Falls City news. (Falls City, Or.) 190?-19??, December 04, 1915, Image 2

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    Slittini»?, December I, 1 litri
p r o fe s io n a l lia r te
JOY IN IMPERIAL HOME.
Copy for new ads. andchanL
lo The New* not later thaw Wi
OFFICIAL DIEFCTORY OF FALL* CITY
H J. C.itmn, Mayor.
R M. Wonderly, ' oun<'Uro«n at luirge
Phillip «lottfreid
H. C. Brown.
c .). Bnttij
C o q m U b « b
I. G. Singleton.
C. L. Hopkins,
R. A. Titus.
C. E. MePherren, Auditor and Polieo Judf
Walter L. T o«re Jr.. City Attorney.
Pat Murphy. Marshal and Water 9upt.
M. L. Thompson. Treasurer
Dr. F. M Hellwarth. Health Ofleer.
Th«Council meets in regular session on the first
Monday night of each month, at 7 30 o'clock. In
the office of the Falls City*News.
S a t u r d a y , D ecem ber 4. 1915
And Hi* Centrala Ars ths Ktisvss In
lìtrniftn Dceks ol Carda.
Berilli. - Gri man* uow play skut uud
gl Iter tu votile vani gaiues wlth pie
tuies of Vou llludeuburg mal olher
popolar leuderi lu thè wur Insiemi of
thè couysntlouul klugs, qtiveus unii
kuuves, says un urtlcle III thè Berlltier
Tugeblutt. The wrtter of thè urtlcle.
after culllug nlteutlon to thè wlde-
spic.nl populurlty of sudi decke of
i urti-, suggesta thut Gennai) be sii I m II
tuted for l'reneh In thè cipressino*
used In cimi game*, tlltultuitlng word*
llke ", urenti." “ coeur." “ piqué" sud
"tretle."
The ii«iv wur curda tinte u plcture of
thè Kaiser Insiemi of thè usuai acca,
n lille thè tour klugs nre thè klngu of
Un vaila, Saxouy and Wurteuiburg.
uud thè lìtui»! Duke of Badett The
kuuves are repressi!ted by Herman
leader*, nini sveli curde llke thè tcn
bave plctures of uotables lu thè wur
Ainong thè meli whose plctures now
figure In curd guiues »re Coutil Zep­
pelin, Adattai vou Ttrplta. Chaticellor
volt Ilei binami llollweg. Captala Wsd
dlngeu. Brince Bupprocbt of ItHvurla.
Ueuertil ìon Falkenbuyo uud Utueral
vou Kluck
F u r Which Waft Held In Cloaa In­
v. Irl U. llicks 1916 A1-’
timacies of Court Circloa That 8ha
s tit FRUIT RU is ING, FJ ARM CROPS
manac is by far the finest, largest tw liM
SOtl.S STOCK »/\I$1NG DA \IK\ WORK
Wai Drifting Into Hopoloaa Insanity
.
m
ini
;.
co<»k
POP L TRY K AIM JO. H AKHKN____ .______
and l>est ever before printed. The
Nov* Dupellftd— Hor Two Daughters
ING Mi W ING »IJU SKHOI.D AK TS. HOMt
Nt’RSING. HI’S I n KSS MKVII o DS. RO\l> Also Ara Activaly Engagad.
Hieks storm and weather fore­
Rl’II.DING HARJU KNGINhhRtN«. Rl’RAI
o r g a n i s a t i o n s m a r k !-: t i n g .
casts for 1915 a train have proven
I’etrograd.— If the war hint brought
Cuiics»W*J»»dcnctr io u t* r* W ithout T uition
their truth and value, and this
V ixprit In stru c tio n tit Muoic.
unspeakable
horror to the Russluu peo­
K« dtw t'i railroad rate«.
splendid Almanac for 1916 should
P ot program write to The College Exchange, Oregon ple It has also brought cumfort lo the
kgrtcultunl College. CooaliU.
Ow 1-1 U» f-1) imperial household o f the czar, l'rlor
find its way straight into every
to the war It was no secret that the
home and office in America. The
| czarlua suffered from u marked form
Rev. Irl R. Hicks Magazine, Word
of meluucholla with other mental pe­
culiarities. The fear wus held la the
and Works, and his unique A l­
-lose Intimacies o f court circles thut
manac should always go together. |
HALF SOVEREIGNS MAY GO.
she w as drifting Into hopeless luauulty.
both for only one dollar a year. I
But since the czarina and her two
daughters, the Urautl Duchess Olga Heavy Wastsgs on Coin Poinlsd Out by
• The Almanac alone is35e. prepaid, j
Economists.
and the Grnml Duchess Tatiana, have
Send to Word and Works Publish
Umdon. It was In the year IHIt)
entered actively Into their work as
ing Company, 3401 Franklin Ave..
Bed Cross nurses the word has goue that the authorities ut the uilut resole-
1 throughout all the Itusslas that the , to discontinue (ho use of the gulueu
St. Louis, Mo.
GIVES HIS WANT AD.
BRIDE $300,000 CASH
NEWS AND COMMENT
ENTERTAINMENT FOR EVERYBODY
Aged Man Wins Georgia Wifa,
Twenty-eight, liy Thai Gourse
People hu\e a thousand and one
CANAL MAY NOT BE
Atlautu, bn.—William II. Durden of
way o f amusu g the
i s in 1 1 e
OPEN UNTIL SPRING summer tim e, hut as w inter ap­ New York, who was mnrrled here re­
cently to Miss Lulu Douglas Thomson,
proaches, w ill
mental sickness of the czarina has
been cured.
To her constuut hih I »elf sacrificing
labors In the court hospital ut Tsars-
koe Selo, the village where the famous
its Irng eve' iogs.
won his bride by menus of it want ad
vertlsemeut.
Mr. Burden Is seventy-ala years old.
Ue has been a widower for several
years and has adult grandchildreu
The bride is twenty-eight years old. It
San Francisco, Cal., Dec. 1.— your fa m ily with
a
sufficient Is generally reported that Mr. Burden
settled $o00,000 on her Just before the
“ A t Panama the general opinion amount o f reading m atter, so that wedding ceremony.
is strong that the canal blockade >>n rf member of the fa m ily may
The bride Ls a niece of the late W.
will not be lifted by General Goe- nave som ething useful and inlet- S. Thomson of Atlauta and of Mrs.
Leouldas F. Scott of Decatur, with
thals until next spring,” said -st ing to rend.
whom she has made her home since
Dr. W. W. Braith svaite here to­
I.o k over the club of inag.tgl
childhood. She got n substantial estate
day.
advertised on png- 4 d ibis paper, after her parents died, but most of
Dr. Braithwaite has just arriv­ there i s » IliHg izi lie for everv nielli this was spent on her art studies in
Philadelphia, and she recently began
ed from the isthmus, accompan­ b- r o f ilie fann y
You are doubt­ to consider earning a livelihood by bc-r
ied by Dr. J. W. McLean.
less already f.m ilia r with the-e own efforts.
A girl friend in Georgia ran across
The former has charge o f the popular publications. 1'hey con­
an advertisement which appeared to
hospital at Ancon and is connect­ tain bright, interesting stories, ai- ask for a companion. The friend an­
ed with the United States health ticles on f s .ion, music and art, swered It, but after a letter or two
was told that she “ did not suit.”
service.
photographs o f the big events hi
"You try it, Lulu," the friend aug
The slides in Culebra cut are all parts of the woi Id and practical gested. So Miss Thomson wrote to the
enormous,” continued Dr. Braith­ helps and suggestions ou every advertiser, received a paper with ques­
tions to be answered, filled them out
waite.
phase of daily life
and returned the paper. Apparently
“ H alf a mile back on the other
The four magazines come to you she "did suit,” for the next mall
side o f the canal, the ground is m onthly for a whole year. You brought a letter from Mr. Burden, who
badly torn and cracked. The im­ will learn to look forward to these had been the anonymous advertiser.
Mr. Burden came to Atlanta and
mense pressure forced the dirt m onthly visits and their arrival pushed his suit so successfully that be
up through the canal oottom.”
w ill be bright spots throughout the won Miss Thomson. The marriage,
coming year. S-nd us your order however, was opposed by Mr. Burden's
children uud grandchildren, who live
Do it before you forget In Macon, Ga.. from which city Bur­
“ I did not raise my boy to be a nid v
soldier” is hurled with much about it. I lie , xtra cost is so lillle den went to New York several years
venom at those who do not glory that u is liurdli wm tli considering ago.
The first news of Mr. Burdcu's in
•‘ D i) IT N O W .”
in war. It is not those who
tended marriage which reached the
♦ —♦ ♦ to to........ -
ears of his relatives In Macon, a friend
clamor for war the loudest who
Bull Attacks Pastor Piety.
of the family said, was tlnH the aged
carry the flag inio the enemies
Wabash. Ind.—The Itev. Samuel f’te man went to his bank in New York
country; it is not always the ry. need sixty-two. pastor of a Disci and drew out 9300.000 In cash, tu-ked
trained soldier who leads to vic­ pies of riirist church in the southern It Into a gripsack aud left for Atlanta
part of the county, was seriously in
Mr. Burden's children came to At
tory. A t the first battle o f Bull jnred when lie was attacked by a bull
lanta »from Macou and tried to stop
Run the regular soldiers were Piety had smic into a liaru on a the marriage, even begging Mi s Thom
whipped to a frazzle and did not frl n l's farm, when lie was uffticked son not to wed the aged man Both
by the animal He was thrown almost
stop running until they had put a-mss the bam and then trampled l»e Mr. Burden and Miss Thomson, how­
ever, Insisted that their marriage con­
twenty-eight miles between them fore bis cries for help brought a p-'sser cerned only themselves. After the
by.
who
seized
a
pitchfork
and
drove
and the squirrel rifles o f the
ceremony the couple left for New
the hull away. Piety suffered two tiro
Y'ork, where they will live.
rebels
It was the untrained vol­ ken ribs mid 8 fractured collarbone.
f
Doctor Returning From Panama Says everybody read* more or less.
Opinion Is General That Months
You do a little V i- lt 11 g. hut Hi"st
Will Be Required to Remove Block­ of your evenings are spent at horns,
ade
and it is a wise tilin g to previd*
unteer taken from the field, the
shop and the office who did the
fighting in that war. Men who
were fighting for their country,
not driven as fat cattle to slaugh­
ter. It is well enough to have a
respectable standing army, we
presume, else how would some of
the army snobs survive? But
come to real war the man from
the plow, the shop and even the
corner loafer will enthuse and
can be trusted to save the coun-
ti without the necessity o f all
this great war talk and extensive
preparation.
MILL MAY START MARCH 1st
From reports, more or less re­
liable, perhaps, it is believed that
the mill at this place will resume
operations the first o f March.
The report is that the Falls City
Lumber company will put men to
work in the woods in February
and that the mill will be ready
the first ot March. While there
is nothing absolutely certain that
the report is correct, it is fairly
reliable and from the reported
revival in the lumber industry on
the Coast it is reasonable to ex­
pect that the mill corrqany w ill;
get busy. However, a might be
well to add that the residents o f
this city are not unduly excited
over the report, burned no bon
fires nor sent any “ glowing re
ports to the Oregonian,”
Round
T r ip
WEEK END FARES
to
Portland and S a le m
On
S a le
Saturday and Sunday
re tu rn
lim it
MONDAY
Falls City to Portland
a n d re tu rn
$ 3.10
Every Saturday and Sunday low round trip rate
tickets are on sale to Portland and Salem.
Tickets to Portland are good via Whlteson and
Newberg or Hillsboro or via Salem. The return
limit is Monday. If you wish further informa­
tion ask the local agent.
SO U TH ER N PACIFIC
John M. Scott, General Patscnt‘ep Agent, Portland, Oregon.
/
ami the half guinea, which were re-
plai cil by Jhe sovereign uud the half
sovereign.
Now- It Is the turn of the half uover-
eUn In bo scrapped. Economists point
out that the wastage on the smaller
gold coin In circulation ls much great­
er thnu on the sovereign, owing to Ihe
huger surface exposed In proportion lo
the value
Everything possible bus
been dune to reduce the loss from
wear and tear aud to Inc reuse the du-
lability of the coins, but the half sorer-
•Ign btlll wears badly and Is said to
chip eustly.
And uow thut "Bradbury's” (oue
pound notes, so culled from Ilio signa­
ture of the secretary of the treasury
which they bear), uud plukuns (10 shil­
ling untesi are part of British everydoy
life the abolition of the hulf sovereign
bus many advocates.
1 - I I Y S K I A N
F. M. HELLWARTH
I’ llY
81 CIAN
AND BUROKON
11 Ili ch (ilio door east o l P. O.
(imo sud pi
gag
fall* City,
K vftldtiicft I h o n « doli
(In g io i
CHIROI’ HACTK’
DR. W» L. Holloway
CHIROPRACTIC
W i|lb«,st r a il* c ity Hulftl
M O N P A Y. W R o N KH U A Y a n u m i l 'A V
A llrrn n o n t Iftcb W»«k.
S u 0 tn c 0 0 (Ia tO o
turriti.
j f a lls C it y Ib o t c l
S a m p le R e a m e
Beut A e e o m modulions
f .
Orosus. Proprietor
HA 1 ( 1 .t u » n o m
Bohle’s Barber Shops
fa lls City, Oregon
Where you u a get * Skirt. Is lr Cat. lath
*r T k lst'
Alesi 1er Dallas lltam Liundry
Hu utile» forw*r«!«d lu M tliy evening
MOfUTMKNTH
G. L. H A W K I N S
M A R B LE A N D G R A N IT E
MONUMENTS
D allas, Oregon
rt'NKHAI. DIRECTOR
R. L. CHAPMAN
Fu n tral D inctot
Ws ftttftftd to all wsrfc promptly.
Dalla* a a l ta ll. City, Or
RAISING GOLDFISH NO
JOB FOR A LAZY MAN
Photo by Am erican Press Association
Topeka Citizen Makes Fortune
at It by Hard Work.
UIEKESS ALE A AN P it A Art IlKP ( UOSH Nl'IlHK
summer palace of the czar Is located.
Is credited the relief which has come
to her mentally.
The czarina and the grand duchesses
took u thorough course lu training In
the care of the wounded soldiers. The
czarina threw herself Into the organ­
ization of the hospital with enthusiasm
and bad It eifulppcd In the most per
feet manner.
It was placed under the direction of
the Princess Gedroyc, one of the high
est nobility und who bus won a na­
tional reputation In Russia us oue of
the foremost women doctors.
The
czarina, with her daughters, works ut
the hospital every day from 0 a. tn. to
2 p. m. uud often later.
So Impressed are they with the serl
onsness and the humanity of their
services that they ofteu return In the
evenings, and when they h ue danger­
ously wounded patients they stay all
night. The czurlnn has also equipped
a bath train and presented It to the
soldiers in the field.
The court hospital has uccomtnodu
tlons for 200 soldiers and thirty offi­
cers. The regular nurse's uniform
which the royal muses wear Is made
of white with a red cross mi the left
arm The example of the czarina and
her daughters has Induced many worn
cn of the Russian nobility to devote
themselves to Red Cross work.
Some of them have turned over their
residences in Petrogrnd as well as their
estates In the country to the soldiers
for hospitals. The Grand Duchess Olga
Is twenty years old and her sister,
Tatiana, seventeen.
Both of them
have been gazetted colonels of two
crack cavalry regiments In their fa
ther's service.
FINDS
DIET
CURES
CANCER.
London Doctor Roports Ssvsn Complots
Recoveries With Nature'* Aid.
London. — Seven patients suffering
from cancer have been completely
cured "by assisting nature's efforts,”
according to Dr. Robert Bell, head of
the cancer research department of the
Battersea General hospital.
“ We have,” Dr. Bell recently said,
"been abie to demonstrate beyond
doubt that the healing power of na­
ture, If sufficiently assisted by regu
taring the diet regimen of patients,
together with the administration of
therapeutic agents, has proved In many
Instances quite competent not only to
overcome the disease, but to bring
•bout complete recovery."
Hit Ashss In Parcsl Pott.
West Palm Beach. Fla.—The ashes
of A. Nlnomlya, a Japanese who died
here several days ago, have been start­
ed for Japan by parcel post. Shortly
before his death Nlnomlya requast-d
that his body be cremated and the
ashes sent to Ehlmn, Japan, where lie
was born. The ashes were placed In a
metal receptacle, which was henuefl
cally sealed.
Topeka, Kan.—Ten acres of goldfish
bring Lugrne Curie of Langdon, Kan.,
more ready cash annually than I*
cleaned up on the average 100 ucre
farm. But rulalng and marketing ten
! acres of goldfish ls no lazy mun's Job.
In fuet, Mr. Cntte puts In us many
1 days’ work In n year as docs tbe aver
age farmer. Ills working season, bow
ever, differs from that of tbe furmcr.
Ills heavy work begins In tbe fall.
Just about tbe time tlio heavy farm
work ls over for the season, aud It lasts
ul! winter. Wading lu water hip deep
during tho winter months und sorting
fish with tbe Uarv bands uro some of
tho Inconveniences suffered by the
goldfish producer.
For many years Mr. Catte has oper
ated a private butchery tn Reno conn
ty, near tbe little town of Langdon
lie took up a homestead near the fool
of the sand hills, some of the land be
Ing covered with bogs and springs.
lie built one pond and stocked It
w Itb fish, expecting to sell them on the
market Boon there came n demand
for »mall fish for ponds und crccka.
and he quit raising for tbe market and
went Into the regular hntchcry bust
ness.
lie gradually enlarged hi» hutchery
until now It covers thirteen acres and
Is composed of fifteen ponds. The In
do .try grew to such proportion» that
Mr Catte lias turned Ills grain farm
over to tils son and now devotes bis
time exeln-lvely to the production of
fish.
For some years he raised game fish
and shipped them all oyer the west
Notwithstanding that •nearly every
state has n fish hatchery which sup
plies small fish for Its streams, ponds
and lakes free of cost, Mr. Catte has
hud no trouble disposing of Ills batch.
fli> still supplies hundreds of ponds In
Kansas, Missouri. Oklahoma and Ne­
braska with game fish. lie sells direct
to the Nebraska fish department and
also to the federal government
SH E WAS NO “P IK E R ”
8o She Rolled * Peanut In Omaha.
Neb., Because She Lost Bet.
Omaha, Neb.—Before a largo crowd
Miss Minnie Kneeter, a pretty society
girl, rolled a peanut arouqd tbe block
staring nt Omaha's busiest corner
The peanut was rolled with a tooth-
pick.
"I lost a b et" said Miss Kneeter
"Let 'em call me crazy, but I'm no
piker."
Honey In Courthouee.
Butler, Mo.—For weeks a »warm of
bees has been noticed around tbe cu­
pola of the Batee county courthouse.
Th# county court ordered the veteran
Janitor, Fleetwood Thomas, to Inves­
tigate. He found the boos bad depoe-
Ited about ROD pounds of honey. He
took It to the grocery stores and real­
ized about |T5 from the sale.
Zhc
©regon
C W . M a tth e w * . P roprie to r
•
-«as
(R-r-Avr 'Avwj
Drink Sode W at«r
HARRINGTON
There ia a Jack for every Gill
aud some oue wauta the articles
you want to sell, Advertising in
the News brings result». Tty on#?
The Womans World, Farm and,
Home, Home Life, Household and
the News one year for $1.18.
When you lose anything an ad
in the News will put people on the
lookout and probably restore to
you some valued article.
Correspondents wanted in every
neighborhood in this section ut me
country.
»