4 THE FALLS CITY NEWS. MAY 22, 1015 (lŒLIGiÔjSCÏËNTÏFTCSKETCHES ANTI-CHUG LAWS DOING THEIR WORK HUMAN PR O CR EÒ Hundreds In New York Seeking Treatment In Hospitals. SITUATION NOT UNEXPECTED P r ie s of Oopo 1,000 P a r Cant H as In Advanced M any Over Instaneaa, a n d F ie n d * F in d It A lm o a t Im p o s s i ble to B u y It a t A n y P r ic e — P r ilo n a F ille d W it h V ic t im s . TH E S IX TH DAY OH EPOCH As the carbon laden atmosphere became more pure, rojtrta ttou became less rank. The animals changed correspondingly The heavy boned Sloth and Mammoth gave place to less bouy varieties of animals, commou today, 1 he specialisation tu the case o f man’s creation Is shown lu his vast superiority over the lower aulmals. The first man, Adam, was an Image of his Creator, the highest type of fleshly or animal being That image of his Creator consisted lu his moral and Intellectual likeness. It Is difficult to Judge from present human conditions all that Is meant by God's image, because we have no sample o f perfect humanity for comparison “ All have sinned and come short o f the glory o f God” In wt^ b Adam was created. (Psalm 8:5.) Sin and Death have reigned and the Godllkeness has been lost. All ueed Restitution. It was toward the close o f the Sixth Day, or approximately forty-two thousand years from the time of beginning the order ing of Earth, that God created Mam The Image of God from this standpoint would mean a human being thoroughly In tune with the Infinite One. one that would have no unrighteousness nor Iniquity In him. Adam's trans gression was not the result of Ignorance, nor o f pure wllfulness. It was the result o f temptation, which tils limited knowledge accentuated. His responsibility was for the knowledge he pos sessed. He knew that he was disobeying God. When thinking of man In the image o f God, we Instinctively look back to "The Man Christ Jesus." "holy, harmless, unde filed and separate from sinners,” and like the first Adam, whose penalty He came Into the world to meet.—1 Corinthians 15:2a "A fte r Our likeness let him have dominion.” Adam's domln Ion over the lower animals was like God's dominion over the Universe Angels, although In God's Image, do not have a God like dominion over creatures of a lower order Man's dominion overthrown by sin. Is to be restored by Messiah's Kingdom.- Acts 3:10-21 :xcooocr=oc=300000c 7 SA VE T H IS COUPON. IT IS W ORTH : 200000 c F IV E J) CEN TS. No. . Send this coupon with eleven others from this paper, each bear ing & different number, and 15 cents In stamps for packing *nd post age. to the IN T E R N A T IO N A L B IB LE STUDENTS ASSOCIATION. Drpt C. 124 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn. N. Y.. nnd receive F R E E a copy of •BIRTH DAYS OF MY FRIE ND S/’ price «a cents. This beautiful book is published to do good—not Cor profit It contains an appropriate Scripture text and comment for every divy in the year, with spaces for autographs opposite, etc. Hand somely bound; gilt edges Sample on display at the office of this paper While the American people will support the President in contro versies with foreign countries, even though they doubt the wis dom of the methods of the State Department, yet they should not and will not feel obliged to sup port him in domestie economic matters when they know him to be wrong. The President has refused to furnish the Industrial Relations Commission with the correspond ence which he had with Governor Ammons of Colorado regarding the strike in the coal regions of that state; and it is hinted that Mr. Wilson is seriously displeased with the farcical manner in which Chairman Walsh has carried on the work of the Commission. Hon. A. Mitchell Palmer, Demo cratic boss of Pennsylvania and an unsuccessful candidate for the Senate last fall, passes into the ‘lame duck” class by Wilson’s favor and has been appointed member of the Federal Court of Claims. In the interva' between shifting from political shirt sleeves into judicial ermine, Mr. Palmer pauses to remark that Wilson will be renominated despite the fact that .the Baltimore platform de clared in favor of a single term for the President. THINGS YOU HAVE ALWAYS W ISHED TO KNOW. CorreEpondence School courses are year ly becoming more popular. Learning in a condensed form is the order of th«' day Here you have it. Read the list and send in the coupon. “ Calamities—Why Permitted.’’ “ Which Is the True Gospel?” “ Where Are the Dead?” “ What Is Baptism?” “ Rich Man In Hell.” “ Gathering the Lord’s Jewels.” “ What Is the Soul?” “ Immortal Worms, Unquenchable Fire.” “ Worry Will Surely K ill.” “ When God Was Alone.” “ The Beginning of God’s Creation.” “ Prince Lucifer Now Prince of Demons.” “ Mene, Tekel, Upharsin.” “ Social Ills Beyond Man’s Power.” “ The Battle of Armageddon.” “ Christendom In Great Danger.” “ What Is Baptism?” “ Chief Cause of Criminality.” ame .......................................................... City and State............................................ Upon receipt of the above coupon wc will send any one of these Bible Studies F R E E , any three of them for 5 centJ (stamps) or the entire 18 for 10 cents. SEND A T ONCE TO B IB LE AN D TR A C I SOCIETY, 17 Hicks S t. Brooklyn, N. Y. THIS BOY OWNS BALL PARK. G a r d n e r ’* F a th e r B o u g h t to P la y In. It For H im (Mint. I’oetolllce clerks were iittonUlied a few days ago when she ibsnnndud ■tauips for cuitveynuru of her house hold goods from this city to QiiluaulL " I figured It would be cheaper this way." said Mrs. Olson, blinding In a barrel containing her kitchen stove. Other article« of furniture followed. weighing In all 337 pounds sud tiirlud lug kitchen iitetisfis a rocking chair j and a dining room table, among other j ttp.igs. The moving eoat her $4.(12 til «lam ps It cost her $2ii I ho old way. • he said ORGANIZE WOMEN FOR HOME EDUCATION Mrs. Schoff Has Already En rolled Over 20,000 Members. New York.-Since Uie strict enforce uieut o f tho drastic null drug laws lu this oily has made It almost Impossible for dopo fiends to buy narcotics the re Washington.—The bureau of eduen mits are both sad mid luterestlug. (Ion Is much Interested lu the tour of Au appalling situation lu which the country lu the Interest of home drug maniacs ure allowed ut lurge,“ Is education by the Nntlouul Congress of Ernest K. Coulter's chnructerUatiou or Mothers' uud Parent Teachers' assoel the present state o f affairs lu New a lions. Y'ork. Mr. Coulter represented Mrs. • While child welfare conferences are William I\. Vanderbilt lu the long being held by the slate branches o( light to suppress drug traffic tu this the Congress o f Mothers III AluhUUl'I. city, lie was asked to tell what ought Georgia, Connecticut. Mississippi. MU Now Hampshire. to be done to handle the many cases sourt. Maryland. Utah aud Wisconsin.” tbe bureau an o f drug victims w ho. deprived o f co- nounced. "the officers and leaders of ! caiue. heroin uud other habit foruilug the congress, accompanied by retire drugs, arc committing acts of vloleuco | and tilling tho city's prisons aud hospi tals. “ I don't believe the people o f the city realize the seriousness o f the situa tion." said Mr. Coulter. “ It must be understood that these men who roll, assault and kill to get morphine or j some similar drug are Insane. They j are the most dangerous kind o f luua- ! tics when the craving comes over them. The drug means more to thein than life, and they will never hesitate to sacrifice lives—others and tbelr owu —to get the stuff. "The situation which has arisen Is perilous In the extreme, but it Is not unexpected, and um|>le wurnlug of wbat would come about tf the city did not prepare for it was given a year ago before the Boylun law became effective on July 1 last The city was told then that it must prepare to handle hun dreds — yes. thousands — of uufurtu untes. “ Commitment o f drug habitues to hospitals had been found to be a fiat failure, because tbe hospitals were tool overcrowded to keep these cases a suf ficient length o f time. In addition ex Vhoto by A m e r i c a n Press Association. perience hud shown that the hospitals HUB. r H K D M U I C Brill,KV were not the proper places for drug cases, because the clinical or medical scuta lives o f tho bureau o f education, treatment needs to be followed by a lire croHslug tho continent, bolding o r prolonged soclul, physical and mental gnnlzution mootings In many o f tbe rehabilitation. The prisons were then western state«. This tour Is Intended overloaded with drug users, aud wo to rnnke tbe benefits of tho nnuunl found that In nearly every ease the conference felt as widely as possible. prison terms were too short for treat "This year’s work of tbe congress ment to effect anything like a cure. Is In close connection with the borne “ Consider this: From -to per eeut to education division o f the bureau of 05 per cent of prisoners are drug users. education. Mrs. Frederic Schoff. presl Leaving out those sentenced for tills dent o f the Kutlouul Mothers' Congresa. very thing, from 30 per cent to 50 per Is director o f the borne education dl cent o f persons convicted o f other o f vision, which, since Its organisation lu fenses are, found to be drug users September. 11)13, has enrolled over 20,- They have to lie treated fur this, but 000 women from all parts of tbe couu the workhouse sentences, for instance, try Interested nnd nble to co-operate are so short that nothing adequate can in organizing parents for study of be done to rid them of the h abit" child nature and child making. Tbe Boylan law, the Vanderbilt nnd “ The plan o f the home education other anti drug crusades nnd to some work, aa revealed In the Congress of extent the war have increased drug Mothers and In the home edncutlon prices us much ns 1.000 per cent. division. Is 'the organization of tbe A year ago ii six ounce cun o f opium parenthood o f the world for study of cost the "plpey" or smoker from $0 to childhood's needs nud for the promo $10. Now It costs from $35 to $55. tlon o f child w elfare' In the confer Sold by tbe “ toy." the smallest and ences which the congress proposes to most popular measure. It brought $1 hold some o f the topics to be discuss for first class opium or 50 cents for od are ‘Peace,’ ‘Encouragement In lower grade. Now Lai Yuen; the best Habits of Thrift and Industry.' 'Sptr opium, costs $i! a "toy.” Recently 300 Itual Development of Children' and six ounce tins o f this opium sold for 'Helping Waywurd Children.' ’’ $15,000, and the buyer expected to make $3.000 profit. H o s p it a ls F o r A n im s lt . Cocaine, now selling for $22 an Rome.—The Society For the Protec ounce, could lie obtained a year ago for $3 or less. A "deck” o f coenlne, tion o f Animals announces that If the smnll package generally nsid In Italy goes to war It will maintain four the Illegal drug trade, sells now for big hospitals for sick and wounded $4.50 to $5. and the user gets less than horses he used to for 25 cents. It Is now »old in smaller packages, containing only a SURPRISE FOR F A L L S CITY few doses, for 50 ceuts or $1. The drug i i u w is often adulternti.d. The s mple mixture o f buckthorn Heroin, or morphine diacetyl, was bark, glycerine, etc., known as Ail- Imported largely from Germany nnd ler-i-ka, tlv* appendicitis preventa little manufactured here. It comes in tablets, which are crushed and "sniff- i tive, surprises Falls City. It draws od" through the nose. A hundred tab I ao much foul matter from the system lets now sell for $5 to $C Before tho that O N E S P O O N F U L relieves sour war they cost $1. U<;roln powder stomach, gas and constipation A T adulterated with sugar < d lead is sold ONCE. M. L. Thompson, druggist. at n corresponding advance. Tbe morphine user piiys almost as J much as the opium smoker. Morphine j Notice to Eletric Light Users Is selling now ut $5 for twenty-five grains. Formerly the sam e amount All persons owing the Falls City was sold for 25 to 35 cents. S t Louis.—Prospect a are bright for a humdinger o f a time this summer fur Rodgers Gardner, thirteen year old son o f Russell E. Gardner, president of a big buggy company. His father has leased a whole hall park for him. Heretofore the corner lot hierarchy reached Its apex In the boy who owned a dollar 'u' a quarter baseball, a catch er's glove and an Inflelder's mitt. Even then he was always likely to be tor>- pled from his throne by some tnler- loper with a wagon tongue bat and an out drop curve. But when a fellow owns a whole park he’s reasonably safe. Electric Light Co. for service prior Russell E. Gardner the other night to April 1, 1914, will please pay W alter L. Tooze, Jr., L a w y e r , MOVED BY PARCEL POST. closed a lease on the vacant corner at the amount to D. L. Wood at The Dallas, Oregon. tf. Laclede and Euclid avenues and has arranged to have It fenced and laid out O ld W « y C o s t H * r $20— N iw O n ly News office, $4.62. Correspondents wanted in « v e r y In baseball grounds by the time the son Seattle, Wash.—Mrs. Annie Olson Is ! neighborhood in this section, o l the returns from a military school for bis Get your butter wrappers print-' summer vacation. believed to be the first houiwwlfe In country. the United States to "move" p _y parcel 1 ed at the News office. 5 M r. H am a 6 * « k tr - C O M C TO FALLS C ITY . O R C U O N a n d B u y O r o h a r d La n d Notice to News Subscribers A b l u « - p « n o l l o r O M m a r h or* t h l i n o l l o « m i s m t h a t y o u r • u b t o r l p * lio n to T h o N o w a hoo oa plrotl a n d nooda f la ln g D o II n o w . FALLS CITY MARKET REPORT Flour, per sack $1.85, $2, $2 10 Bacon, per pound 20-22 cents llntna, par pound 22-centa Picnic bamn, per pound 16-otnla Choice Dairy bultrr 25-cents; Roll 60 cenIs. Creamery, per pound 85-ccuta; (Loll 70-oenls. Eggs, per dozen 18-cents Coffee, per pound 26 to 46 emits Sugar, 13-p mud for $1.00 Bmtns, small w hite, per pound 8-eents. Lard, per 5-lb pail 85-centr; per 10-lb pail $1 06. Potatoes, per pound 2^-cei.ts Faad Wheat, per bushel $1.80 limit, per sack (1.15 Shorts, per sack $1 75 Harley, Midd per sack (2 25 Hulled Harley, per sack (1.75 Alfalfa meal, per 100-lb« $1.75 Post Office Time Card Offico hours: Daily, except Sun day, 8 a.m. to 6.30 p.m. Mail arrives, front Salem 9.00 a.m , 5:15 p.m. Dallas, 9:00 A M , 5:45 P. M. Portland and Dallas train No. Ml, 1 j :6A A M. Hlack Rock, 1:30 P. M. Mail closes for: Salem, 8.50 A.M., 1 P. M. and 5 P. M Dallas, 8:50 A. M. and 5 P M. Portiand-DttiiaB train, 358, 1 P.M Hlack Rock, 11 A. M. S unday O nly Offico hours: 9:30 to 10:80 a.m: Mail arrives front Salem, 9:00 a. m. Mail closes for Salem, 8:50 a. m. Effective May 13, 1915. 1 it a C. M Kit » L I N O , Postmaster For Rent— Dwelling house. ply at News office. Ap Extra copies of The News are printed each week, and will be sent to any address desired, postpaid, for 5 cents per copy. Heart Disease Almost Fatal to Young Girl "M y daughter, wh»a thirteen year« old. waa stricken with heart trouble 8h* waa so bad w* had to place her bed near a window eo eho could get her breath. On* doctor eald, 'Poor ohlld, ahe Is likely to fall dead any time.' A friend told me Dr. Mile*' Heart Kemody had cured her father, ■o I tried It, and ■he besan to Im prove. She took a «reat many bot- tlee, but eh* le ■pared to me to day. a fat. roey cheeked alrl. No one can Imastne the confidence I have In I)r. Mile»' Heart Remedy.” A. R CANON, Worth. Mo. The unbounded confidence Mr. Canon has in Dr. Mile*’ Heart Rem edy is shared by thousands of others who know its value from experience. Many heart disorders yield to treatment, if the treatment is right. If you are bothered with short breath, fainting spells, swell ing of feet or ankles, pains about the heart and shoulder blades, pal pitation, weak and hungry spells, you should begin using Dr. Miles’ Heart Remedy at once. Profit by the experience of others while you may. 4 □r. M ile s' H e art Rem edy I* «old and guaranteed by all drugglete. M IL K S M E D IC A L CO., E lk h a r t lad.