The Monmouth herald. (Monmouth, Or.) 1908-1969, December 29, 1922, Image 3

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riothgriCooji Do°k
Uncommon
We
c lim b e d the h eig h ts by the sig z& f
path.
A n d w on d ered w h y —until
W e u n d e rstood it w a s m ad e z ig z a g
T o b reak th s " f o r c e o f the h ill!’ *
Bv--------------
JOHN BLAKE
a
A
Y O U lt T E M P E R
TUfKN hnrne"3 rivers anil make them
work. Some day they will con­
tinue the experiments begun by Benja­
min Franklin nnd harness lightning
Itself.
They have nlrenily hitched
electricity in another form, to most
of the wagons of Industry.
Energy, controlled, Is tremendously
useful. Uncontrolled It Is tremendous­
ly destructive.
Temper Is highly concentrated en­
ergy. Allowed to take its own course.
It is capable of doing lntlntte damage.
Controlled, kept In check, and di­
rected luto useful channels. It Is an
asset that can be turned Into ready
money.
If you have a high temper It Is proof
that you have energy. Lazy, languid
men never get angry or excited.
But your fits of anger, your explo­
sions of temper, are sheer waste of
the energy that Is stored up in you.
They lose you your friends. They
destroy your judgment. They bring
about consequences which you cannot
foresee and from which you may never
recover.
Harness your temper as men har­
ness the energy that Is stored in moun­
tain torrents. Employ the ‘‘pep-’ that
now goes to waste when you fly oil
your handle. In attacking your Job.
If you have got to get excited, get
excited over your work. If you are
bound to get mad, get mad at your­
self for not accomplishing more than
you are accomplishing.
Nothing Important Is ever done with­
out energy. And If your energy Is al­
lowed to run away, as does the uncon­
trolled stream, you will have none left
with which to do the great things
which you have planned to do.
Temper, kept within bounds, proper'
ly directed, will carry a man far on
his wuy to success and happiness.
Permitted to “blow up" It will kqpp
him in continual trouble, and land him
in the poor house If he Is fortunate
enough to escape Jail.
(C opyright by John
ft
B lake )
---------o ---------
-•—— •••*' ■
■
~o—
-
jy
MEN YOU MAY MARRY
By E. R. PEYSER
Has a Man Like This Proposed
to You?
Symptoms: Good style, good
looking, looks unlike anything
but a clergyman, yet he Is one; bo
Is the Irregularlst regular feller
you ever knew. Awfully funny,
awfully Jolly, quite flirtatious,
wears good looking civilian tog­
gery, doesn’t want to put a
damper on people when he
comes around. Says he. “ I would
never have my wife mix up in
parish matters. She must have
her own Job and not take mine
over even as Is the case with a
l-rokeT’s wife" Talk* of his
Baris gambols and your future
trips with him.
IN FACT
His pre-wedding notions are
Ideal.
Prescription to His Bride:
7 )
let an antidote for Parish
A c Green. You’ll need it. It
will be yonr constant duty to
help In parish affairs.
Absorb This:
Thcro Aro Qroat DtfToreneos Be­
tween Parisians and Parts-
IIM,
. f t>7 MeClere New«pa*«r Sradlcate.)
-
DISCOVERED IN OLD RECORDS I
(P re p a re d by th e U nit*.! S tates D ep artm en t
o f A gricu ltu ra l
Gto^MD —
Sense
Delicate Fowls Have Very Severe At­
tacks and Recover Slowly—
Isolate Sick Birds.
comih
Vifc’i hCVm'
ws T mü
L^ r
v W k T ê « . , vrtKT
ROUP IS DANGEROUS DISEASE
Will of Col. Lewis Morris Left
*■ r.
Six Pounds Sterling An­
nually to Quakers.
po5s»^^'*•'«Tl,,
OV*tT to B'«- Vb°'
frocT&DHoPPea >
T***«? o°f *
7R j O*-£
U*56*-
VDÙ « N » » » *
CCOK S t > v t
Legacy Is N o w
231 Years Behind
fl f*
---------------------------- ----- *
---------11---------
Somewhat Monotonous.
Some men are too methodical In
their hablta. and no are tome horaes.
Twelve months ago a horse fell with
Its owner near Blanchvlew, Queens­
land, and the rider fractured his left
thigh. The other dsy the same bora#
fell again at tba same spot and fha
tame rider fractured the same thigh.
ro a d s tra ig h t up w o u ld p r o v s too
steep
F o r th e t r a v e le r 's fe e t to trea d :
T h e th o u g h t w a s kind in Its w ise design
O f a z ig z a g p a th inatead.
HONEY DISHES
of us who are not bee keep­
T HOSE
ers will not feel that It Is econ­
omy to use much honey In cookery, but
rather ns a sweet, and as an occa­
sional treat; however, those who have
it In abundance will enjoy a few of
the dishes made famous by the wife
of Maurice Maeterlinck who hns writ­
ten very entertainingly of the bee and
its habits.
One of the worse results of the wet
and Inclement weather of fall and
early winter Is the disease of chickens
commonly called roup. It resembles
the more malignaut forms of Influenza
in larger animals and In man, attack­
ing principally the membranes lining
(lie eye, the sacks below the eye, the
nostrils, the larynx and the trachea.
It Is attended with high fever and Is
very contagious, but the nature of the
germ is not yet known. However, It
Is known that contagion Is brought
into the poultry yard by Infected birds.
Outbreaks of roup in the fall occur
most commonly where the growing
chickens are overcrowded In the coop
or where the coops are not waterproof
or are poorly ventltlated. Sometimes
these are birds purchased from other
flocks, and sometimes they are birds
from the home flock which have been
on exhibition and exposed to conta­
gion. Again, they are wild birds or
pigeons which fly from one poultry
yard to another.
Delicate birds have very severe at­
tacks and recover slowly, ns pointed
out in Farmers’ Bulletin 057, published
by the United States Department of
Agriculture. Often a chronic condi­
tion persists for a long time and
birds so affected give and spread the
disease for a year or more, becoming
a starting point for many new ous
breaks.
At first symptoms are similar to an
ordinary cold, but there Is more fever,
dullness and prostration. The eyelids
are swollen and held closed most of
the time. The birds sneeze nnd shake
their heads in their efforts to free the
air passages. Sometimes the eyes are
entirely closed nnd birds are prevent­
ed from finding food. This, of course,
results In rapid loss cf etr**ngth, nnd
many of the birds die within n week
Honey and Sour Milk Ginger Bread.
Blend one cupful of honey, one-half
cupful of sour milk and one-half cup­
ful of butter; two well-benten eggs,
two cupfuls of flour, one-half teaspoon­
ful of cinnamon, the same of salt, one
and three-quarters teaspoonfuls of
soda, one-half teaspoonful of ginger.
Heat the honey and butter and when
just nt the boiling point remove from
the fire and add the sour milk and
the eggs and dry Ingredients. Bake in
a sheet and coat with a thin icing.
c U
. U
v r t iJ L
(Cl. 1*22. W n t « r n » w e p e p e r Union )
---------O------—
owe i
sev
north o f the Harlem River.
Charged Against “ Bronxiand.”
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OWSSSSWSSSSSSSSSSSiSSSiiiilSSiSSSSKL
I _ _ _ _ ______________________________ —
Arrears Without Any Interest Total
It was lYotn this property that the
- -
____ a- .
.
$6.468— No Record Is Found of
six ¡annul* left annually to the Friend.1 or<1* of ,he
d° n°* *°
that far. There undoubtedly was am­
Meeting was to he drawn.
Jonas
Any Paymsnt From Bronx
ple provision in the estate left by Col­
Brouck, the original settler in IC39. had
Lands of Testator.
onel Morris, for In the accounting made
received a charter from the Dutch West
following the proving of the will £H44
New. York.—Through a search of one India Company, and Lewis Morris, on alone was due from the torn! of negroes
of the oldest records of the Surrogate’s receiving his Inheritance, procured from held by the Morris estate.
court, It has Just been discovered that j Governor Fletcher In lt’A»7 a royal
In the will of Col. Lewis Morris, dated [
and founded the Manor of Mor-
Good Reason.
December 7, UiSJl, an annuul legacy of flsnnta.
Whether the bequest to the Qugk-! “ Jack Isn’t the same to me any
f6 was bequeathed to the Society of
ers was ever made Is difficult to more.” “ Did you see him with an-
Friends lu New York.
Mcinbera of the Friends were very snF. Dlu* a,most impossible tq trace at other?” “ No; he saw me with anotli-
mueh surprised to hear of this old this late date, as the New York re o I er.’
bequest, os there Is uo trace today
of any such fund among the records
of either the meeting on Twentieth
6trcct or in the minutes of the llixites
on Fifteenth street.
An Investigation Is planned to aid
In the payment of past and future
amounts due from such a bequest, In
the event that It should be possible
to collect It. John Cox, Jr., the cus­
todian of the records of both meet­
ings, was very much Interested in the
news of the old legacy, and stated
there had never l>een received such a
sum from the Morris estate.
As 230 years have elapsed since the
will was filed, the totnl amount due.
without interest, would he $tl,4t>8.
Col. Lewis Morris wns one of the
most distinguished men of his day, and
was the predecessor of a long line of
noted statesmen, through his brother,
Capt. Richard Morris, who fought un­
der Cromwell. Among the descendants
were Lewis Morris II, chief Justice of
New York nnd governor of New Jer­
sey ; his son, Roliert Morris, governor
of Pennsylvania nnd chief Justice of
New Jersey; while the four sons of the
succeeding generation Included Morris
III. one of the signers of the Declara­
tion of Independence and a general In
the Revolutionary war, and his brother,
The change that hns come over Turkey may be appreciated by this photo­
Gouvemeur, minister to France, pa­
graph of a throng of women waiting In Constantinople to greet the Kemalist
triot and United States senator.
forces. Up to a short time ago not one of them would have dared to np|>enr
Converted by George Fox.
In public unless her fuce wns covered with a veil, but the custom of centuries
Having met George Fox, the founder Is being abandoned.
of the Quakers, during a successful
venture in the West Indies at Barba­
dos, where Colonel Morris nnd his
brother, Richard, hud large plantations,
the legacy to the Friends In New York
was a result of the conversion of Col­
onel Morris to that faith.
The will reads. In part as follows:
“ I give nnd bequeathe to my hon­
oured friend, William Penn, my Ne-
groe man, Yaff, provided the said
Penn shall come to dwell In Amer­ U. S. Bureau of Mines Conducts have failed to develop any practical
method of using wireless waves for
ica.”
Experiments Through Fifty
i ndergmund communication, neverthe­
“ I give and bequeathe unto the
less, says u publication of the mines
Meeting of Friends In the Province of
Feet of Earth.
bureau, they Indicate clearly that elec­
New York the Sume of six pounds
tro-magnetic waves may be made to
per annum, to be paid out of my Plan­
travel through solid strata.
tation over against Harlem lu the same
Heard Through Fifty Feet.
Province, by whomever shall enjoy |
In the Bruceton experiments sig­
same • • • on every twenty-fifth
nals were heard distinctly through
day o f the month called March, Yearly
and every Yeare, forever unto such Communication Between Rescuers and fifty feet of coal strata, although the
audibility fell off rapidly as the dis­
Persons • • • as shall be appointed
Entombed Miner* Held as Hop*
tance was Increased. The absorption
by the General Meetings of Friends
to Lesion Horror* and Loezea
or loss of Intensity with distance Is
(called Quakers) In ye said Province,
In Mine Disasters.
very great for the short wave lengths
to be employed as they shall judge on
used in these tests. Longer wave
Truth’s acct.”
Washington.—Radio communication lengths ure known to suffer less ab­
It Is especially Interesting to note.
In view of the high offices nnd Influ­ between rescuers on the surface and sorption ami may possibly he found
ence wielded later on by his nephew, miners entombed In mines following practically effective under certain con­
Lewis Morris II, In what low esteem tires and explosions Is a hope held out ditions.
In this connection It Is Interesting
he wns held by his uncle. Colonel Mor-! by the United States bureau of mines
to lessen the horrors and losses of to note tests «-onducted by the United
rls, for the will continues;
“ And whereas 1 formerly Intended I mine disasters. Preliminary tests con­ States hureau of standards In drop­
to have made my nephew, Lewis Mor­ ducted by the bureau, with the co­ ping wireless antennae down deep, un­
ris • • • my whl. Executor, his operation of a great electrical manu­ used oil wells to underlying rock
many nnd Great Mlscurrlages and DIs- facturing concern. In an experimental strata, in order to send (lie wireless
obedience towards me and my wife, mine nt Bruceton, Pa., already have re­ Impulses through the rock Instead o f
through the air. The results. It Is be­
and hts causeless Absenting him self! sulted In a degree of success.
from my house and Adhering to and 1 While these experiments so far lieved, may l>e the same as projecting
the antennae upward Into the air
strata.
The desirability of substituting th«
\
wireless system of communication for
|
the present telephone systems In usa
t
In mines Is evident In eonslderlng that
'
n rock full or explosion, by breaking
!
wire connections, can put the entire
system out of order.
Present Phone* Unsafe.
The mine telephone has been per­
fected to such an extent that It Is giv­
ing satisfaction In most mines whera
the wiring Is well insulated, the bu­
reau of mines announcement contln-
I
uea. Very often the telephone cannot
he depended upon on account of falls
i
o f rook, grounding due to worn In­
sulation or extreme dampness. In
the event of a disaster It frequently
;
happens thst the mine telephone sys­
i
tem Is put out of commission by tha
i
agency that causes the disaster at fha
!
very time when It la most urgently
j
needed. On this account the mining
!
Industry Is Interested In any kind of
;
telephone system that can l»e counted
upon In an emergency. Many requests
have been received by the bureau of
mines to devise means of utilizing
wireless methods for this pur ¡rise.
The preliminary experiments con­
sisted first In receiving signals from
without the mine hy means of a re­
ceiver located inside the mine, end,
second, both sending and receiving
messages underground through the
|
strata. It was found that with a re­
i
ceiving Instrument set st a point 100
feet underground, signals sent from
i
This shows the memorial stone at Rethondes. France, on the spot where station KDKA of the Westtnghousa
j
i the armistice was signed on November 11. Ittifl. ending the World war. The Electric and Manufacturing company
j atone was dedicated on Armistice day, thla year, hy President Mlllerand of ■ t East Pittsburgh, eighteen miles
away, could be heard dlrtlncfly.
France, assisted by Marshals Joffre, Foch, Haig and other notables.
Veils Being Discarded in Turkey
SEE GREAT POSSIBILITIES
Comfortable, Roomy Winter Lodgings
for the Hene Means Plenty of Eggs.
or ten days. Some of the affected ones
recover nnd others continue weak and
have a chronic form of disease for
months.
Oatmeal Honey Bread.
The best treatment Is to plnce sick
To a cupful of rolled oats add three
cupfuls of hot water, half a cupful of birds In a warm, dry, well-ventilated
honey, a tablespoonful of butter, a room free from drafts, ntid away from
teaspoonful of salt. When cooled to the rest of the flock. An antiseptic
blood hent ndd a dissolved yeast cake. | nnd healing mixture should he applied
Stir In flour till a suitable dough for to the affected membranes. Lacking a
kneading has been made. Itaise again spraying apparatus, a small syringe
and make into two loaves.
Raise and oil can, or even a medicine drop­
again and brush with one teaspoon­ per, may answer tlie purpose, or the
ful of honey and two tablespoonfuls bird's head may he plunged Into a
of milk Just before going Into the basin of the mixture and held there
for a few seconds. The most suitable
oven.
Honey Is a natural sweet and should remedies are: Equal parts of hydrogen
be given to children to satisfy the peroxide and water; boric acid, 1
craving for sweets which Is natural to ounce, water, 1 quart; or permanga-
nate of potash, 1 dram, water 1 pint.
childhood.
Fresh preserves are quite different
when prepared with honey Instead of WINTER SHELTER FOR GEESE
sugar. Quinces are especially dell-1
clous when preserved with honey. Shed Open on South Side With Plenty
of Straw or Shavings Is Most
Served w-lth whipped cream they make
Satisfactory.
the most delectable dessert.
'H
Geneva.—The family of a pub­
lic servant named Ila -tin of
Mi ns ¿rii, In the * 'ai
of Zug
hns recently been Increased by _
twenty-fourth child.
All the
A,1' lzl"F " l,h ,ho** °t Bad Life and
children are living and none of
Conversation, C’oi
oDtnrj to my Direc­
them are twins.
The eldest.
tion and Example” • • • following
« twenty-four. 1» to enter the
which. Colonel Morris leaves him 2.000 v>
. .? ,
_
............
_
...
priesthood.
The
agricultural
acres In the Shrewsbury
,
diury district In » 1 ,,
syndicate o f the locality has re­
New Jersey, “one of my best mares
quested the favor of being god­
father to the newcomer.
of land known as “ Bronxlsud” on the
T o Use Radio in
Mine Disasters
Baked Apples With Honey.
Core large apples, fill each cavity
with honey and top with pieces of but­
ter. Bnke In a moderate oven, basting
occasionally.
Pears are also delicious (using
lemon Juice with the honey) baked in
this way.
Ham Cured With Honey.
To every 50 pounds of ham use a
brine of four pounds of coarse salt,
one ounce of saltpeter, two pounds
of honey and two gallons of water.
Blend well, pour over the hams and
let them stand for six weeks. They
will be found delicious In flavor.
24 Children, Ail Living,
Swiss Family’s Record
Except In stormy weather or In the
winter mature geese seldom need a
house. A shed open on the south side,
a poultry house, or a barn usually Is
provided by breeders in the North, and
is used by some breeders In the South.
says the United States Department of
Agriculture. Coops, barrels, or some
other dry shelter should be provided
for the young goslings. But wherever
they are the geese should have a clean
place, with plenty of straw or shar-
ings for the floor during the winter.
KEEP POULTRY FROM CATTLE
Unless Herd Has Been Found Free
From Tuberculosis Fowls Should
Bs Separated.
Poultry kept on dairy or general live
stock farms should n»t be allowed to
run with cattle unless the herd has
bqen tested and found free from tuber­
culosis. Poultrykeepers are beginning
to realize that If they are to buy
healthy birds they must get them from
places where the live stock Is known
to be free from tubérculo#la.
Stone Where Armistice Was Signed