Falls City news. (Falls City, Or.) 190?-19??, January 10, 1914, Image 1

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    FHLLS CITY NEWS
T he N ewi iUnds for
a grea ter and better
Falla City all the time
FALLS CITY. OREGON, SATURDAY. J A N U A R Y 10, 1914
VOL. X
Oregon Agricultural College
Winter Short Course
F A L L S C IT Y P O S T O F F IC E . J A N U A R Y 1, 1914
I M A CL h l l M I K L I M U , I ’ O R I M A V T E I I
W tIQ H T S , ZONES
January 5 to 30,1914
The College ha* »pared no effort
to make thin the mo*t complete
abort courae in its history. A
very wide range of couraes will
be offered in General Agricul­
ture, Horticulture,Animal Hus­
bandry, Dairying, Poultry Keep­
ing, Mechanic Arts, Domestic
Science and Art,Commerce For­
estry, and Music. Numerous
lectures and disctfsaions on Far­
mers’ Co-Operation, at home
and abroad; will be a leading
feature. Make this a pleasant
and profitable winter outing.
N o tuition. Accommodations
reasonable. Reduced rale* on all
railroads. For further informa­
tion. address
H.M
Parcels Post Information
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20 24
Farmers' Hus ness Courses by
correspondence without tuition
S
A
i
■
Hurry! Hurry!
This is positively your last
opportunity to secure The
Weekly Oregonian (Oregon's
greatest weekly) at 75 cts.
to January 1. 1915. Satur­
day. January 31, 1014, the
price advances to $1.50 per
year, the regular rate. Your
order for the weekly Ore­
gonian taken at The News
office. Attend to this now.
AND
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83
f»r Milling
/ s
P rep a re
Cl*
cl» your parcel
in s u c h a
.12 manner for
JÌ
.21 .24 m a i l i n g
.31 .36 t h a t t h e
.41 .48 c o n t e n t s
.51 .60 ran be easi­
.61 .72 ly examined
A parcel
71 .84 must not be
.81 .96 a c c e p t e d
91 1.08 for mailing
1 01 j 1 20 u n l e s s i t
M l i 1.32 bears* From’
and n a m e
and address o f sender.
Isisrascc on Eared«
A mailable parcel on
which t h e postage ia
fully prepaid may be in­
sured against loss in an
amount equivalent to
its actual value, but not
to exceed $50, on pay­
ment o f a fee of 10c in stamps, to be a f­
fixed, 5c for up to $25,10c for up to $50.
*‘C. 0.1." The sender o f a mailable par­
cel on which the postage is fully prepaid
may have the price o f the article and the
charges thereon collected from the receiver
< on payment o f a fee o f 10c in stamps a f­
fixed, provided the amount to be collected does not
exceed $100. Such a parcel will be insured against
loss, without additional charge, in an amount equiv­
alent tn its actual value, but not to exceed $50. The
sender will be given a receipt showing the office and
date o f mailing, number of parcel, and amount due.
No. 39
» U - .lt
*
»
I
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* (I
World Noied Sculptors Produce
Marvels In the Plastic Art
Superb
Decorative Statuary Fast Assuming
Form at the Panama-Pacific In­
ternational Exposition
RODIGIOUS works o f sculpture are now being completed In the sculp­
tural warehouses o f the Panama-Pacific International Exposition.
Many o f them have already long been finished. The works ara re­
markable for Imagery and vigor and for beauty of conception.
Not for many years will the world be enabled to enjoy so marvelous a col­
lection o f the works o f contemporary sculptors. The World's Columbian Ex­
position at Chicago first proved that the greatest talent might lie employed to
pnslui e «van work of temiMimry value. Since then more und more attention
has ls-i n given at each succeeding eximxltlon to sculpture as a form of decora­
tion, and iiuw the Panama Pacific International Exposition promises to surpass
•ven Chicago’s exquisite display.
Viewing the superb groups and Individual pieces o f statuary, the visitor
feds like a Lilliputian who has been transported Into a land o f giants. Horn«
o f the great groups are o f coin-sal dimensions. Many o f these great pieces of
statuary will adorn huge triumphal arches and when so placed will seem of
natural size to the visitor who stunds upon the floors o f the ex|H»Hitlon courts.
We present i i | m > ii this page some classical examples o f the sketch m odels
• nd the enlarged figures. A number o f America’s foremost sculptors have
been engaged In the production o f these figures. Among the sculptors are
many names widely known both in America and abroad. The list Includes
A Stirling ( alder, acting director o f sculpture; Albert Jaegers, Furlo Ptoeirrllll,
Leo Leutelli, Robert I. Aitkin. Adolph A. Weinman, Isadora Koutl, Evelyn Bea­
trice Longman, Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, Itouglas Tilden, Gutzou Rorglum,
H. A. MncNell. James E. Fraser. Charles C. Rumxey, Haig Patlgan, Paul Man-
ship, F. G. It. Itotb, Charles Neihaus, I). C. French. Herbert Adams and others.
The sculpture o f the Panama-Pacific International Exposition will carry
out the note o f the ex|>osition In celebrating the opening o f the Panama canal.
The spirit o f achievement as exemplified by America's work will be idealized.
P
50*
Postmaster Mehrling has issued a card bearing the above par­
cels post information, applying to Falls City as a central point.
A washing soda is being taken
O n * Ri ght Lett.
A city clmp in an effort to cro*8
from the bed of Alkali lake. Lake
a busy itreet dodged an electric
| county, Or., by a company.
The Evening Telegram
and
RATES
T h e Falls City News
Are conducting a vigorous circulation campaign in Falls
City. These t w o papers will supply you with all the
news of this locality and also with all the news of the
country at large, at a minimum cost. For a short time
we will take your subscription to the two papers for one
year at $3.75- by mail a saving to you of $2.25. Pay to
The Telegram, Portland, or to the Falls City New*.
truck, leaped over a sixty horse­
power roadster, squirmed out of the
way of a trolley car, escaped a taxi­
cab by the skin of his teeth and
was just setting his foot on the op­
posite sidewalk with a sigh of re­
lief when a descending monoplane
bore -’ .iwn on him.
“ Has a pedestrian no rights these
days?” cried the poor fellow, dodg­
ing this wav and that.
“ Sure he has— funeral rites,” an­
swered the aviator, as he volplaned
heavilv down on ‘ he man’s head.—
Amamt.j*.
“ I don’t care!” retorts the peeved
wife. “ I only married you because
your hair waved the same way as
Harold Gallup’s!”
“ That so?” jeered the jolted hus­
band. “ Well, I only married you
because you used the same flavor of
lip rouge as Millie VVillums!” —
Copyright, ISIS, by the Panama-Pacific International Exposition Co.
BEAUTIFUL OREGON BUILDING AT THE PANAMA-PACIFIC
INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION. SAN FRANCISCO, 1915.
REGON, the first state to se'eot and dedicate n site at the Pnnatna-
Pacltlc International Exposition, was also the first to accept de­
signs for her state building. This very interesting structure,
neighbor to New York’s great huildng, has been designed in the
chaste spirit of the golden age of Greece's architecture. It will be 150 by
250 feet and designed on the classic line o f Icthlnus’ Parthenon. The col­
umns, which Greece herself modeled iu marble from previous exemplars
In wood o f a more r.nclent architecture, will revert to the original and be
o f timber brought from Oregon's forests. They will be five feet In
diameter and forty feet In height Not only will the materials which
will l>e placed within the structure he Oregon’s products, but the ma­
terials o f which the state palace will be constructed will come from Ore­
gon's vast resources.
O
Try a Sack of
HIGH FUGHT FLOUR
'■Ì
and watch results
A '
!■> ■
All Goods and Prices Are Right
AT
Falls City Lumber Co.
STO R E
FIGURE OF ENTERPRISE CROWNS HUGE TRIUMPHAL
GROUP AT THE PANAMA-PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL
EXPOSITION, SAN FRANCISCO, 1915.
H E above photograph represents "Enterprise,” a detail o f the
sculptural group, the “ Nations o f the West,” which will crown
the Arch o f the Setting Sun at the Panama-Pacific International
Exposition, San Francisco, 1915. This arch will be on the oppo-
alte able o f the Court o f the Sun and Stars to the Arch o f the Rising
Sun, crowned by the coniiajsltlon “ Nations o f the E a s t” The group
“ Nations o f the W est” is designed by Messrs. A. Stirling Culder. l.eo
Leutelli and Frederick O. R. Roth.
T
Buy all goods o f homa
merchants and help to
make Falls City greater
|
DOGS OF LABRADOR.
They Go Lika IN* Wind and Are ’ -t*,
l*ss and TsarUsa.
In Dr. Grenfell’s book be tell«
some interesting things concerning
the Labrador dogs. The creatures
are fed once a day and are always
hungry, and yet a team will go for
two or three days without food. Dr.
Grenfell says that he has traveled
seventy miles a day with a half
breed team of seven dogs and 250
po unde of baggage. “ The great
bt-l auty of a dog team ia that it
seems to banish all conventionali­
ties.
You can go anywhere and
everywhere with no roada, no
hedges, no walls, no restriction but
your own will, and that will with­
out rein or bridle you make your
dog’s will.
Dogs can carry you up almost the
steepest snow slope and down again
in safety. They do not slip or sink
in, and if they fall over even a high
cliff in the winter they are very
rarely hurt. They seem to under­
stand what you say and so form a
better companion than a horse.
They are automobiles which need
no handling of their machinery.
They enjoy traveling almost more
than their masters enjoy it. They
learn to love you as only a dog will,
and if it were not for their occa­
sional outbreaks of wickedness they
would make the best of companions.
As it is, I know of no greater pleas­
ure possible thar a large, strong
team, a good leader, a brisk, bright
spring day and a really long journey
to go.
“ Our dogs know little or no fear
and, unlike the wolves, will un­
hesitatingly attack even the largest
polar bear,” Dr. Grenfell says again.
“ On one occasion a man’s dogs,
traveling along smooth sea ice,
scented a white bear and started
off like the wind. They suddenly
turned a point and ran right into
him, so that the traces tangled
round the bear before the astonish­
ed driver had time to unlath his
gun. As soon as he could he cut
the traces, but even in harness tha
dogs kept bruin at bay. Though
the bear stood up to fight on hi*
hind Iegr, the dogs managed to get
in some good bites without being
hurt.
“ On another occasion,” adds the
doctor, “ a man brought me a spe­
cially valued dog that a bear had
squeezed. The bear had been sight­
ed some distance off on the ice floe,
and the dogs were slipped to hold
him up for the hunter. By the tima
he arrived on the spot they had
the bear practically killed.
But
two had been damaged by him, one
clawed and one squeezed.”
SLIPPED"P A S T DEATH.
Curious Casa* of Paopl* Who Mi****
It by a Hair’s Braadth.
A t Geneva recently a professional
acrobat who performs on a trapeze
attached to a balloon fell into the
lake of Zurich, a distance of 1,500
feet.
He swam unhurt to the
shore, just missing death by a few
yards, for had he not sprung from
his seat when within fifty feet of
the lake he would have been dash­
ed to pieces on the rocks.
Several instances of people fall­
ing from great heights and surviv­
ing to tell the tale can be quoted.
A t Brighton an actor known as
Lieutenant Daring, who was play­
ing the part of a naval officer who
is attacked by brigands in a cine­
matograph play and who was sup­
posed to slip over the cliff— in re­
ality, however, to stand on a plank
which had been placed below the
edge to make the illusion complete
— missed his footing and fell ninety
feet below into the sea, escaping
with a sprained wrist.
An even more miraculous escape
after a fall over a cliff was that of
a seven-year-old child who had been
gathering flowers on Culver cliff,
near Sandown, Isle of Wight, who
slipped and fell 200 feet. She wts
only slightly injured, a bottle which
she carried being unbroken.
Often the merest accident pre­
vents death. A Cardiff laborer some
time ago fell from a scaffolding
about fifty feet high, but as he fel
his foot caught in the scaffolding,
and he hung head downward until
rescued. Similarly a woman who
fell out of a window backward at
llolbom lately was saved from in­
stant death by her clothing having
caught in the window catch.
John Hazleton, the son of Rev.
John Hazleton of St. Neot’e, Hun­
tingdonshire, when cycling between
Huntingdon and St. Neot’s at night,
was suddenly lifted off his hieycle
bv a passing motor and was carried
on the bonnet for a considerable
distance before being gently de­
posited on the road as the car pull­
ed up. His cycle was smashed te
atoms— I.ondon Tit-Bits.