..HI IJ
Monmouth Herald
Mosmuilh, Cic. July 23 1920
Pane 4
Z am here to saw wood
EDW. J. HIMES
Civil Engineer and
Surveyor
PhoPt S73 318 Levant St D.!I.
No raise in prices '
at present WALTER G. BROWN
S. H. Hinkle, Phone 2411 Repenting the
"PENNSYLVANIA"
DR. F. R. BOWERSOX Fire Insurance Co.
PHYSICIAN & SURGEOS of rhil,lJelPhi
PHONE NOS. NotOTV fut,'C
x CM ICE 3303 B1nlt Dmis' M,,rttr,K-a-Etc-KOISS
i 4191
pon et a sm00(, tonpucJ
A. N. Paltokbuvs junk of all t"angrr persuade you that there
kind and pavs highest cash is any.kmd of pnntine the Her-
prices. tf ali Print bhop can not do. ;
I 1
aw
TABLET,
RIM
11 VUcft.
. 1
mm
FHIS is just wkt you need, r.adarn. Many
I, woracn who were trcubled villi i.idigcs:i;.n,a
sallow, muddy skin, iadicctinj biiiousr.e:; cr.d
hd':;tual conctipction, have been pertinently ci";cd
by tb use of Chamberlain's Tablets Before using
these tablets they felt miserable cr.d despondent.
ww twy VuVwiUl tWi.U AUL,'j.'y w-U 1 CleUUi lUvi
meois. . Try them. They only ccct a quarter
If yen Save pride in the farm that gives you a home and a
iivir.tr why not show it by naming the farm and doing your
corresponding on printed stationery? Ask us about it.
Vacation' Time
' '' ' AT
Seashore and Mountain Resorts
Summer Excursion Fares
TO
Tilamook County Beaches '
A delightful trjp across the Coast Mountains. Double daily train
service from Portland. These beaches include Ro kawav and Gari
baUi beaen res -its, Neah-kah-nie Manzanita and Bay Ocean.
Newport (On Yaquina Bay and the Pacific Ocean)
A charming place for the family. Large and modern natorium.
aa.' water baths. Many formsof amusement.
Crater Lake (One of the world's natural wonders)
highly five miles from Medford, 6177 feet above sea level. A skv
line boulevard of 35 miles encircles the rim of the lake
Other Resorts
Detroit (Breitenbush Hot Springs-Mt Jefferson Country)
McCredie Hot Springs
Jesephine County Caves (Oregon's Marble Halls)
Shasta Mountain resorts
"Oregon Outdoors" Booklet
Particulars on the different resorts; excursion fares; Hotel
and Camp rates.
For particulars inquire of local agent
Southern Pacific Lines
JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent.
USBSBe23BEI!
sura cot
Mr. Barnes, U. S. Wheat Director Says:
, til
at More
ad
And reduce the high cost of living."
ISTHECHEAPEST AS WELL AS THE MOST
WHOLESOME FOOD ON THE MARKET.
BUY THAT,
EXTRA LOAF :
.
Your Grocer has it
erry ity Baking Co.
CONDENSED
CLASSICS
QUO VADIS
By HENRY 8IRNXISWICI
CxtKMtar k fW WlH- Wer
Sij
Henry ' Blenkle
win, to great a
name In Poland
that he baa born
coupled with Co
pernicus and Km
eluaako aa tht
I h r a Polea to
whom Americana
an moat Indebted,
waa born In Opre-i
ya In Russian Po-1
land In Hit. He
studied phlloaophy J
at Waraaw unl
veralty and aoon 1
llirwi rda, In
company with
Helen Uodjeeka
and other radical
Polee. catabllahed
a socialistic com
munity In Cali
fornia. It waa somewhat like the
earlier Brook Farm experiment made
by Hawthorne and hla friends. It w
no more successful and Slenklewlca re.
turned to Poland where he wrote a
series of article (or a Waraaw news
pnper about his American experiences.
Then he turned to novel writing He
wrote brilliantly and rapidly, turning
with the utmost ease from realistic
ploturee of contemporary life to stories
of romance and to historical hovela.
"Children of the Boll." which he called
hla best bonk, la a almpl atory of
Polish life which won more favor with
hie own countrymen than It did abroad.
In the 80s he completed hla tremen
dous trilogy. "With Fire and 8word."
The Deluge and "Pan Michael."
There was an epic quality about these
historical novels that made many peO'
pie In many lands hall him aa a new
Scott or a new Dumae.
Hla International reputation, how
ever, came with "Quo VadTe," his mas
terplece of ancient Roman Ufa. It waa
M.-klv translated Into Knailsh and In
to nearly every tonitue. Then It passed
to the stage, not only In America and
England, but also In France and Oer
many. Since that success Blenklewlrs
had traveled widely, visiting England.
France, Italy, Spain, Greece, Africa and
the Far East He received the Nobel
prist for literature in 1906. From the
outbreak of the war to hla death In
November, lilt, he devoted himself to
the relief of Polish war victims.
i
(((TDO not know of cer
tainty ner name even Lygla
or Callloa? They call her
Lygla In the house, for she cornea of
. the Lyglan nation ; but she has her
i own barbarian name Calllna. It Is
j a wonderful house that of those Plau-
tlusfs. There are many people In It:
but It Is as quiet there as In the groves
j of Sublacum. For a number of days I
did not know that a divinity dwelt In
the house. Onee about daybreak I
nw her bathing In the garden foun
tnln ; and I swear to thee by that foam
from which Aphrodite rose, that the
rnys of dawn pussed right through her
body. I thought that when the sun
rose she would vanish before 'me In
!he light, as the twilight of morning
does. Since then I have seen her
twice ; and since then, too, I know not
what rest is, I know not what .other
desires are, I have no wish to know
what the city can give me. I want
not women, nor gold, nor Corinthian
bronze, nor amber, nor pearls, nor
wine, nor feasts j I want only
Lygla.'"
Thus did Vlniclus, young Roman
patrician of the time of Nero, an
nounce his love for Lygla, daughter
of a king, beautiful hostage from her
nation, forgotten In the turmoil of the
world empire and brought up as ft
Roman girl.
Vlniclus was speaking to his uncle
Petronlun, known to his own time as
Arbiter Elegantlarum, trained In all
the art and beauty of Greece, wise,
witty, and learned, gayly staking his
life In his dally battle of wits with
Tlgellinus, who provided for the gross
er desires of the tyrant Nero as Pe
tronius did for his finer and more
artistic ones.
It was a time when the conflicting
tides of a pagan age, sadly degenerate
from the sturdy days of pristine Roman
virtues, mingled with those of a new
era in the world, only recently herald
ed from Judea. In the complicated
Ihrrads of the picture of Rome, cap
ital of the world, appear the figures of
Peter and Paul on their mission of
spreading the new religion of Christ;
I'oppaea, wife of Nero, beautiful as a
dream, but wicked as a nightmare;
Eunice, the charming slave of Petro
nlus; Chllo, wily Greek who can be
Christian or pagan as profit leads him ;
Ursus, prodigious In his strength, Blm
pie as a child In his faith In Christ
and his devotion to Lygla (from whom
). B. S. may have drawn a sugges
tion In "Androcles and the Lion"), and
many minor folk who help to make the
story stand out as unusually human
among the numerous tales of Greco
toman times. ,
When Vlniclus told his uncle Petro
nlus of his passion for Lygla, the lat
ter thought nothing was easier than
to provide his nephew with what he
regarded as a new plaything; a word
to Nero, who as emperor had all hos
tages In his care summon the maiden
to the palace, hand her over to the
young patrician as her guardian what
more could be needed to satisfy any
one's desires, especially as the maiden
manifestly was pleased with Vlniclus?
But Pctronlus and his nephew reck
oned without a new force that had en
tered into this Roman world. They
could not iumIitxIiuhI a cjrl who flitl
from Norn's court snd all Its niuciiHI
feno, tied even from the luvvr whom
lie loved. Hut "llnnlly he understood
this, which he and Prlronlus hud n.it
understood. Hint I he new n lllon, i n
grafted Into the amil aoiiiotlilns un
known to that world In which hp lived,
and that Lygla, even If she lovi d hint,
would nut MicrlBce any of her Chrla
tlnn truths for his sake, and that, If
pleasure rxliled for her, It wus
pleasure different altogether from Urn!
which he and IVIMiilim and Caesar's
court, and all Homo were pursuing
Kvery other woman whom he knew
might become his mistress, but that
Christian, would only become hla vic
tim. And when he thought uf this, he
felt W'gcr and burning pain, for he felt
lliat his anger wis powerless. To
carry off Lyglu seemed to him pos.l
He; he was even ure that he could
do so, but he was equally Mire, that, In
view of her religion, ko himself, with
his bravery, was nothing, Unit hla pow
er "lis nnthlug, and that throiiiili It ho
could effect noihlni!. That Hoinau
mjlltury tribune, convinced that the
power of tht sword mid Hie list, which
hail conquered the world, would com
mand It forever, suld for the Brat time
In his life that bryoud that power
there might be something elae; hence
he asked himself with anmaement what
It was."
It Is a definite and concrete way that
the author has chosen to show the
power of the new religion over human
lives. Struggle as he would, backed
by blrili, by wealth mid all lb beauty,
chnriii mid allurements Hint wealth
could bring, by the Ingenuity ami wit
of Petrmiliia, by Ibe strong-arm meth
ods of Croton, champion hrulser of
bis time, even by the force of the
known world In Nero's sway, Vlniclus
could accomplish nothing If all he
could win to himself was mere un
willing body, while soul mid spirit
were beyond his grasp. Ami Ibe mad
dening part to him was that he owed
all his troubles to the teachings of I
parcel of Jewish fishermen or their
likes, or slaves or humble folk who
bad never before entered Into Rprlnus
consideration In the thoughts of pa
trician like himself. II was a long
strnteli) wlih him, and lis Ibe nnder
follows the various people of the atorj
through their purl In the action, he
gets an admirable plclure. of Home
Nero, tyrant, actor and artist, with all
his mntiilrWnre and nil his debauch
eries; the poor and humble In their
crowded quarters of the great, city;
the delight of nil the "ensea in .the life
led by I'eimnlus; the lawless streets
of Koine by night ; the pursuit of Lygla
by Vlniclus and his hirelings result
ing In the death of his professional
bruiser Croton at the hunds of the
faithful I'rsus, and the disaster to
Vlniclus which led to his nursing hack
to health by the Christinas; his meet
ing wllh I'eter and Paul; tht gradual
opening of his eyes, physical and spir
itual; his discovery of Christians
everywhere, among the people, among
his own slaves, among soldiers and offi
cers, even In the very court of Nm
ml th . 'rowing worry ind astonish
ment of Pctronlus:
"'Vlniclus, thou art loslnf sons,
Judgment, moderation,' exclaimed Ps
tmnltis. " 'I love only hor In tht world,' re
sponded Vlniclus.
"'What of thatr
"'This, that I wish no other lo.
I have no wish tor your life, your
feasts, your shsinelessnrss, your
crimes.'
" 'What Is taking plsct In theet Art
thou a Christian J'M
And then the great Are of Rome,
el by Tlgellinus that Nero might n
lack the experience of Priam, who had
seen Troy burn; of rescuing Lygls
from Hit flames; the persecution of the
Christians with the thought of throw
ing on them the rage of the people
st the burning of the city; the
singling out of Lygla by the lisle of
I'oppaea because Vlnlclua had spumed
the empress' proffered chsrmiu ths
final rescue by l miracle of strength
on the part of the ever-fullhful Ursus,
and the words of Vlulclus to Peter:
"'What thou couimandeit I will
do.'
"'Love men at thy own brothers,'
answered the apostle, 'for ouly with
love mayest thou tervt 11 In).' "
Copyright MS, by the Poet Publlehlnf Co.
(The Huston Post). Printed by permis
sion of, and arrangement with, UlUe,
Drown k Co., authorised publlehers.
aiiOEi
ID
It's the Fixtures that Make the Silo
RATCHET
WRENCH
A bandy, feveriiblt ratchet
wrench (umithed tree with
every lOo.
DOUBLE-CABLE
ANCHORS
Four double-able with sD
silo over 26 ft high. (Single
cablet with smaller ones.)
Notice this silo is anchored
al top, middle and bottom.
Can't blow down or collapse
when pfoperly put up.
A. Anckof
',11 I t ' ltaV' TlkLl ' l I '
ilfiii
V .A V ii i NT i i il sail 1
rtf 1 fTi T ,7TirH
Ii"l;V .; ! , m l 'd
f :M tft, I M!' .
L'riif'-filMiytWii'MUHikJ
U I ll ! KMLSSP'Li
jmi ir j r m to
a mmmm
I f. ' Ill I Ps .tTK. M .1 . A
. twit
m
m s.
Mm
PATENT
CABLE.
TIGHTENERS
Tightens both cablet
tt the same time
with even tension.
Nine inches of
thread on anchor
rod. Cablet
tightened by
limply turning
nut above tightener.
SIX BASE ANCHORS
Six of thete fieel bate anchori on all tilot
over 10 It in diameter. (4 with mallet
onei ) Together with double-table anchori
they constitute the tecuiett tnchorage ever
deviled (ot a silo.
ANCHOR FASTENING
'cablet (aliened la both iniJJ m
v
and outct hooct by bmsbi of
steel U-boll ptuuuj thiotgh
Have and around both hoops,
EXTRA HEAVY
STEEL STAPLES
Heavy iter.) tUplei lour inches long lailen Msvst
to both innet and outer hoops. , Nets that staves
srt alto ttapled to bottom hoop, I construction
that cannot coutpts (ton ihrinlugt ol sUvct.
STEEL HOOPS
High gttdt steel hoops, -in. in diamttet. Nine
inches ol machine-cut thread at each end. Beat
quality doted aulletble iron lugs lot conrttdiBi
Mcb'ont.
STEEL LADDER
SteeUlep UJJef. Sieps every 18 iacKas al ikt wty
lop. DclW and siler lhaa claabma. noH baft.
LARCiiil3
DOOR
OPENING
Dear twingi si
the wty but,
letrai enure
opaunihw.
Kequirea
ealy Ito-
inch tleirana.
FOUR DOOR LATCHES
Four door Inches, two at lop and
two al bollom. rrereolt wtrptn.
rtibaht SuyiliuW.
STEEL HINGE'
M.M itnM twirl Ul, ,A Is.n.Ha
at hatcleta doot. Doers never have to be Ultd tiouai
never get Ion, ait tlwijn is place. 1
iy.
Compare Our Fixtures with Others
There's a big difference in the "futures" you get tt the
pricei asked lor different silos.
Compare fixtures when you buy a silo. It it the fix
turet that make a silo. Durability, tccuiity and liability
are determined by the anchorage, the size, quality and
number ol cables, hoops, lugt snd staples, Convenience
snd ease of getting at your silage (or use arc determined
by the door and ladder construction.
Man" silos are priced without hinged doori ot ladders.
In other .wotdt, you pay at "extrat" (of necesstry con
veniences without which your silo is incomplete.
Notwithstanding out lower price, we include more tad
belter axlutct than many who silt more lor their silos.
In tome csset we supply more ol a given item than
others, at in anchorage cable. In others, our fixtures
are stronger or better in whatever vitil point deter
minet their value.
Keep thit ad and check out fixture! as described above,
with those offered by other tilot. Don't pay more tad gel
lest, or buy hall a silo when you can get a complete one.
n Willamette Valley Lumber Co. n
u vv. vvauer, Local Manager. Monmouth, Ure, '
DOQIIIilllllDDD
I if'tBM P I L!tLXrU I Sill J5V P0P' MCEft i 6t MBMTCAVfl
IT-IVE BEE.N I y MMSH SK ANTS VOO tA LHMi itikf
I HOME m
II" ji,-UUL4. .....
Bo-uEue Me,-THEse srtoESARe going Right back
i 10 ourtto- r,c sniu lrtcvCKt GOOD CALFSKINS
UN' VKalLD WEAR M M0NWSpl- VoO'VE WORK 'M JUST
l VM . .. TWO
V.t ...4' It- "
IilLv7s THE OTHER FOUR
f . W$y. tnOMTHS J r
AT3CTjaaa