PAGE EIGHT !ThOrrC( STATESSUNrSal Oregon; Satcrday Morning, September 21, 1S23 i . i . . ii i ... i . "All Qmetfe Wes:KoeiL,- Sa v J)l fuV I CHAPTEH TI We bare to go up on wiring fatigue. The motor lories roll ap after dark. We climb la. It la a -warm evening .and: the twilight seems like a canopy under whose belter we felt draws .together. Even the stingy Tjaden gives me a cigaret and then a light. . We stand jammed In together, shoulder to shoulder, there Is bo room to sit. Bat we do not ezpeet that. Mailer is in a good mood for once; he Is wearing his new boots. . , The engines drone, - the lorries bump and rattle. The roads are worn and fall of holes. We dare not show a light so we larch along and are often, almost pitch ed out That does not worry us, however. It can happen if It likes; a broken; ; arm W better than a hole In the jrats, and many a man would be thankful enough for such a chance of finding bis way home again. . Beside us stream the munition columns In long files. They are making the pace, they overtake us going forward. We Joke -them and they answer back. A wall becomes visible, It be longs to a house which lies on the side of the road. I suddenly prick op my ears. Am X deceived? Again I hear distinctly the cackle of geese. A glance at Katczinsky a glance from him to me; ire understand one another. ' "Kat, I shear Bome aspirants for the frying pan over there." f He nods. "It win be attended to when we come i back. I have their number." ' Of course Kat has their num ber; He knows all about every leg Our eyes peer out our feet and our sticks feel front of nst restless. "The Tommjjee,. are. fir- oeiore ney lane me weigm oi i ing, aireaay, says Kropp.-.-- the body. Suddenly the bne i The shelling can be heard dls halts. I bump my face against I tinetiy. It is the English batter- the roll of wire carried by the ties to the right of our section. man in front and curse. a radius of IS They ' are : beginning an hour too I soon. According to us they start punctually at 10 o'clock. .. POLLY AND HER PALS of goose within miles. . , - . The lorries arrive at the artil lery lines. The gun-emplacements are. camouflaged with bushes against aerial observation and look like a kin1 of . military Feast of tne Tabernacles. These branch es might seem gay and cheerful were not cannon embowered there. The air becomes acrid with the smoke of the guns and the fog. The fumes of powder taste, bitter on the tongue. The roar' of the gung makes our lorry stagger, the reverberation rolls raging, away to the rear, everything . Quakes. Our faces change imperceptibly. We are not, indeed, in the front line, but only in the reserves, yet In every face can be read: This is the front, now we are within its embrace. It is not fear. Men who have been up as often as we have be come thick skinned. Only the young recruits are agitated. .Kat explains to them: "That was a 12-lnch. You hear the explosion first and afterwards comes the sound of the gun.' . But the ' hollow sound of the firing does not reach us. It is swallowed up in the general mur- j 'I'll f ft? TUP TftTf Ps7 mar of the front. Kat listens: 1 1 1 ,rf 1 "n V 1 1 ,r,lv "There'll be . a bombardment to night." We all listen. What's rot themf says UtiO- er, -their clocks must be f astT -;.. Therell be a "bombardment. I tell you. I - eaa feel it my bones.- Kat shrugs his shoulders. Three shells, laa4 beside ua. The burst of flame shoots across the foe. the fragments howl ana drone. We shiver and are glad to think that we shall be back In the huts early In the morning. - Our faces are neither paler nor more - uuanea uu uuii are aot .mor tense ; nor more mbby--and;.:Tet'i:'- they-;? are changed. "We feel that In our blood a .conua has . shot home. That Is no figure of speech; It is f act. ' .Tt' Is -the v front, the con sciousness of the . front; that makes this eontaet. The moment that the first shells whistle over and the air Is. rent with the ex plosions., there Is suddenly In our veins,' In our hands. In 'our .eyes. a tense watching, a . profound growth.' a strange sharpening of the senses. .The body with one bound Is In full readiness. - It often" seems to me as though It ' were - the vibrating. shuddering' air that with a noise less leap springs upon us; or as though the front Itself emitted aa s electric current which awak ened unknown nerve centers. Every time it Is the same. We start out for the front plain sol diers, either cheerful ..or gloomy; then come the first gun-emplace ments and every word of our speech has a new ring. ' . When Kat stands In front of the hut and says: "Therell be a bombardment, that - is merely his own opinion; but if he says it here, then the sentence, has the sharpness of a bayonet inthe moonlight; It cuts clean through the thought. It thrusts nearer and speaks . to this : unknown. . thing that is awakened In us, a dark meaning "there'll be a -bom bardment. Perhaps it 1 our- in ner and -most secret life that shivers and falls on guard. To me the front is a mystert ous whirlpool. Though ! am in still water far away from Its .cen ter, I feel the.wWrl of the vortex UCUXi JUS UVW1J, JIICOJOHW1J. inescapably into itself." From the earth, from the air, sustaining forces pour into us mostly from, the earth. To no man does the earth mean so much as to the soldier. When- he press es himself dowa I upon her Ions and powerfully, when he buries hla face and limbs deep in her from the rear or ueaia oy sneu fire, then she la his only friend. U protner, . us motner; - sne stifles' his terror and his cries la her silence and her security; she shelters tp and . gives him a new lease of ten seconds of life. receives him" and often forever. Earth! Earth! Earth! , . Earth, with thy folds, and hol lows and holes. Into which a man may fling himself and crouch down! . In -the spasm of terror under the hailing of annihilation. In the bellowing 'death of : explo sions, O Earth, thougrantest us the great resisting surge of new- won - life.'- Our being, almost ut terly carried away by the fury of the , storm, breaks , back through our hands from thee, and we. thy redeemed ones, bury ourselves m thee, and through the 'long min utes In' a mute hgbny -of hope, bite Into theer with our lips! ;. ; At the sound of the. first dron- grammar. Then-he hastily correct ed himself. -I mean-they're not attending to their singing lesson. They seem to be," Hania saio. : "Yes. tier seem to be, but I can't get more than a. peeli Out of them. . Peeping isn't singing, you know. Anybody can peep, he said, putting so much emphasis on the word peep that he fairly aereecn d It - : The poor llttlo birds; were terri bly rrightned.7They: tried. to fly out of the cage, but of course they could not get;through-the jbara. So they fluttered wildly, scatter ing the seed shells and. the grains of sand that covered the bottom. ow see here. Mr. Canary be gan, after they -bad settled . down on the long perch again, "you can all learn to singHn five minutes (To be continued)- GOOD-NIGHT STORES By Max .IreO Knarf Gives the Young Canaries A Real Singing Lesson - ' Oh, Yes! The sounds of considerable ex citement were coming from the canary cage ahd Mij. Flor, Hanid, Yam and Knarf the " five little shadow-children with the turned about names hurried into ' the parlor to see what was the matter. It turned out to be Mr.' Canary chirping at the top of his voice at the four young canaries, who were standing in a line on a perch In front of him. They all looked badly frightened .and every, now and then cast anxious glances' in the direction of the little door, which however, remained tightly shut. Thelr names, you remember, were Do-re, Mi-fa, Sol-la and Tl-do. . ; "Come, come," "their father was telling them. "You're not attend Ing at all." And he ruffled his feathers Just to show how angry he was. . What arent they .attending to?" Knarf wanted to know. "They're not attending to noth ing." he replied, forgetting: an his Willi rows! Why to yon PEEPt" i Tho little eanarie could only shnfffe about la the most pitiful discomfort They would have hid den' themselves under the seea-oox had there onlv been room enough. Angrier and angrier grew Mr. Can ary. ; ; : . . . : " - Why. he cried. --'. his voice throb binr - with rage, . "even tne shadow-children eaa aingl . - The - shadow-children snooa their heads all except Knarf, who smiled proudly. ,..- . "Certainly we caa sing.r u said. "We dont Just peep like you do." ... : "Of course not, Mr. Canary re marked. 'You sing very welI7 don't you?:X': 'v :' ; . "Oh yes, very welL? : "Thaffr because you've always attended to your singing lessons. never taken a sinking- lesson in his Ide. The canary beamed at him. ; Youro a very, very clever little . shadow-boy, ever so much more clever than my Children. I want you to show them how well .yon sing, Just to make them ashamed of themselTes.' ' ' Knarf smiled. "What shall I slag themT - ' .:" ' - 5 -Anything,? said Mr. Canary.. ' lHanid aneV the others tried to stop Knarf. fWhy, you cant aing a note! thoy whispered.. -Now; children, listen carefully and you'll hear how well you can sing if you only attend," said Mr. Canary. The children all listened and to their astonishment,' this Is what they heard; ;i ; Squa-aw-wk, gr-r -!i For Knarf. you see, couian t Knarf nodded although he hd sing at art no. npt M aut. MWkal ShaO.l Sing Them?' if you only do exactly as I do. Just watch me carefully." He opened his mouth a little and In stantly began to sing. It was the sweetest song Imaginable, full of chirrups and warbles and long trills. It looked Bo easy that the shadow-children gased at each other In surprise. . "It looks as easy, aa pie,". MU said.: . ; - "It's much easier than pie." Mr. Canary said. Then he turned to the young birds: "Now then, sing!"! - They opened their mouths. In-j stead of singing, they Just peeped. Where were the chirrups, the 1 warbles and the trills? Mr. Can ary glared at them. Is that singing?" he cried. "Is that the way. von attend to my les sons? Are you canaries or spar- WORD HUNT . (TndtvurJt) ' Copyright Atesander IJchUaUg. Pattnl Psadlaf v s In the English language there are TriiKTKgM WORDS (etc having just srx LETTERS) that begta with the letters 6BB. One of them to: .,- - . v- .-''" - -'''''-Yr-. '. i;u-'-"- - - SUO A "M IT Wrinkled, bended or euried; eontracted into a less) n 1 A JV. . .stent or compass. Also retired, as from dan! gen recoiled, as In t earT -t; 2jS HR 1 1 3S1HR1 II 41SIHIR1 I 1 31SIHIRI 1 61SIH1R1 11 71SlHRhj. 61S1HIR1 9IS1H1R1 101S1HIR1 -1 I11S1HIR1 j I I21S1H1RI I31SIH1RI To break Into shivers; said of glass not properly) - tempered. Keen: .sharp; cunning: clever la praetieel afo fairs. . " - A sharp, shrill outcry; -scream Absolution. - Sharp and pleretng. as a sound. A slander. lobster-Uke crustacean. Also, a puny , or 1 nsl gnlflcant person. . - . , A place of peculiar sanctity. Also, a receptacle for sacred relics. . To draw taceihen contraet: diminish; shrivel. tf To withdraw; recott; flinch; juaU. v To confess and absolve. ' ;V- A garment for the dead. Also, to envelop; viu? ' conceal; hide. Beard or received the confeasioa of. Confessed and received absolution. Drawn together: constricted; shriveled. BeooUed) or withdrawn. ; I j VOTB :' ' " ' ; Im proper Bonnr,- obtoleU sad areliaie words, extrtnMly eanaasl Uebnieml an seientifie wordi that voale otUai roed taste, and taoae plarale of aanna; and lnrnl Terbf. that era fomee by the addltloa ef s er as are pnrpoaely- exclude from Were Hna. . . " - The solution for today's Word Hoot will be found on the Classified page 'AshnT Gets the Dope" By CLIFF STERRETlj Vfe GODS! THE MUST Bel AJM. 4SHUR URL WSM LErTS LOCK HIM lis Hp IkISIDE:. Bl6 Ml j IB auTxuRs mvx caacfm m pgp& QQMm W weil CROAK VousM 1 f l g J , J "What Price FriendsMpr By RUSS WESTOVER The front Is j CAUSES. OF EPILEPSY STILL DEFY SCIENCE Dr. Copeland. Giying Some Thoughts on This Strange Malady, Calls Attention to the Growing Belief v, that a Body Infection May Be Responsible. - By ROYAL S. COPELAND, IL D. United 8Utes Senator from New York. yomer CoMSiissfoiwr ef HesKA, VewTerk OUy. IN the letters coming te my desk are many relating to the varieu diseases ef the mind and nervous system. Many people ask me abevt epuepsy and what can be done for Its relief. - .When I was n bey hi the lower grades I had a schoolmate named WflUe. He meed to have fits. The poor little chap weald let ent a yell, fall en the floor in a convulsion, froth at the month and bite his tongue. Even in that remote day I expected to be a doctor. The teacher -knew this so she always assignea me ie ue cuty ex taxing care ox wuiie. ue .was my urn patient I , , 1 don't knew who told me to do ft hot the tint step of my treatment always was to keen the teeth separateeV-eo as to prevent. biting ef. the tongue. I kept a wooden clothes pin for; this, purpose and my first eixort. was to get ft between his teeth. Aside from washing his face. ana preventing Ais narnung aimseiz la ats con- uisive eiiora, , recau ooing nouung eise, u faet that s about all a real doctor could do. v Epilepsy is one of the mysterious diseases. Its eanses are obsenre. It is auite nrobahle that an uuecuen ox some sort may be the root ef the trouble. ' It is wise for the enflentie ta be eiven a thenneli nhvaleal nm. -Ination. - Every effort must be made to discover and remove every possible source of infection. The progress made in the euro of fnac- uuwu inwniiy uj (xiung na ec Doaye powaae iboom ae keptta mind in dealtn with the epileptic The seed leal precession le eomlna; mere' aad more to recognize the serious effect upon the system which fonm m abaorpUoa tafeetkme found la the! aa.W - " . - . iwnna. ineees. generauve et tana aad particularly the Intestines, -it la expected that these poisons , oastantly absorbed ay the blood net have serioue effects upon the erreue sytem. Any poison, whether a comes from within or without the tody, tf taken ta repeated doses is " wate unpleasant symptoma. : tt "ar wett be that epilepsy mar be .-Branded anon such a dhrturbaaee. WHLlMAC,OLD PAL. TRICKC AMD AW.DWY UP AMD BLOW AWAV. Ajv4lPpLe -- vcr- 1 UQE I'LL "TELL. HIM. MR.WmPPLE J I MAC,, MV?. VMIPPLE VJELL.SIA1CE. HE'd If v T SCEVOO IA1 rllS 1 ESS OL ., MAr? I H I MY WALLET TILL I Vtttw -ri Mt V 1-1 VTA I KMOW THAT FCMJG2. PLUMBC AMYTIMB HB CTSIS PRIEMDLV VJITH Me HE'S HOMGr TO TQV TO rlMAlE A "TOUCH ' 7 Q UTTLE ANNIE ROONEY ilrs. Meanys Grasp. By BEN B ATSFORLT Cl OCTrELArSx' FAnswcrs to Health acn are. W. W. O. Q.What an offenetre dlscharae from and throat? , - t leas noticeable by applying hot and cold compresses' to the face, alter nately, for tea-minutes, night saornlBg. ' - -. -. - , - - e e e -r J . - MOLLT. a What should a girl agea , e n. s lacnee tan weicnT X What do you advise for pimples?. - A-8he' should weigh about lit pounds, x. Oorrect the diet by cut- Ung down oa sugars, starches) and eotree.. ssat simple food. Bend sett- addressed stamped envelope for fur- taer patncoiare and repeat eestton. - -jr1'" : -, , w - i , .. - e Ifrs. W. A. Q. What do yea ad vise zor mueua eoitusr . : . j - . "SparcTibs' Example" . - . "1 I '" v TOOTS AND CASPER A This Is Brobabhr dne ta catarrh. For further rtuataf-a elf-adaarcssed stamped envelope and repeat your euestion.. - - ee- .,,:.:"Ka;3:r - C T. i Ov-Caa cbnbtolns he euredT - . . . A;--Tea. For 'particulars send a sett-addressed, stamped envelope and repeat your euestloa. Un.J.J OWbat eaa be done i for enlarged pores? U-What causes brown spots oa , the. aeekt ....... Av This dlstase la very obstinate , aad does not readily yield to treat- ment. - Indiscretion fat diet bring en' an acute attack. Oeast patios - should be corrected. The" medical treatment must be directed oy tne family physJcJaa after a a. O. Qi Haw mi I mbm welghtT t. Is swimming a good es ercise sor leoacinsT Aj Waicnt rednetloa hi a matter ef self-control as regards the diet. Exercise Is. of coarse, es sentia. Par details send a eCf-ad-dressed, stamped envelope aad re- Colonel. Hooren- - A1D ME SAW YOU AX TWT3.- VMNAS)UM AlrARsI is-sh y sXe&fr-tne-! t MiUAt " 9 wtrw 0 vvirai . ww, i ss-a, .ARE TtJU DOIKI TOWNl TDCTTS! . rMTARlNr 00T CARS an ha. I AT "TELLING TOCTTsI rri Bsi SWA) KVNCHE9 ; Wrm"Wlt ftVVlAMrTET rJEVT wORHt HCQ.I I CAW HAAtSLY VATT trTjp-THURSW TO COM&! ML EH TM TV4T5.' AUDIENCB Al4TrtW TWCtl AMN0UT4CTS. FROM THS 5TGE "THAT p a5O0.J2 OOE3 TO IMS. rU V VWO tASTft FDUtt ROUNDS MTM CHAMP fLL STEP Ot By JHHMY MURPHY) HE'LL WAVE. TO CATTM wits. "TO HIT ME..AND1 Tat AVi -rv-k waatlie- JSWT-ACE. OUT OP-tmts-BOX1 vuSr CfyfTgeT! ALL t CrOTTAv 's PO y& WEEP OUT OF Hl REACM re SS1?013 Wt W THH. litaVr J i.il.'T AT3T2. INTO UIKi . fsTi -i in a. . X k. a.. ... a AcrAlNiT TUP ru&iuflimi n. m.. . -i Moeotyv -thought TTHilrOOTtp2rf , DID TUEV A Dl6RKrCH BiRMlNHA) ALA8AMA,j TTATE TUMI PR0MINCH1 HAMKEh . TMBRTS. HAd LAPrCBST s:.-7HArr.fji; ' CAMPER Wli NQT U.AST OVEQ. TWO 'YOU , Aj Enlarged pores pea your enauou,- s. xea, be maSs rnnifju. txs. kaig ffll Symm-. fat, Cinl trttnm t -