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About Falls City news. (Falls City, Or.) 190?-19?? | View Entire Issue (Dec. 2, 1916)
MATURI>AY, DECEMBER 2, j In the Arena j j of Sports j • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••a Pittsburgh'« Strang Cantar. tiloiiii Warner, lioail roach, Ima <!«• vnl<>|>o<l Oli» <>f Ilio sirwiigoat toaina timi lias ovor io|iro«oulo«l Ilio 1'iilvor ally o f I'ltlshurgli. in ('H|italu Itoli I'tH'k he hna (ho I iom I ronlor of any of Ihn cantoni uiilvoraltioa anil probably Ih » aliloat o f ihn year. Although nitirh lighter than moat contera, Captain 1010 Post Office Time Card ‘ y !J- O ilici» h o u r«: I>uity, oxcop t Hun- ■lay, 8 n.in. to 41.30 p.m. M a il tu ri vow, from Su Ir in '.».1)0 a.in., 41:16 p in . Yesl We do Job Work. Compare our prices with others and see samples. THE NEWS D u lia », 9:00 A . M , 6:16 P. M. l'ortIrtful A Eugviie train 10!, 11 :5Îi n. in. j B la ck K o ek f 1:30 P. M. M a il cloaca fo r : S alon i, >1 50 A .M ., 1 P .M . am i 6:30 P. M . D a lla », 8:50 A. M. and 5:301’ . M. A E u gen e P o rtla n d tra in 162, I p. m. Black R ock , 11 A. M . M a il O rd e r and Poetai H avings ! w in dow clone» at 6 P M. S t 'N I M T O n I.V O ificc h o u r«: 9:30 to 10:80 a .m : M a il a r r iv e « la from S a lem , 9:00 in. A P o rtla n d 11:55 h . E u gene trnin 101, in. M u il clo se« foi S alem , 8:50 a. m. E ngeo« P o rtla n d tra in 102, 1 p. nr. Effective Oct. 20, 1915. I k a C. M k h ih . in o , Powtinaster Ptioio l<> Amvrlcm» ft'iena A iw » Relation CA PTA IN »Oll Ftt« k. IN « k I uim hnri ho troulil» Mo für In uiore tluiii lioMiiitf hU u t r, |n Hu» Um*, ln tho rtMout gutuo w**,« (tyracnse ho playotl huvue w ill» ,|ictr llue lu Mi. tuuibllng alM>iit wltli com- parallve enae. Pittsburgh, tiy tbe « a y . Imi the best «.leycu ihut Ima roproaoiit- ,<d that UM , cmiiy in tuaiiy yenrs. It la atroo'^ „ ii both offen «« and defense. To Rsviaw McGrsw C j »«. Tho John MeGraw chm « will be bau dled lijr ihe btmril o f dlrectora o f tho Nallunal len Kilo w hen H inoola lu New York uu thv noi-uud Tursdny lii l>o- «•«Muber. lt 1» Mild timt aeveral o f the olub oteuer« «ro Aiixlotis to linvo Mc- Gruw’a atatewent iluii the Gluuts wen» not playlug tbclr best agaliist Itrook lyii thorouKhly rovlewctl und waut the New York loador t » Hinke liU »Inte j ment oloar thnt lio did not mean t » re- lleet on th » hnncMty of tho gauie. The rnlo undor whleh tho MeGraw on»* will Com« prnrldcM for the dlrectora to Imndlo nll IncIdontM tvhleh rnlglil In* couatnicd um heilig "projndlclul to tbe Ifood repute o f ibe gam « o f lutae lia ll“ Sheldon Lott to Yalo. Chilli ftbrldon. veteran loft tackle nt Y'ule, I iiim proba lily played lila luxt ginne nt footbnll. ile la anfferlng from In- tlntnninlory rhouinatlam. ladlovoil to have been contracted while n iiioui I m 'C o f the Yale nrtlllery bnttnlion In ennu't. at Tobylianna, Pit., during tho aumw'.-r. lie prepared for Ynle nl Andover and wan the chief competitor o f ••Ctlt.ild" Itlaek for the Yale captaincy laut win ter. Ill» home I» In Joplin, Mo. c hnr- ley Taft, «ou o f Ilio es-prealdenb. sue- eoeda to the po»ltloii nt loft tackUx Chief Fire Causes A chief aouive nf lire 1» '.Tom gfiao- llue. denning with gnsollii»» should lie done out of ddora, and when the gaso line Is no longer lit for uso It »bould lie thrown upon the grounvl, tn which It will i|Utckly hide lt»elf. <><>k stores also are a constant tiro danger. Cracks In stoves large enough \o allow Ihe es- ia|ie o f »parks are cotv mini from over heating and fron^ thv wnrptsg o f the stove lids. The pipe often has lm|ier- foct Joints or nilHfltH the chimney hole nnd not Infrequent' y It Is perforated by rust. The s t o v j should lie a foot nnd a half front tl te wall or else tbe wall protected by a sheet o f zinc or tin loosely hung m i hooks so nlr can circulate behind it It should extend a yard above the iitove to protect tho wall from Ihe pipe, which often be comes red hot to that height. t-’ndcr tho sto ve should be a sheet o f metal extending; far enough tn catch coals falling VToin doors or cracks. Every stovepipe should be held In Ihe chimney by a wire. More than half of all tires In. dwellln g houses start In tho kitchen or fro’ .n sparks In the kitchen fine. Tho lig h t materials used In starting a (Ire af e most likely to be carried above thu building by draft, and these spark« falling down on a fuzzy stippled r o o f start a fire.—R. B B uckley. Ohio P lr8 Marshal. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ T H E P A TTE R N . ♦ >♦ ------ ♦ •v OftllniM ms long that ws might » « « • <?> aright O' <0 Ths wsh that ms ars w a v in g 0> <*• m-Hh ths years, # I For hidden Is the pattern fToiji our <b j O' sight. # <*■ And each the tad In ths mar.y dls- -Ic j <j> appears. a <*> a <*> Wo may not know the pstts m. but a | cA If threads a I a Of levs and trust, of aervl es kind a and tl US, a a Are woven In our hearts nes d have a | a no dreada a a Of what the pattern la whet i turn- <f> a cd to view. a a -A . W P i act*. a a a ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ j > ♦ ♦ ♦ PAGE 3. KALI .H CITY NEWS °°©3)(BÌì sm tffo p í ?(?® imi O pqqqü (tadlasljO Q s' When travel- r f log, attending a Theatre or some Social Function, or if Shopping, don’t forget to have D R . M IL E S ’ -A n ti • PA IN PILLS with you. They are in valuable for Headache and all other Panr*. • 2 0 D o o m , 2 5 -Cents. IF FIRST BOX IS NOT SATIS FACTORY, YOUR MONEY W ILL 3E REFUNDED. ORINQ D E SIR E D ■1 hav« used Dr. R E L IE F . Mile«' Antl-Paln PUIa for soma time and find them an Invaluable remedy for headache. I have always taken great pleasure In recommending them to my frlrnda, being confident that they will bring th« desired relief. I am never without them and nee them for all attacks of pain, knowing that they will not dlaappoint me.' MRS. W. H. BENSON. West Haven. Conn. Comparative Digestibility of Food Made with different Baking Powders From a Series of Elaborate Chemical Tests : A n equal quantity o f bread (biscuit) w as made with each o f three different kinds o f baking powder— cream o f tartar, phosphate, and alum— and submitted separately to the action o f the digestive fluid, each for thfc same length o f time. The relative percentage o f the food digested is shown as follows: • Bread made with Royal Cream of Tartar Powder; | 100 Per C e n t Digcatcd | Bread made with phosphate powder t____________ I 68*4 Per Cent. Digested! Bread made with alum pow der:___________ | 673s Per Cent. Digested 1 These tests, which are absolutely reliable and unprejudiced, make plain a fact of great importance to everyone: Food raised with Royal, a cream o f tartar Baking Powder, is shown to be entirely diges tible, while the alum and phosphate powders are found to largely retard the digestion o f the food made from them. Undigested food is not only wasted food, but it is the source o f very many bodily ailments. by them from the way they Dented J each other, and It was plain that an; Intent kilts I dl»ie»pe<t shown her would tail foitli Hie aiiathcijiii» If not the | blows o f the others. Shortly after supper my hostess said to me: "W ell, pard. slnee you’ ve <ome «11 Ihe way out here to talk business with me suppose we get Mwsy from these galoot» and have a |wwwuw." She led Ihe way out on to the reran dah, threw herself Into a bom mock, III a cigarette and said: “ Fire aw ay!” I had preiaired an exposition o f the By H O R A C E S L A 1 E R condition o f the property and began nt the beginning. btlVnad not proceed M y father wss Interested with a ed far before she atopfied me. “ See here, pard," she said In a mix Scotchman o f the name of MacAllater tore o f Hcoteh and cowboy dialect. lu ranching In the weaL MacAlister j "I'm no shot at business. I could na attended to tbe stock raising, while j hit a bam door that a w a y. My fa my father remained In the eaat rnnnag ther and your father run this ranch lug the financial end of tbe bustueaa. together so long as my father lived, When my father died I was twenty- since when your father dealt the cards. one years old. I found with his will, You say your father left the manage leaving all bis property to me, a letter ment to you. What can I do but the stating that It was all In tbe ranch. same thing? I'll na Interfere with ye.” This ended our business talk, and lt He and Ills partner had virtually lieen was not very long before I broached one owner, and this was all that had another subject. I asked Miss Helen saved their Investment from bank I f she Intended to live on tbe ranch ruptcy. MacAlister bad died ton years for the future as In the past. before, since when toy father hud “ You bet your bottom dollar I don’t,” managed the busiuees alone for him she »aid. Then her face took on a self and' liia iiurtuer'a daughter, who troubled expression as she continued: was solo heir to her father's Interest- “ But wbat can 1 do? Where can I go? From my father's death, the letter I'm na fit to associate with girls who went on to say, I was to lie sole man have been brought up as girls. I ’m nothin' but a cowboy” —the adjective ager for myself and this daughter, preceding the word cowboy is omitted. Helen MacAlister, now seventeen years ‘‘Girls o f my age w-ould turn tbe cold of age. shoulder to me. All I ’m fit for is to 1 am a methodical chap and after hobnob with punchers.” reading tlila letter sat back in my chair My father had been her adviser and for a job o f thinking. I did not relish had submitted plans for her bringing any business relations with a woman. up. but had not Insisted on any o f My father had been dealing with a them. Now she was beginning to re child who was now entering uimhi wo alize the necessity for getting educated manhood. Doubtless my task would be and polished, and I found no difficulty far harder than his. The result o f my In |>erauadlng her to assent to a plan thinking was a resolution to go west I proposed. It was simply to take her east with me and place her at boarding and look over the property and e»pe d ally the owner o f the other half o f it. school. I remained several weeks on the When I reached the ranch I found it entirely in tbe hands o f men. Asking ranch studying the estate to which I for Miss MacAlister. 1 was told that had fallen Joint heir with Helen Mac she was visiting a ranch near by. Alister. Then we started east togeth n here there was a woman, since there er. and at the end o f the Journey she was no one o f her own sex at her own became an inmate o f a school the prin b»me. I was further Informed that she cipal o f which I Informed o f her an had lived only amoug tbe men on the tecedents and received the lady's prom ranch from the time she was five years ise that she would treat Helen accord old. when her mother died, and her ingly. There was no money Income to our father had the undivided core o f her. Joint estate, so I paid Miss MacAlis- She bad never been away from home ter's expenses from any funds that I till this visit. I sent to Miss MacAlister a request happened to have on band, keeping an that she come home, since It was nec account o f the expenditures. She ask essary that we have a business talk ed no questions as to where the money together. She returned at once. On came from, nor did she ever Inquire as • lie day o f her arrival I was sitting on to the condition o f her property. She the veranda o f the ranch house. Be wrote me frequently, at first address ing Just from the east, I was dressed ing me as ‘TH*ar pard,” but soon the iu eastern costume. Mis» MacAlister new Influences changed all this, and I was addressed proj>erly. Tbe principal wns robed in cowboy apparel o f a fern inliie cut. She rode up to the house ou o f Ihe school considered her my ward horseback, astride, and. tliugiug her and sent me roi»orts o f her progress, as right leg over the saddle, planted it on surlng me that she was getting on fa the giouud; then, taking the left foot mostly. One o f <he most difficult of from the stirrup, she turned and came her former habits to eradicate was that of using profane language, since It was up the steps. * Suddenly she stopped and looked me liable to come out under Impulse. Helen MacAlister remained at the ower from uiy derby hat to m.v check ed spats. Evidently she had never academy tw o yea I s. wiieu I arranged for her transfer to a finishing school seen one got up as I was before. w here she remained another year. Dur "A re you Mr. Millbank?’’ she asked. " I 'am,” 1 replied, rising aud making lug her schooldays 1 never saw her. She complained that I left her “ for a drawing room bow. “ I did na reckon I was to meet a lorn,” she haviug no one but me to be tenderfoot." she said, with a Scotch Interested In. At the end o f the third accent. Her father and mother had year o f her studies 1 arrangevl that she been Scotch highlanders. "H ave they should visit a lady whom I hud inter ested tn her, and then for the liist time taken gude care o f ye?" " I think they have been waiting your In three years l called on her. I found a beautiful woman o f twen arrival to dispose of me. Men ure not as well fitted as women for household ty. tn whom not a trace o f tbe ranch remained. Since I was the only tier- affairs.” son in the world with whom she had " I say,” she said to several men the slightest connection she was nat lounging about, "w hat do you mean by urally much moved at meeting me. In leaving the gentleman without a room deed. I* seemed difficult for her to re and sumwhat to eat? Bestir your strain herself from throwing her arms selves aud show him to the room his about me. father always had when he visited us! Meanwhile I had lieen getting our Gang on!” pioperty iuto shape. The herds had To m.v horror the order was accom grown from hundred» to thousands, panied with a volley o f oaths emanat and the necessary sales o f attle pro ing from a rosy little mouth, the most duced a large Income. The most rea Inappropriate instrument in the world sonable plan for me with one who. for their Conveyance. One o f the men though not legally, had really become addressed shouldered my trunk, which my ward, was, if she was so disposed, had thus far been left on the veranda, to marry her. and carried it to a room on one side Her reception o f my protiosnl con o f the hall within. I folldwed him and vinced me that former habits are liable made a toilet, donning a flannel shirt to crop out under strong emotion. My which fortunately I had brought along declaration was preceded by a matter ns a protection from the cold. While 1 of fact statement o f our connected doing so I heard Miss MacAlister talk j business Interests and the fact that I ing with some cowpuncher» In the hall, was her only protector. From this I and. though her voice was musical, her dropped Into a vein more akin to m.v words «lid not differ from theirs. feelings and ended by telling her that There was the same cowboy nomen t loved her and asked her to he my clature, the same slang nnd, what grat wife. 'You bet!” «he exclaimed, and threw ed most on my sensitive nerves, the herself Into my arms. same oaths. I certainly had no objection to this Now, if Miss MacAlister had l>een an angular, homely, coarse visaged wo disposition of her. but It did not seem man I doubt I f I would have been to me a very honorable thing for me shocked I would simply have been to take a girl who had seen no men, a disgusted. As it was, while I was girl with something of a fortune, and Jarred. I was fascinated. I f this pret appropriate her to myself. I formed ty Scotch girl's accent was a bit like a very virtuous resolution, which was a finger on the string» of n mandolin, Jo arrange a home for her with some her oaths were the bitters in a sweet older person o f her own sex to guide drink. At any rate, they were unique. and control her for, say, two years. It occurred to me that the daughter If during that time she met any one o f a gentleman brought up among she wished to marry, then It wquld be men, with no associates o f her own my duty to give her to such person. I f sex, would naturally fall Into their after two years' familiarity with the ways O f the two elements that go to world she was still fancy free I would consider It perfectly proper for me to make tip the aoclal human being, hered Ity and environment, the tatter had the win her If I could. I had difficulty in Inducing her to field all to Itself. Nevertheless. In Mis« MaeAllster'a case, heredity had not consent to see the world, ih e said been put out o f the fight, for among that we, being partners In business, the slang and the oaths was a cropping should retndn together, she not eondd- out of gentility thnt must have come erlng that would be Impossible with out marriage. She so dreaded going from parenta o f refinement. The first meal I took at the ranch out Into the world with no one to tie house wns supper. All were men ex to that l finally gave in and revealed cept Miss MacAlister. and there was to her what I thought, what I consid little difference tn her and their ap ered the only way that w e could avoid parel. She was evidently "one of separation. And ao~w e were mar them," but »he was treated differently ried. Helen MacAlister A Story of a Girl Brought Up With Cowpuncher». professional CarOs p iir s tn a x F. M. H ELLW AR TH P H Y S IC IA N A N D S U K G E O N O ffice o n « door east of I'. O. «ìffi» ». «fut ... o/.»i I «!!» H) rhonfctfW l or**»A 1 f HIRO PRAC TIC DR. W. L. Holloway C H IR O P R A C T IC will b* (I Fall. City lletsi MO.NJJA V, WKi NKSI.A Y and PtCL'AY Alterane« of Each Week. B u s in e s s d a ro s HOTEL jfallôCit^lbotcl Sam ple Room s Bost A ccom m odations F . D r o t g t , P r o p r ie t o r Bohle’s Barber Shops BAKr»K>t SHOPS Falla City, Oregon Wktrc y«« cas |tt « Shive, lair Cst, lath *r 'ikias* Atjent for Dalla« Mean Ljnndry Hu utiles fu rs si,le<l lu e e d s ) eren in f MONUMENTS G . L. H A W K I N S M ARB LE AND G R A N IT E M ONUM ENTS Ool l as, O regon K C N F U A L DIRECTOR to News Subscribers Notice A mark here indicates that your subscription is delinquent. Please call and fix it. ( M r. H om s S e e k e r C O M E T O FA L L S C I T Y . O R E G O and Buy Orchard Land 3 '\ SOUTHF.RN PACIFIC COMPANY Passenger Train Schedule Effective Oct. 4,1914 wkstbocud 161 16 } am. am. ; Salem . . . 7:00 9.45 Dallas. . . 8.15 11.02 FallsCity. 8.50 11.35 Bl'kRock. 11:55; 167 pm. 4.00 5.30 6.05 164 I 1*6 I am. pm. Bl'k Rock 1.05 FallsCity. 9.30 1.25 Dallas. . . 10.10 j 2.00 Salem . . . 11.011 3.151 170 pm. 6.10 6.40 7.45 A. C. 1‘OWIM. Au JOT Methodist Episcopal Church Rev. Jamen C. Erwin, Pastor Sunday School 10 A. M. J. R. Moyer. Sunday School Sup’t. Preaching 11 A. M. and 7:30 PM Junior League, Sunday, 3 P. M. Miae Marv Hammond. Epworth Leagae, 6:30 P. M. Hanvey Deal, Pree. Mid-week services, Wed. 7:30 P. M. CHURCH NOTICES Fra« Methodist Sunday School 10 a. m. Preaching service 11 a. m. Song and praise service 7:30 followed by preaching at 8:00. Mid-week prayer meeting 7:30 p.nt Everyone cordially invited to attend these services. Edgar N. Long, Pastor.