Services at 11 u. m. and 8:00 . m . S u n d a y School 10 a. m. Jpworth L m j f u e 7:3 0 p m . , P r a y e r m e eting on Wodneaday in the parnonaKo at H p. rn. E I am in the market for Fat Hogs Sheep and Cattle Might., t Market Price Paid f or Livestock „ ‘hone or See Me Before Selling Oregon 4 4 4 4 4 4 M 4 4 4 I 4*4*44 »4 Aluminum Five-Piece Combination Cooker This Combination Set has more uses a. I advantages than any other s: ailar set on the market. The regular price of the Combina- t i Cooker is 54.50 but we will re- d. ;e the price to $ 2.80 F o r Saturday", July 26 only" OIL STOVES Charter Oak and Toledo Ranges Aluminum Perculators All Kinds of Dishes W e can save you money, come in and let us show you how we do it 3 77 Com 3t. FRANK RICHTER TH AT ROCKING-CHAIR SHRINE LOST $10 in greenbacks and a U t U R G E W A S H I N G T O N O N few centsjin silver also 3 padlock A D O P T I O N O F C O N S T » I U T I O N Place W here Mother Sat It Forever Sacred in the Memorie» of Her D uring the years 1787 and 1788, keys last Wednesday, July 23. Children. George W ashington in over 00 differ­ Purse folds over and clasps. $10 ent le tte rs expressed bis hope th a t reward for returning to Maii of­ the C onstitution for a le a g u e of th ir ­ By the window In th e sittin g room teen Staten m ight be ratified; many »food the old chair. It was “moth­ fice. of bis rem arks are ex trao rd in arily ap ­ e r’s ch air"—otherw ise It would have plicable In th e p resen t discussion of been Juut a chair. W ith m other In It, our ratification of th e C ovenant for however, It became a shrine to which the le a g u e of N ations. ‘‘T he C onsti­ flocked h er devoted little worshipers. In the rocker, as we sat on moth­ tution th a t is subm itted, is not free from im perfection, but th e re a re as er's knee or a t h er side— for the chair Preaching every second and few radical defects in it as could well was generously made—th e bumped fourth Sundays of each month, be expected, considering the h etero ­ head and the bruised h ea rt were i morninjf a n d evening. Morning geneous man.! of which the* C onven­ healed, says a w riter In the People’» services at 11 a. m. and evening? tion was composed and the diversity Home Journal. Frightened, we found of inte-rests th a t a re to be attended there a safe re tre a t, a refuge from ev­ services at 8 p. m. to. As a C onstitutional door Is ery harm . At night the bedtim e story Sunday school each Sunday opened for fu tu re am endm ents and w as told to th e rhythm of Its soothing morning at 10 h . m. alteratio n s, I think It would be wise awing. Joys, sorrows, all were brought S. L. Boyce, Pastor. In the people to accep t w hat is offered to Its encircling arm s. M other’s chair, to them .” rocking, rocking, rocking by the win­ dow. Th«it Surprising Way. The old chair, we think, hod n hand “T w as never more disappointed In In th e m aking of character. Maybe esybodjr In my life than I wa* In my cousins up In K ay See,” adm itted G«ibe It was more effective in th is service Gosnell of Grudge, who w as Just hack than we realize. Seated In It, we First—Dont Delay. Second-Don’t from a visit to the Big Burg. “Why, watched the needle in quick, nimble with everything on earth going on and fingers, glinting In and out among the frayed edges tirelessly : we heard our Experiment anything you could think of liable to childish perplexities explained over happen a t afiy moment. I’ll be switched and over again, w ith no hint of vex­ If they don’t poke off to bed a t be­ atio n ; we sang the songs which tau g h t If you suffer from backache; head j tween 9 and 10 o’clock every night of ur some of th e beauty of life ; we lis­ aches or d u ty apeil*; if you restjpoorly j the w orld!”—K ansas City Star. tened to stories of bravery and truth. ---------------------- 1— i ana are languid in the m orning; if ¡[the Industry, patience, beauty, courage, Animals In W ar Service. i kidney secretions are irreg u lar and un- honesty—they can be traced back Animals on hand In the service of through a golden pathw ay straig h t to i n atu ral in app earan ce, do n ot delay. In »uch caaea th e kidneys o ften need tne w ar departm ent November 2, m other’s chair. l'Jlfc w ere 113,723 cavalry and riding T he old ch air h as seen valian t serv­ help. D oan'a Kidney Pills a-e especillay horses, 180,348 d ra ft horses. 144,611 ice. Old-fa-hioned, scarred and worn. d raft mules, 17.298 pack and riding It still stood In the fam iliar place by prepared for kidney tro u b le—th ey are mule», and 13,280 unclassified anim als, recommended by thousands. Can resi­ m aking a total of 477.202 anim als th e window. Why Is It not refinlshed —th e scars smoothed out, th e worn dents desire more convincing proof ready for use. places covered ? W h a t! Cover the than th e sta te m e n t of a citizen of this m arks which little hands have made, locality? th e worn spot w here m other's tired FARM AND CITY LOANS H. C. M angas, retired d ru g g ist, 412 bead rested, th e scars m ade by tiny, If vou a re paying a high r a te o f in­ ' S. F ifteen th S t., Corvallis, O re., says: restless feet? Such a question came te re st. why not refund your loan at “ 1 have tak en D o an 's Kidney Pills at from one who did not understand. To a low er ra te and more liberal term s. him the old chair was mere wood and different tim es when 1 have felt in need It is not good business to pay a p ain t—Just a piece of fu rn itu re, not of a kidney medicine and have found a shrine. h ig h er ra te o f in te re st th an the i ' them to be all th a t is claimed o f them. We do not say It aloud—our g reat­ m a rk e t dem ands, nor is it good busi­ In irecs7Ui“" ',,ng D oan’s Kidney Pills, est longings are not spoken—but some­ ness to keep your surplus tunds on 1 am only speaking from personal ex ­ tim es when life gets tangled we find tim e deposits a t 3 to.4 p e rc t. p er an ­ perience, b ut from w hat I knew of ourselves going again to th e old chair num when 6 per cent ciT rreadily be I 1 o th ers who have received g re a t resluts to have th e knots untied. W hen grief secured on first Farm M ortages. .’ f rom th e m ." comes we sob It out there. When Joy Price 60c, a t ail dealers. Don’t sim ­ you have money to loan or wish to '\Sin.vS we run to tell It there. W hen refund or secure a new one, call or ply ask for a kidney rem edy—g et we fail. wh“n we win, our thoughts D oan’s Kidney P ills—the sam e th a t w rite S. H. H ELTZEL, S tayton, fake us to the old ehairv»..i\nd *1 night Mr. M an ias had. Foster-M ilburn the little lisping prayers come beg­ O regon. | Co., M fgrs., Piiffalo. N. Y. ging to be said, and we send them, along w ith our grown-up petitions, up to heaven by way of th a t sacred shrine. Baptist Church ED. PHILIPPI Stai Ion *'W ot co n ten t with estab lish in g k world record : m be Inn the rim i to fly a balloon aero - th e ocean. Vom E n gland to th e U nited State». M ajor Scott and hl» llr|tl» h crow of th e R-34 had no m ore tn an i.milnd' tit M lneola field. New York, th an they were m aking preparation» for th<- re tu rn n ig h t Tbl» I» <■ Icture of th e biggest d irig ib le balloou ever built, ra ¡aiu rln g 934 feet long ab o u t two city block». saiem. Ore. A BIT OF ADVICE Balsiger & Brotherton LYONS, OREGON General Merchandise OMJLTt»■'VJmtc Jt-.t iöjsness A h HEN you have a bilious attack your liver fails to perform its functions. You become con­ stipated. The food you cat ferments in your stomach instead o f digesting. This inflames the stomach and causes nausea, vomiting and a terrible headache. Take Chamberlain’s Tablets. T hey will tone up your liver, clean out your stone .h and you will soon be as well as ever. There is nowi ;,. octier. W h J E BUY anything in the Pro­ duce line from cascara bark to a dressed cow. Will sell you anything in the oMerchandise line from a knitting needle to a thresh­ ing machine. Come in and see us W Balsiger & Brotherton, Lyons, Oregon !9 444444*444444*. ' ' c ."AT l •ÏO V K t O' - -> X. '■< -7C I \ IN THE TOP PRAWCP Wttxrj THE S \ . . YrtCTUREt v / 0? YOU.7! [O F h\V CHIFFONIER MRS SlOCUM HAS A5K«> EACH IDEA, Cl APE71 CNE OT US TO WfTAP S O ^ f ARTICLE v a tC tlf ^ f a P iP P ltE r tn A TITLE OF SOME B ook ” 5 i\vi ;i ho ?: e I & to? •.fits? -------- Tj L IF E ’S LUCK AND CHANCE OF LIFE A bundant Reasons Why Fighting Men Develop a High Degree of F ata l­ istic Reasoning. T ha T reaty of P art» Is tho longest single treaty ev er signed, i t Is six tim es as long as th e tre a tie s of the peace of W estphalia (1648) and te a tim es aa long as th e tre a ty of V ienna (1816); It la aa long as the la tte r and all the subsidiary tre a tie s resu ltin g from It. Though It covers m ore ground than any other tre a ty made, it w si prepared in h alf th e tim e re ­ quired for the peace of Vienna, an d In Icaa th an o n e-ten th of th e tim e r e ­ paired for the tre a ty of W estphalia. T his phenom enal re su lt Is a ttrib u te d j by E uropean statesm en to th e in itial adoption of the C ovenant of the I Le-igue of N ations, which provides for 1 the fu tu re settle m en t of a large nura- i her of perplexing problem s. D espite I opinions to the co n trary , th e verd ict of history will unquestionably be th a t I the Peace of P aris c a rrie s Into effect \ to a rem arkable .degree the program accepted In advance by th e peoples of th e world, and em bodied In the Fourteen P oints put fo rth by th e A m erican governm ent on Ja n u a ry 8, 1918, ten m onths before the actual | signing of the arm istice. 1 Of th e F ourteen P o in ts thus ac­ cepted by a world in arm s, serious objection has been raised to only one, the 14th. T h at objection h as come from a faction in the U nited S tates Senate. T his 14th Point, as em bodied j in the trea ty Is A rticle X, of the ; Covenant of th e League of N ations. . G erm any herself h as in sisted upon it j a3 an essen tial p a rt of th e peace. T he trea ty as signed m akes a new world, politically, physically, m orally and spiritually. T he m an datory sy s­ tem ends th e old regim e of exploita­ tion, an d m akes w ards of the whole world in Asia, A frica an d th e Isles of th e sea. The T re a ty has established i in the place of artificial sta te s n a tu ra l . political and n atio n al u n its. It has rem oved from the m ap nu m erous h is­ toric w rongs w hich have long served to em b itte r th e in te rn atio n a l r e la ­ tions. It has set th e w orld upon a ! new path of progress m arked by th e following guide p o sts: 1. In tern atio n al co-operation. In- ' eluding the consolidation of a ll e x ist­ ing in tern atio n al ad m in istra tiv e a c ­ tivities. 2. E xtensive m achinery fo r co­ operation in a L eague of N ations open to all th a t prove w orthy of m em ber­ ship. 3. T he cre atio n of a labor con­ ference and labor b ureau to solve th e problem s of an in d u stria l civilization. 4. A pledge to reduce arm am ents, and as a first ste p tow ard it th e d is­ arm in g of th e one nation w hose geo­ g raphical situ atio n has m ade it a m enace to th e world. 5. T he abolition of conquest by A rticle X, w ith o u t in te rfe rin g w ith o th e r m ethods of te rrito ria l a d ju st­ m ent. 6. T h e d eclaratio n th a t any w ar is a m a tte r of concern to all. and the erection of m achinery for dealing with conditions w hich en d an g er th e peace of th e world. 7. An ag reem en t n o t to go to w ar before peaceful se ttle m e n t of disputes h as been tried. 8. A utom atic provision sanctions for th e p u nishm ent of th e breach of ag reem en ts v o lu n tarily taken. 9. A re p re se n ta tiv e A ssem bly m eeting reg u larly and, am ong oth er things, carry in g on th e w ork of codi­ fying and rev isin g in te rn a tio n a l law begun by the H ague Conference. T he tre a ty is th e m ost m om entous docum ent ev er prep ared by the hand of man. . I t se ts th e world rig h t about face, u m ark s th e triu m p h of A m er­ ican ideas, policies and institu tio n s, by extending to a league of sovereign n atio n s the dem ocratic principles first em bodied in our league of sovereign sta te s. EDWARD CUMMINGS, i G eneral S ecretary, W orld P eace Foundation. As I to u r th e m ilitary hospitals, says a w riter in a London paper, I h ear stran g e stories frofli the w ard »isters, from m atron herself, and from men of all g rad es iu the serried rows of beds. Poor M----- braved all the te rro rs of w ar — wounded a t Molls, and gassed at La B assee—only to be Ignouilniously killed by an omnibus in the city stre e t a t home! W hole fam ­ ilies of sons He buried in France. B ut I know n ease in which four sons and a son in law joined up In August, 1914, and w ent clean through the whole stu ­ pendous dram a, w ithout one of the five getting so much as a s c ra tc h ! 1 know a heroic m ajor, w ho had the m addest escapes from shot and shell, anil w*as killed at last by a falling branch of freland’s Flax Crop. a tree w hilst at home on leave. T he flax crop Is engaging the a t­ I know a chaplain V. C. who all but broke his neck on a flight of stone tention of ag ricu ltu rists in the north steps at Saighton Towers, w here he of Ireland. F lax pulling is giving em­ w as Countess O rosvenor's guest. I ployment to every hnnd th a t ean be en­ know a w ar correspondent, of mauy gaged. and fa c to ry w orkers, clerks and fierce campaigns, who met Ills death business men are Joining in th is Indis­ a fte r all In a London a ir raid. And I pensable work. T he cadet corps of talked w ith the sole survivor of a rhe Royal Academical In stitu te of Bel­ ship, who turned out to he the only fast Is also engaged in pulling flax. member of the crew who couldn't Before the w ar the price paid for flax sw im ! How shall we explain these ranged from $1.30 to 82.30 per stone. vagaries? They m ade fa ta lists of our The highest price ever paid for (lax m e n ; and one day iu tin hospital, I was $.'1 per stone In 1^04, during the came upon a lad who was reading the I Civil war. T h is y ear th e flax supply Moslem Kurau. He held up the page com m ittee has arranged to take over to me. and pointed to the v erse: "No the whole crop at price» ranging from hap chaneeth, but the -...toe w as w rit­ $7.30 to $10 per »tone, according to quality. Tho flax will he divided Into ten In the Book of D ecrees!” “ 1 »lx grades. H A N D IC A P \ / A