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About Independence enterprise. (Independence, Or.) 1908-1969 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1919)
NDEPENDENdE ENTERPRISE, INDEPENDENCE, OREOON, THE I PAGE 8IX F E OIKS I U. S. Forces 4,79 1,172 at End of War Rcicrvo of 2.340,000 Claw I Men Waiting . to Be Mobilized When Armistko Wal Signed I GRAY Hi H in & CHAPTER XV Continued. 15 He knew very well that what she Lad said about his daughter aud Jo seph Stagg was quite true, la his self ishness lie had been glad all these years that the hardware .merchant was balked of happiness. I The carpenter had always been a self-centered individual, desirous of his own comfort, and rather miserly, He had not npproved, in the first place, of the, intimacy between Joseph Stagg and his. daughter Amanda. . ... "No good'll come o'.that," he had told himself. ' That is, no good to Jedidiah Pnrlow. He foresaw at the start the loss of the girl's help about the house, for his wife was then a helpless invalid. 1 Then Mrs. Parlow filed. This death made plainer still to the carpenter that Mandy's marriage was bound, to bring inconvenience to him. Especial ly if she married a close-tisted young business man like Joe Stagg would this be true. For, at the reading of his wife's will Mr. I'arlQW discovered that the property they occupied, even the shop in which he worked, which, had been given to Mrs. Parlow by her par ents, was to be the sole property of her daughter. Mandy was the heir. Mr, Parlow did not possess even a life Interest in the estate. It was a blow to the carpenter. He made a good' Income and had money In bank, but he loved money too well to wish to spend it after he had made it He did-not want to give up the place. If Mandy remained unmarried there would never be any question be tween them of rent or the like. Therefore, If he was not actually the cause of the difference that arose be tween the two young people, he seized and enlarged upon it and did nil In his power to make a mere misunder standing grow into a quarrel that nei ther of the proud, high-spirited lovers would bridge. Jedidiah Parlow knew why Joe Stagg bad taken that other girl to Faith camp meeting. The young man had stopped at the Parlow place when Amanda was absent and explained to the girl's father. But the latter had never mentioned this fact to his daugh ter. Instead he had made Joe's supposed offense the greater by suggestion and Innuendo. And it was he, too, who had urged the hurt Mandy to retaliate by going to the dance with another young man. Meeting Joe Stagg later, .the carpenter had said bitter things to him, purporting to come from Mandy. It waali mean and vile; the old man knew - It now as he bad known it then. All these years he had tried to add fuel to the fire of his daughter s anger against Joe Stagg. And he believed he had benefited thereby. But, some how, during the past few months, he had begun to wonder if, after all, "the game was worth the candle." Suddenly he had gained a vision of What Amanda Parlow's empty life meant to her. Carolyn May, interested only in see ing her friends made happy, had no idea of the turmoil she had created in Mr. Parlow's mind. During the time that the nurse was at the abandoned lumber camp caring for Judy Mason, Carolyn May hoped that something might take Uncle Joe there: ! The next Friday, after school was out, Miss Amanda appeared at the Stagg home and suggested taking Caro lyn May into the woods with her, "for the week-end," as she laughingly said. Tim, the hackman, had brought the nurse home for a few hours and would take her back to Judy's cabin. "Foor old Judy is much better, but she is still suffering and cannot be left alone for long," Miss Amanda said. "Carolyn May will cheer her up." Mr. Parlow would drive over on Sun day afternoon and bring the little girl home. , Of course, Prince had to go along. That Friday evening at supper mat ters in the big kitchen of the Stagg house were really at a serious pass, Jo seph Stagg sat down to the table visi bly without appetite. Aunty Rose drank one cup of tea after another without putting a crumb between her lips. "Say, Aunty Rose," demanded Mr. Stagg, "what under the sun did we do before Hannah's Car'lyn came hero, anyway? Seems to me we didn't really live, did we?" ' Aimtv Ttnso haA no nnswer to make to these questions. In the morning there was a smoky fog over everything a fog that the sun did not dissipate, and behind which it looked like an enormous sar fron ball. Mr. Stagg went down to the store as usual. News came over the long-distance wires that thousands of acres of woodland were burning, that the for est reserves were out, and that the farm ers of an entire township on the far side" of the mountain were engaged in trying to make a barrier over which the flames would not leap. It was the consensus of opinion, however, that j the fire would not cross the range. "Scarcely any chance of its swoon ing down on us," decided Mr. Stairir. iieeKon i won r nave to go home to Mow fire furrows." BY RUTH BELMORE ENDICOTT At the usual hour he started for The Corners for dinner. Having remained in the store all the morning, he had not realized howmuch stronger the smelt of smoke ''was than, it had been at breakfast time. Quite involuntarily he quickened his pace. The fog and smoke overcast the sky thickly and made it of a brassy color. Just as though a huge copper pot had been overturned over the earth. Wom eq stood at their doors, talking back and forth la subdued tones.,' There was a spirit of expectancy in the air. The hardware merchant was striding along'at a quick pace when he came to the Parlow place; but he was not go ing so fast that he did not hear the carpenter, hailing him in his cracked voice. "' "Hey, you, Joe Stagg! Iley, you!" Amazed, Mr. Stagg turned to look. Parlow was hobbling from the rear premises, groaning at every step, scarcely able to walk. "That sciatica's got me ag'in," he snarled. "I'm a'most doubled up. Couldn't climb Into a carriage to save my eotuV "What d'you want to climb into a carriage for?" demanded Mr. Stagg. "'Cause somebody's got to go for that gal of mine and little Car'lyn May. Ain't you heard or is your mind so sot on makin' money down there to your store that you don't know nothin' else?" "Haven't I heard what?" returned the other with flue -restraint, for he saw the old man was in pain. "The fire's come over to this side. I saw the flames myself. And Aaron He Plunged Forward Leaped the Blaz ing Brand and Galloped Down the Road. Crummit drove through and says that you can't git by on the main road. The fire's followed the, West Brook right down and Is betwixt us and Adams' old camp." "Bless me!" gasped the hardware dealer, paling under his tau. "Wal?" snarled Parlow. "Goin' to stand there chatterin all day, or be you goin' to do something?" "Somebody must get over to that cabin and bring theni out," Joseph Stagg said, without taking offense at the crabbed old carpenter. "Wal!" exclaimed Parlow, "glad ter see you're awake." "Oh, I'm awake," the other returned shortly. "I was just figuring on who's got the best horse." "I have," snapped Parlow, "Yes. And I'd decided on taking Cherry, too," the hardware dealer add ed, and swung into the lane toward the carpenter's barn. "Hey, you! Needn't be so bra&h about it," growled the carpenter. "He's my hoss, I s'pose?" Joseph Stagg went straight ahead, and without answering. Having once decided on his course, he wasted no time. He rolled back the big door and saw Cherry already harnessed In his box stall. Together they backed the animal be tween the shafts, fastened the traces, and Mr. Stagg leaped quickly to the seat and gathered up the reins. "You'll kaftor take the Fallow road," the carpenter shouted after him. "ind have a care drivin' Cherry" Horse and blackboard whirled out of the yard and his Voice was lost to the hardware merchant. Cherry stepped out splendidly, and they left a cloud of dust behind them us they rolled up the pike, not in the direction of the abandoned camp. Fore warned, he did not seek to take the shortest way to the cabin where Amanda Parlow and Carolyn May were perhaps even now threatened by the forest fire. The Fallow road turned north from the pike three miles from The Comers. Flecks of foam began to appear on Cherry's glossy coat almost at once. The air was very oppressive, and there was no breeze. The streak of flame that had fol lowed down the banks of West Cteprrlglit, W13, It XXH Kmi Companr. Ino. brook moved mysteriously. He could see the smoke of It now. Amanda. Parlow and his niece might even now lie. threatened by the flames! Now that'' danger threatened the woman he hud loved all these years, It seemed its though his mind and heart were numbed. He was territled be yond expression terrified for her safe ty, and terrified for fear that some body, even Jedidiah Parlow, should suspect Just how he felt about it? The horse's hoofs rang s harply over the stony path. Presently they capped a little ridge and started down Into a hollow. Not until tliey were over the ridge was Mr. Stagg aware that the hotlow was filled, chokingly filled, with billowy white smoke.' . , Another mau one as.caut!ous as the hardware merchant notoriously was would have pulled the horse down to a walk. Hut Joseph Stagg's cautiousness had been Hung to the winds. Instead, he shouted to Cherry, and the beast Increased his stride. Ten rods further ou the horse snort ed, stumbled, and tried to stop. A writhing, . flaming snake a burning branch plunged down through yio smoke directly ahead. "Go on!" shouted Joseph Stagg, with a sharpness that would ordinarily have set Cherry off at a gallop. But, as the snortiug creature still shied, the man seized the whip and lashed poor Cherry cruelly along hia Jlunk. At that the horse went mad. no plunged forward, leaped the blazing brand, and galloped down the road at a perilous gait. The man tried neither to soothe him nor to retard the pace. The , smoke swirled around them. The driver could not see ten feet be yond the horse's nose. Ten minutes later they rattled down into the straight road, and then, very soon, indeed, were at the abandoned camp. The Are was near, but It had not reached this place. There was no sign of life about. The man knew which was Judy's cabin. He leaped from the vehicle, leaving the panting Cherry unhitched, and ran to the hut. The door swung open. The poor furniture was in place. Even the bed clothing was rumpled in the old wom an's bunk. But neither she nor Aman da Parlow nor little Carolyn May was there. CHAPTER XVI. The Laurel to the Brave. The heart of the man was like a weight in his bosom. With so many hundred acres of forest on fire, and that, too, between the abandoned camp and The Corners and Sunrise Cove, how would Amanda Farlow and Caro lyn May know whore to go? Certainly the place must have been deserted in haste. There was Carolyn May's coat. The man caught It up and stared around, us though expecting the child to be within sight. The old woman's clothing was scat tered about, too. It did not look as though anything had been removed from the hut. Coming out, he found another article on the threshold one of Amanda's gloves. Joseph Stagg lifted tho crumpled glove to his lips. "Oh, God, spare her !" he burst forth. "Spare them both !" Then he kissed the glove again and hid it away in the inner pocket of his vest. The hardware dealer tried to think of just what the fugitives might have done when they escaped from tho cabin. If it were true that Amanda would not run toward the fire, then she more than likely had taken the opposite di rection on leaving the cabin. There fore, Joseph Stagg went that way set ting off down the tote road, leading Cherry by his birdie. Suddenly he remembered calling Prince the day Carolyn May had been lost on the ice. He raised his voice la a mighty shout for the dog now. "Prince! Frincey, old boy! where are you?" Again and again he called, but there was no reply. The smoke was more stifling and the heat more intense every minute. Mr. Stagg realized that he must get out quickly if he would save himself and the horse. He had Just stopped into the buck board again, when there was an ex cited scrambling in the underbrush, and a welcoming bark was given. "Prince ! Cood boy !" the man shout ed. "Where are they?" The excited dog flew at him, leaping on the buckboard so as to reach him. The mongrel- was delighted, and showed it as plainly as a dumb brute could. But he was anxious, too. ne leaped back to the ground, ran a little ahead, and then looked back to. see if the man was following. The hardware dealer shouted to him again : "Go ahead, Princey! We're coming!" He picked up the reins and Cherry started. The dog. barklne his snHsfnn. tion, ran on ahead and struck into a side path which led down a clade. Jo- seph Stagg knew immediately where uns path led td. There was a spring and a small morass in the bottom of the hollow. (TO B3B CONTINUED.! , i v,.. ,.,., I T 1.11,173 men during l!H! if tin- war lui.l continue.!, ,1'rovost Mn.l.al General (Vow.ler statd! in Us annual report to confess. reene of V 3 10.000 class 1 men was wnilmtf to lo inobilmul when the' armistice W Hi..oJf tho report .fated, the anne.l sire.ih of il,o nation then l.ei.ii: -I.TlU.lTa ii.vh. When war was declare! the nrnW stimuli was 3:s.lD men. . ... ' ' Two out of every three men in uniform wore raised through the draft, CrowdVr stat-l". the total number in.li.eted during the war hen J sit) :!)(. Kvory one. was iakcti from class 1. ' Only IS iht ir.it of Uh men of military age, 18 to 45. were in ho porvicp. tho report .stated, while Kn-luuJ contribute.! C3 per cent of her available fighters. ' . ' In all 21,S3-I,0l men were rogistervd by the great draft system U military service. , Seven per cent was tho maximum peivcntago of men taken from amy one industry. ' . The farmers were treat oil better than any other workers, (.. icr cent of those registered Wing granted deferred classification. Com paraiively few married men were taken, the recur.! showing that 89 per cent of thorn were deferred. . Physically he nation is TO per cent perfect, according to tho draft examiners. This is the percentage of the men found lit. This does not include the limited service men or thoso whoso defects could be rcrncd;od, The highest percentage:) of physical fitness come from tho middle West Oklahoma led the nation with 82 per cent, closely followed ly Arkansas, Kansas, Nebraska, Wyoming. Texas and North Dakota. Khodo Island and Arizona show the largest percentages of physically unfit, with Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont, . New York and Washington close, lihode Island had only 53 per cent fit and New York CO jkt cent. Liquor was the smallest factor in causing physical rejections, tho percentage being only one-tenth of 1 per cent. Heart troubles, eyes, tuberculosis aud mental defects brought the largest number of rejections, each claiming J.iore thru 19 per cent of tho total disqualified. Flat feet took onlv 1.3 per cent. fhm rw.lor's "work or fiiiht" order forced 130,000 men cither into the army or useful work and his drive on the slacker marriages added 123,000 men to class one. Eighteen thousand waiters ah. no changed j their work, as did 17,000 clerical workers. More than 295.000 are still j classed as deserters by, the provost, marshal general's olli.r, having failed! to answer calls or register. About 67,000 have been apprehended. Eight thousand convicts or ex-prisoners wt;re uimico'u unu u.vu records show they have made fine fighting men. Gen. Crowdcr closes his report with a tribute to all who helped make thi draft a success. The total cost of the draft, was only ?l,00o,OOI) and Gen. Crowdcr had $38,000,000 in appropriations waiting to go back to the t reasury. The per capita cost of the induct incuts was $0.53, as compared with $217 in the 'GOs. The cost of enlisting a oluntcor was $28.05 during tho operation of the draft. TIPS FOR THE POULTRY GROWER Tlmt laying hens will Increase their production it fed n properly propor tioned ration litis been demonstrated In Missouri this winter. ' And the ra tion costs no more than smiio of tho carelessly compounded rations many flocks receive. Here is the ration ex pressed in quantities sufficient to feed 100 hens one day: Scratch Feed Ten pounds shelled corn or katlir nml 5 pounds thrashed oats or barley. Food in deep litter morning and evening. Dry Mash Three pounds bran or 3 pounds cornincal, .'! pounds shorts or .' pounds ground outs, and 1 pounds beofscrnp or 1 pound tankiiKe. Throe gallons of milk may be substituted for the heefscrap or tankage. Keep tills inash before the birds at ail times. In addition to this feed, supply Kroon feed in .some form, plenty of fresh water and grit and shell. The use of the foregoing ration has hecn advocated by the extension serv ice of the University of Missouri col lege of agriculture. Ten communities have reported re sults for .'i0 days which shows a per centage increase of 73. This means that nil communities reporting are re ceiving a double return In number of eggs, laid, and one community reports that the yield lins been Increased seven-fold. This is conclusive evidence that the ration is practical, and that a laying hen, well fed, will respond to good feed. First Discovery of Gold in California Was in 1848 The first gold In California was dis covered 71 years ago, on January 24, 1848, by James Wilson Marshall. He was a native of New Jersey who had gone West and settled on the site of Sacramento. Wasting away some rocks to make a foundation for a building, ho observed grains of what seemed to be gold scattered about In the excavated earth. A tost revealed that it really was the precious metal. Wild excitement followed the discov ery, and the immortal rush of the "forty-niners" brought thousands of minors and adventurers to tho golden stnte. Marshall, the discoverer, did not profit from his find and would have spent his lust days in poverty except for a small pension granted him by the state of California. Active Volcano. The most active volcano in the world Is Mt. Sangay. It Is 17,100 feet high, Situated on the eastern chain of the Andes, South America. It has been in constant eruption since 1728. v 'to inorciisu its lil'litintf force to Immense Food Supplies for Brave Yanks Across Seas The Daily Stocks in Hand Whoever gofa hungry In Furope this winter it will not he the American soldiers, notes a correspondent. The dally sloeks in lunrd reported by the quartermaster's department of the American expeditionary forces gives an Idea of supplies only when It Is remembered they represent reserves held between daily consumption and arrivals known to be en route, l'o tatoes furnish n striking example. The stock In hand at I he last report was 8,200,000 pounds, mid yet the Ameri can forces are receiving .'iO.noo tons of potatoes a month, which makes (JO, 000,(100 pounds, ehlelly from Ireland. Potatoes being perishable, It would riot lie wise to keep double the daily stocks in lilt nd. Others were as fol lows : Fresh beef, Ifi.OOO.OOO pounds; tinned beef, 211,700,000 pounds; tinned bacon. 20,:i00,000 pounds; tinned sal mon, 0,4-10,000 pounds; Hour. Hitl.OOO, 000 pounds; oatmeal, 2,000,000 pounds; cqniineal, 6,000,000 pounds; dry henna, 20,000,000 pounds; linked beans, 27, 000,000 pounds; rice, 8,000,000 pounds; onions, 1,000,000 pounds; tomatoes, 30,000,000 pounds; Jams, 2,000,000 pounds; prunes, 2,000,000 pounds; sugur, 28,000,000 pounds. This list does not include other foods running beyond a million pounds, like dried vegetables, syrup, bnc.m In bulk, hardtack, hominy, dried and fresh fruits, as well ns cheese, maca roni, butter and lard. U. S. January Expenses Totaled $1,962,350,000 Big payments to allies under credits previously established, ns reported by the treasury, raised the total of nl lied advances In January to .$200,250, 000, and aggregate government ex penses for tho month to $1,002,350,000. Thla is $97,000,000 less than the record of December. War savings sales reached $70,000,000. WITH THE SAGES It is a proof of boorlshness to confer a favor with a bad grace. How little does a smile cost ! Ihuyere. Without thought there can be nothing done that can be truly called a work. T. A. Edison. Ill fortune never crushed that man whom good fortune de ceived not. 15en Johnson. We should be ashamed to think what .we should be ashamed to do. W. l'ickford. DniRtflHt Sajg Iridic are ! Kcelpe of Suge Tea and nuipuur. Hulr that UiNtui Itn c.ilnr mid ),,, or when It fmlcN, tuVnn Kmy, dim . lir.'U-HH, Im cttumul by a l.i. k of In the liulr. Our Krainlmotlier up ii mixture of Hiiko Tea and Suit to liocii her locl dni k nml bomV mid thoiiHund of woiinm uiij value- tlmt evon color, t It Ut bmr .lurk mIiiiiIo of linlr vlih h U tru.'tlvo, tiHtj only thin oht time f: Nowmlnya wo K"'t thin fumoui tur iiiiproviHl by tho addition of ' liiKroill.'iit byfimkltiK at any 4, Hloro for a tmttto of "Wyoth'i gi"' a nd Sulphur Cuinpqtuiil," which .Mis tho hulr po naturitUy, m (v(i ' tlmt nolmtly ciur iMwalbly toll U t;l heeu applied. )'ou J;i.-it daiup,.t1 xponK" or soft bnmli with It suit jr, thin through your hulr, taking t Hiiutll Mtrnn.i lit a tlm. Iiy mora'1 tin KHiy hulr dlniui uri; but ili.tiklitH tho liullei with Wywth'i &' nml Hulpliur Compoim.l In that. be. bountifully ditrkfjtlriK tlu linlr atte few application, It almi brings 1; tho kIonh and luatro mid g,Ue$ . uppcnniiii'O of ahurniunro. Wycth'ii HttKO and Sulphur (V pound U a dullfchtful tollfit nmkl to ltupnrt color and n youthful aj iiiH B to tan nair. ii in not lutonil: tho euro, iiittlKUon or pruvenfa lllB.'HHO. Ad v. Foollah Worrvlna. ! Ho niiiuy thing do not matter. ; nuiiioriiblo things that wo worry or fret nboiit or Mtrlva for, really si no difference whatever, imdwetH and fr.'t and utrlvo for them up front a Ht upld wort of haiilt, kUn !mv pcrhapH. lot thetn liotbcr tad troublo ii h n.Kaln and iwtlu, th'ci that they mattered, and mattered preinoly. Hut do thoy? For Houto Plants. A splendid fertilizer for sit r plants and evergreens may be mii. till - way: Dissolve one can of in two gallons of water; put Intao honoH to inaka a thick, crusty mis few Bpocufuls of thla In your wa'r pot onco a wf-ek will kIvo a floods reault. Tha Difference. Fiat head is quite as bad In pol nn flat foot Is In military life. .No! is Hint, but 80 per cent of tho flat! eases am curnhle. lluiiHon Post Funny, Ain't It Said tlio facetious feller: "I b often wondered how a man can straight from tlin tdiouliler unit does hia talking on his fingers." And He'a Worth Listening To. The mini who really has nothinf say generally talks less than other? pie, hocaiiHo he consider it worth i lug Homo thought to. ' Beet Sugar Industry. Tho United States and Spain art only countries which produce .vjj cane anil beet sugar in any cons: uhle quantity. Tho development1 Die heet-migar iinluHtry In the Ct States has been one of the great rlculturul and manufacturing gro of this country. From 1S98 the sugar production In tho United SU increased from 60,000 tons to appr' niately 800,0 0 0 tons in 1915.. Proper Treatment cf FriH" When our frlonda are present' ought to treat them well; and thoy are absent, to speak of theo Eplctetus. A NERVOUS BREAKOOV Miss Kelly Tells How If E. Pinkham' Vegetal Compound Restored Her Health. NoTvnrk. N. J.-'For about & years I suffered from nervous w weakicouiu'- stand, and ha' .i. da?' 4.:..,l ouorvtl & could tliink of r v was unuer sician's carei',j years. Agjr f tame (.uu-... Rho tolJ ma ;, s ' 'it'- : .. . . n IF: dayltookitW; fCto feel hew ble todotiiost f pound ever since and pive you mission to publish this ic Flo Krt.t v 47ii Sn 14th St.. Ne N. .1. ' , ' " . The reason this famous root a"0 ;, remeuy, nyuia Jii, 1'inKnam '-p ( Compound, was so successful i" ,, iveuy s case was Because u a .wot ot ner troutile, restorer - normal healthy condition and 83 ' her nervousness disappeared. i i i i i v-'w"ir