ills brain, his eyes fixed aisles. More than 150 students seated on platform. Myrtle Park. travel und took hla mind from the ag dully upon the glaring tires above the New boarding houses completed, additions to room Services Sunday 11 a. m. ing houses built and tents used. One hundred girls ony of movement and this aching sleep hilltops. For years a faintness came Sunday School 9:30 and 11 a. m. sleep on upper floor of school. hunger. Wednesday evening testimonial meet ' over him with the memory of these The official school report gives 150 grade pupils ing 8 p. m. The feet of both men felt like fear lines: In Monmouth, for teacher practice. ful. shapeless masses. Their packs Then dark they lie. and stark they Ila Rookery, dune and floe. leaned backward sullenly, chafing raw Read what those you have elected to handle the Lents M. t. Church shoulder sores, and always the raven And the northern lights came down o' nights to dance with the houseless affairs of your state and who are thoroughly informed ous nioHqultoes stung and stung and Sunday 8chool 9:45. a. m. snow. regarding school conditions in Oregon have to say whined and whined. Preaching 11:00 a. m. Reaching the cabin, they found an Bible Study Class, 5:30 p. m. At an exclamation the leader turned. army of men sleeping heavily upon concerning measure 308 on the ballot at the coming Epworth League 6:30 p, m. Mlles back, silhouetted far above on the wet moss. Among them was the election: Preachibg 7:30 p. m. the comb of the ridge, they descried great form of Knute, but nowhere did Prayer meeting Thursday evening at two tiny figures. By James Wlthycombe, Governor of Oregon: 7:30. F. M. Jasper, pastor. they spy Sully. “Oregon is unquestionably in need of more normal "That's what we'd ought 'a' done. Residence 5703 8Jrd St. With much effort they tore off the school work and Pendleton is the logical place for a They'll beat us in." school of this class in Eastern Oregon.” constricting boots and, using them for "No, they won't. They'll have to pillows, sank into a painful lethargy. By J. A. Churchill, Stats Superintendent of Public camp tonight or get lost, while we can Instruction: Awakened early by the others, they Laurelwood M. E. Church "I trust that th* voter* of the State will assist 1* keep goln'. Wo can't go wrong down took their stiffly frozen footgear be raisins th* standard ot our schools by establishing a 9:45 a. m. Sunday school. here, can’t do no more than drown." State Normal School at Pendleton.’ neath the blankets to thaw against 11:00 a. m. preaching. Buck groaned at the thought of the their warm bodies, but their feet were By P. L. Campbell, President of the University of 12:30 a. m. class meeting. night hours. He couldn't stand it; swollen to double size, and every joint Oregon: 6:30 p. m. Epworth League. "At least on* additional Normal School la urfeatly that was all. Enough is enough of had ossified rheumatlcally. 7:30 p. tn. preaching. seeded In Oregon " anything, nnd lie had gone the limit. 8:00 p. m. Thursday evening, prayer Eventually they hobbled about, pre By W. J. Karr, Praaldant of tho Oregon Agricultural Just one more mile aud he would paring the first square menl since the service. Cellop*: quit. Yet he did not. Dr. C. R. Carlos, pastor. "Sine* th* people ot P*ndl*toa ar* Initiating a meaaure start—two days and three nights. for th* e*tabll*hm*at of a Normal School nt that place. All through that endless phantom Still they saw no Sully, though Crow It will give me pleasure to support this measure." night they floundered, Incaaed In frees. ley's eyes darted careful inquiry among By J. H. Ackerman, Preaidant Oregon Normal S*h*el, Ing garments, numb and heavy with Geruidu Evangeflcal Reformed ’Church at Monmouth: the horde of atampeders which moved sleep, but morning found them at th« “ A careful analyst* of th* situation will coavtnee nap Corner Woodstock Ave., and 87th .St. about the cabin. latter he seemed bent Me that Oregon seed* a Normal School la Eastern Ore banks of the main stream. Rev. W. G. Lienkaemper, pastor. gon and Pendleton nil* all th* government requlreoiaata." on some hidden design, ao they crawl "You look like h—1!" said Ruck, Sunday School 10 a. m. By th* County School Superintendent* of Oregon: ed out of sight of the camp; then, Morning Worship, 11 a. m. laughing weakly. Hla mirth relaxed commencing at the upper stake of dis "Reoolved. that It 1* the ***** of th* Caoaty Scheol Superintendent* of the State *f Oregon. In eooventloa Y. P. 8. at 7:30 p. m. his nerves suddenly till he giggled and covery, he stepped off tb* claims from assembled. that the beat tatereste of the echoole ot the German School and Catechetical Claoa hiccoughed hysterically. Nor could he State demaa* tacreoaad faetUUo* fee the tralaiag e< post to post Saturday 10 a. m. teacher*, and that w*. therefore, eager** the taltiativ* stop for many minutes, the while It is customary to bias* the bounda ******** to «atabliah a Not S*h**l at Fendiet**'' Crowley stared at him apathetically ries of locations on tree trunks, but By Mrs. Charlo* H. Caatnar, President at th* Or*g*a from a lined and shrunken counte from topographical Irregularities It la F*d*ratl*n *f Women'* Club*: Free Methodist Church “I moat heartily endorse the lecattoa of a*M Nlime l nance. hla features standing out skele difficult to properly gauge these dis School at Pendleton " ton like. The younger man evidenced tances. Sunday Schoo), 10 a. tn. Hence many rich fractions Pref. Robert C. French. Farmer Pr**ld*nt of th* the strain even more severely, for his have been run over by the heedless, to Preaching, 11 a. m. and 7 .30 p. m. Normal Scheol Located at W**t*n: flesh was tender, and he had traveled fall to him who chained the ground. "An Immediate establishment ef eech a echool at ease* Prayer meeting, Wednesday 7:90 p.m. rentral point eucte a* Peadletaa would prove a groat ***** the last hours on pure nerve. Hla Upon pacing th* third one be showed All ar* cordially invited to attend to th* Stat* of Oregon " Jaws were locked and corded, however, excitement B. F. Mulkey, la-Pr**ld*nt Southern Oregon Normal these service*. while hla drooping eyee shone un- "You walk this one again. Mebb* 1 School: Robert H.Clark, pastor. quenchably. made a mistake." '1 ehall support the location ot an Eaatern Oregon Normal School at Pendleton. ” Eventually they rounded a bluff on to Buck returned, crashing through the a cabin nestling at the mouth of a brush. LODGE DIRECTORT State Board of Regents of Oregon Normal School dark valley. Near It men were work Magnolia Camp No. 4098, Royal "I make it 1.700.” declares that “ the necessity for additional Normal ing with a windlass; so. stumbling to Neighbors, meets regular Second The claim above figured likewise, school facilities in Oregon is apparent.” and Fourth W cl new ays of each them, they spoke huskily. nnd they trembled with elation as they Portland Chamber of Commerce endorses measure month at I. O. O. F. Hall. Second “Sorry we ain't got room Inside.” the ! blazed their lines. Wednesdays social meeting. Neighbors und say Pendleton most logical location for Nor stranger replied, "but three of the boys Returning to camp, they found the bring your families and friends. mal school in Eastern Oregon. Is down with scurvy, and we're all recorder in the cabin with the scurvy Fourth Wednesday, buflln**s. All cramped up. Plenty more folks com Neighbors requested to com*. By pntients. Unfolding the location no Ing. I H’poHe. eh?" order of the Camp. _ tices. his face went black as he read, The two had sunk on to the wet while he snarled angrily: Toledo votes <lown a 1? mill special ground and did not answer. Ruck fell Eastern Oregon State Normal School Committee. ”'Fraction between three and four tax levy. i P h M Adv.) By J. H Gwinn, Secy , Pendleton, Ora with his pack still on. utterly lost, and 1 and 'Fraction between four and five,’ Richland will bond for a 115,000 tho miner was forced to drag the bun i ehr You're crazy!" dle frotn his shoulders A m ha rniind water system. "I reckon not," said Crowley, lifting his lips at the corners <-lm no t,.rt«tl<- At The Churches COME TO the new Continued from l.n»t Week while they felt It »ng Ix'tienfli t heir feet. It 1« bud In th- dark t<> lid.i> th* 1er of i¡ni ovrrflu insli througl i niikh’ d W«p lo Ibv M dill body 1,cueilli «tir- face to ward fa ft 'F a till. AA lliiout VIrara- iuh I hm L bl hiiiiwu y to ing. <i hl" hip M. Ilf iflil forward IxxlJly, ami til« ice let him tbr nigli dii bo r ollt-d BiP k Mklnihiwt over 111 tile AV n epi more II cbtiy mid. hv lien ilipy hud r< •ach e<! the wotld fuptlIng. hrlj i-d liiui wring Strulglitwny the out Illi» yninn-iite cloth whitened tiiidor tbo front and crackled when they rp«uiu««d their miircli. but there wn* no time for tire*. and b> Vigni oil* u< lion Clow Ivy could keep tin» colf! from Htrlklng In. They lind threaded up Into the re- glon where spring wn* further ad- vanced nnd within half an hour eu- countered another overflow Climbing Tin Shop in Lents 91 and Foster DO IT NOW ! D. SWIFT & CO. Crow lay Smashed tn. the steep hank, they wallowed through thicket* waist deep In anow. Beneath the crust, wbicli cut knife Uke, It was wet and Boggy, so they emerged ant urated. Then, debouching on to the glare Ice, the boy had a nasty fall, for be slipped and bls loose bung pa' k flung him suddenly. Nothing Is more wicked than a pack on smooth Ice. The surface tiad frozen glass smooth, and constant difficulty beaet their prog ress. Their slick soled footgear re fused to grip it, so that often they fell, always awkwardly, occasionally crush ing through into the Icy water be neath. Without warning Buck found that be was very tired, lie also found that hla J>ack bail grown soggy and quud- rupled tn weight, tugging sullenly at his aching shoulders. As daylight showed they sllp|ied her ness and, hurriedly gathering twigs, boiled a jiot of ten. They took time to prepare nothing else, yet, even though the kettle sang speedily, as they drank from around the Is-nd below came voices, Crowley atralghtened with a curse and, snatching his pack, fled up the stream, followed by Ids companion. They ran till Buck's kueea failed Idm. Thereupon the former removed a por tion of the youngster's burden, uddlng It to his own. and they hurried on for hours, till they fell exhausted ujion a dry moss hummock Here they ex changed footgear, as Buck now found bls feet were paining him acutely, owing to the tightness of bls rubber boots. They proved too small for Crowley as well, amt In a few hours hla feet were likewise ruined. Noon found them limping among the bald bills of the river's source. Here timber was sparse. and the snows had likewise thinned, so to avoid the con volutions of the stream they cut across points, floundering among "nigger heads"—quaint wobbly hummocks of grass--being thrown repeatedly by their packs, which had developed a malldous deviltry. This footing was Infinitely worse than the reeking Ice. but it saved time, so they took it Now, under their stiff mackinaws they perspired freely as the sun mount ed until their heavy garments chafed them beneath arms and legs. More over, mosquitoes, which in thia latitude breed within arm's length of snow drifts, continually whined In a vicious cloud before their features. Human nerves will weather great strains, Imt wearing, maddening, un ending trivialities will break them down, and so, although their journey In miles had been Inconsiderable, the dragging packs, the driving panic, the lnck of food and firm footing had trebled It Scaling the moss capped saddle, they Inbored painfully, u hundred yards at a time. Back of them the valley un rolled, Its stream winding away like a gloaming ribbon, stretching through dark banka of Hr down to tho Yukon. After Incredible effort tbev re>p b<-d the Pendleton Normal School Proven Necessity 308 X YES IS A VOTE FOR YOUR CHILDREN