i I i ' h Pajre Six INDElNDENCE KNTEllPlllSE JANUARY 14, 1021 1 HAVE KEEN EYE FOR DANGER j BOKES OF HISTORIC RA fsr-WU Hunter A.: .s its Hint It Is Prnc'Jsaliy lmpc.5.- to Gurrriia too tdo.:,ikm- "TIic " most i): . !'-'' a- ei.a.w i. hifc Mi; lift ! f (ilit ;i i: .in V. ! ! otlge, aiii! i!i a till ;-:v.:,-i in ; -'..llli it. jive;). i) is ipo of the our AritviMii !':. n:-.':-." says i Anthropolo'j'S'.s Intensely Interested In I Discovery of Indian Skeletons ! In California. -,!il' j Mi' i I it'll 1 Oil the ih.es' ape lor i make y oilier .haawl- iV tl ;U1 a: tiUfiilcnii hnvelicn jrwvdto.:i'i;' will "v' usuaiij one or mort siawiin ou sotue prom inent point vhiw thoy can sol a view of the sut-i-v'Uiuliair foimiry. 1 know of no more insuirlnj: jsight than one of those old rams with Ills massive hums outlined ugruinst tlto sky, standing as motionless as a statue And it is a wonder to the hunter how they get across tlie rock slopes with such ease and grace. There has beeu much writ ton of tlie mountain sheep, of its won derful feats of springing from ledges and lighting upon its head and horns, which is without foundation iu fact. While it Is true they can stand an im mense shock in battle, yet if one of those sheep weighing 300 pounds should drop from a ledge of any con siderable height and laud on his head his neck would be broken. I spent .several years in the sheep country in the Cauadinn Rockies and was near the sheep or aimmsr tlieiii during all seasons of the year ti ml they St -em to lie less sensitive to tiio rigors of win ter and the ever-ehn lining elements of the hiji'Ii attitudes tlmn any other ani uial except i .ns.-iliy tle mountain goat, andoftliee animals I think they have the advantage, because I have a num ber of times found mountain fronts yarded in the drop snuw in places where ftunl was scarce, but I hv.ve never yet found Bn.y.;utain sOieip in this condit i on." Mar bm I urin inks''! ; v. :'s on S VI' n-;'i't o i ir lis tl by d I rendu vtti of aiife i t oll . !'. vct..l lir.T roi li'Ui'.. 1 I Uil pritr-? k,.iuni Institution in Eivjla-iJ Had Its Incep tion in t!is Shortage of Houses and Housemaids. A smaj! r-rivate 'hotel for babies is tlie latest idea of domestic life. The. baby gets n change and the mother gets a ro. t . The baby's hotel or bo.irdiu house ' is the prod net of the shortage of houses and iinrsetnakls. Parents have been forced into hotels and furnished apartments, and as many hotels have not the conveniences of the nursery, the baby's hotel, where he or .she may be received as a paying pest, is making- its appearance- There is, of course, accommodation for the baby carriage. Two certified nurses conceived tlie idea. They have established a nursery in Hampsteatl, London. The walls are decorated with ducks and chickens, and each little guest has a white cot with curtains. A medical man and a dentist are in attendance. The tariff is about $13 a week. The little puests may stay a week, a year, or merely for the week end, while their parents go house hunting or holiday making. A young war widow, who has re sumed her former post as secretary, brought her baby to the nursery, and Saturday afternoon and Sunday they spend happy hours tog-ether, while an other woman left her little one in our charge while she rejoined her husband in the tropics." Continental News. ,-,l v. !..-n sew r u in! I low ; rt SI Wis s dNuM f I., i....vM. 1 an l;.d:an !, wi.h skeletons tK-.-'- I an seven loot. t nils rtid ore v.ell pre served skelote-i are to be given ovr to tb.c investigators of the anthro polotrv department of the University of California. The skulls and skele tons are declared to be of highly im portant and scientific value. lMseevery of the burial ground has revived an old Indian legend that an immense treasure of cold nuggets was interred with n body of A chief of the ancient tribe of the gkint In dians. So convinced are the residents in the truth of this legend that great crowds have thronged around the sewer diggers, largely hunioving their activities, and more than a score of persons have applied to the municipal authorities for positions on the city's sewer-diKpinK crew. Atwrd'ns: to tlie ancient Indian legend, the vast nold treasure was buried in cloe proviinity to where the boiii-s were recovered. Kijrbt years use William Alfitmn, curator of the inr.seuui in tloblen (etc park, San Francisco, declared that skeletons unearthed near Con cord were the most valuable contri butions to the soienillie invest !'.-l-t'.ons of the state's ptchisto'.ie hi-tliars. H1STCHY Som.i h icr, ;'tt D.tta Cuarlno on tin ii'l,i Known to Fa.i. t;ii) -Acf J." to.i. . i have t?-.e Kiiine : nt tri.'M' INDUSTRIAL IE- .Hf r'J el VIEW OF STATE "cjl vi O1 '- '. . jMi,,u. vho luwl e-otc'l el'. ;ir-oy corned boo'' i" ,'.:,. i!.: n or oo;- l.j- In the hi-' i'oioo," reniarl.) the t!.'.n;',i:o.i, The plooo is Hoaitrents !'ubliM:."d --n 1 A. I., by i ii Aim-i'ii ioi I lis- jii.il boon J..;i leoylnst ainii;; ! :i!lit'i'hi;' unlji a lae no- of men liiioci n as tlie A el's. The oi'U'.n of tl.ls strange people is I one of Ihe iii-cat mysteries f blstory, Likewise their sudden extinction has been just as balilinj:. The Act's appeared In western lhi rope very suddenly about the tune of the bei'iiniiif; of the Teutonic dark n;;os the hitter part of the second decade of (he Twentieth century. For a short period they flooded hi great numbers the entire territory of thud from the Tyrem-os to the Khtne. Then they suddenly vanished. It 'was recently thought that a clue hud been found to the kind of food eafou by these nomads. In an old cellar In Andortmeh there were found what nt .first looked like peculiarly shaped bricks, but what later proved to be cans of ft strange sort ot meat. : (Vrlnin Investigators soon decided that! this could be notbin- other' than ele-. oh-'iit moat, and students weie about i I of i;re i) ... Now I'll e -ilcu-ed the v.vei J" ei.il cut to f.,0 W issued by t! 1 aieu ;i iinMot ui,uiii. ()i-;;-on, Washington for t i j 1 1 1 ek! .' i:l CM ,iu -1 f!" in t",:t ' p. ,'io.l, , hi.id-er i t t!oa-;t in 'Ol'.o Ihe i i ot .rd- I hum-! i I 1 v A ami linti.ih per cent of the nun to make trips to ', n KELLS C"PiTUiE3 CLD Africa In se.-n-ob f i:tl. or evidence, "ben the result some chemleal leois was puhllsb. Tb.ls showed thai ihe tneat was least b.MT year old. if m'l very no oilier; and as the A n.t'.e'ol r 1 ears lieve il.su in t.) l! i"M. It in (. of of 'd, lit eh ml U Is lolly to he ; store e.f foo 1 ludoued s much more prob:il'o ColuiuSia represent. S the total shingle production of tinted Slate;-! and Cattail:. Snlcm dehvdrutimr nlant will unit and cold storagro jmnt. Ih'clanmtion projects of Oretron allowed ?2,M-S.(HMI. i'orvnllis I'rof. I)r5ser of lc luirtnicnt of Economics opposes cash bonus to service men ns "least desir able." but favors aid to pet farms. Sn lent Manufacturing plants in Orojron have increased 475 in num ber during: the last two years, according- to the biennial report of C. 11. Ciram, commissioner of labor, O'-egnn Kg-). Cooperative iiksoc iation marketed 'John) do.-.eti ci-i-TH, gi-tting ?." cents a lor.en if stead of CP cents. Kderprisi -- IVrldey Walker lias become publishi r of the Reporter. Tidewater fish hatchery cnlarp-ed v.1 turn out 1 r.(!O0,(hh, salmon. iVitemnh Cniiiity taxei jump fro!:: f2.IHH.t''0 iil I'.'Jtl to $11,70-',-O0f in lii'JI, s.n inert use of per A .' f Cii"' QuaIarMi ''' 'tw Oor Caul-M l it sinnitilnl f .rn. lirt-NiiKli MliiW cs Iim ietl i't't "O (', tc ilOO" ol ' I f , c auJ I 'Ufnu, I ci'iiiiici. l'milny fill J lUH ."-''il( I'll'. ii tivs nrel .Si'OiV i;, f, I '.mv '."lOi t'v u. ij L14.1t11lJ.11t. ) and Planters GuidcJ ,.-l,,a. h.fontmlhm lo -'". H Midi climi. , Put your land to work for profit ju Yi u can't nffor.f to tic up yir land tif Jvns, . timewiJI labor on any but the -t mh. 0rjt,i Diutnond Quality ,,Iul r mre of k"1 ting tlie'" fmnc ttram md the rlu! vorUt ri 1 (or y,M' inirpo-e. (let. the Dianv ntl Qtinllt; Cotolo ,,u I viy you t m for Cotlo: fio nod jr a T.CC0-. i fin J v.-- hl We i1 Itl 1 l'trown. MlPfiiltteiulent of the division of th N. 1'. i:y. Marion County .dab- t:ix im-re-iseil from SlS-l.oV nt l!"'J!i to ?:l!-'!..2'J in Ul'J.1. lu-i'p:.' !u:;n- in lit lift trKi-'i oil v fii s,",:ot p ir t'n. t at it Diffi-M tit wru jt-..1' tmrJ -iu 5v si n , l V '3 I bi tUeUy ;., ., Jit d before lllii i ' V,! im- you biei), yiu (' .ii i: Eei;rf T'r.st Relics Unearthed by Wo: i::'n in Orerci Vcre Use;! t'3 C, n.-.ments by Indians. So;', slad's a"'o-' v.vro :';:oo rod, by F.ddy. near Th j at tin- !:e:ii!s of I Ti.oy were decayed ' touched. These s! six Inches across vo'-kers rov:it!y at billies. (re-.. lying Indian skeletons. -.::d crumhle I when Ms showed in.liea- For European Children. Italy and neighboring countries, especially Switzerland, at the end of October held at Milan a conference on child welfare to discuss, more spe cifically, seaside and country homes for needy children, placement of chil dren in foreign countries; vacation camps; also prclsiou of Institutional care in cities ; state, local and inter national organization ot child welfare; better training of social workers en gaged In child welfare service, and improvement of technique general';.-. The public welfare department of the city of Milan, which called this con ference, Is especially concerned over the duplication of efforts, the lack of proper care in the smaller communi ties and Interaction between town and country. One definite elm is that of making International co-operation In this field a means of encouraging closer relationship between the peo plea. Tions i f b:-vinr been i-so-:: ;-s ear or; a moiits. They :uo of the species of shel!-fish commonly called "eolucs" on the Atlantic coast, ncein:i:or to per sons who have observed them, and do not crow to the size of those found on the Pacific coast. Wonderfully perfect spear and ar-. row-heads, made of ohsidian, a rock found no nearer than California, also were unearthed. All of the chipping on the arrow-points found appeared to be much finer than later Indian work, local amateur collectors de clared. The rolks found by highway work ers at I'dg Eddy are an accumulation of centuries, in the opinion of D. L. Cates, city recorder, who has lived in and around The Dalles for more than CO years. lie points out that in the hills back of Big Eddy trails worn in the rock may be seen, evidence of the activities of Indians who used thess trails for hundreds of years. Mr. Cates says that at Big Eddy the In dians find finer salmon fishing than at any other place along the river and have been making the trip to that place annually probably ever since sal mon began running up the Columbia. t; ii ti.;i h ie-i t - :! ami vie ica ft t la ma. U h'l'ie. ! he time lhui :md elephant ir lung expedi- tee is, My it good thing for Amer 'e mysterious ipNjipp, nranef .'s came a! out. l' T there H esidenee that this bnrharlc p'iiimititf t" migrate io North nul establish itself ea that taxe l,e Co. vi emr!. edfe;-; i v V, : o,,r.th r 1,.l..,l : shoiv no. idcreasc p v cc"t . ( YovT.-YViHameth r."ii!i;v open' ii r-; T"r ilhnll! "a!l !;.l;. as l ew whole -'uV ,'aHs -S'raliiini rr. over i: Jle! t I I s If ( ): ..'it, oil, o; in John ,h,M- h.l- i mi MOV L'eli'.iuenf perni.iiieii'ly. .ii.fioo !:gtcr;c tree nehing end lmmens Hwdi vf Caribou. Late arrivals at Vancouver, B. C from the Yukon report that wandering herds of caribou are appearing' in im mense numbers on the banks of that river. They declare there are millions of the animals. Two men who tried to get down the river Just at the time of the first Ice were held op for three hours by a multitude ot caribou which were crossing- the river below them. How long the migration bad been go ing on when they were stopped they did not knoflr. The stream of animals blackened the water on a space one half mile wide and continued uninter ruptedly during the period the men were held.np. Photography 100 Years Old. This is the centenary of photog raphy. So rapidly does the world progress, so essential a part of our civilization Hhs become the taking of pictures, that It is difficult to realize that the art was unknown when Mon roe first entered the" White House. Yet In 1820 Niepce. first of all men, succeeded in producing what might be called a photograph, a rude Impression on a silver plate rendered sensitive by a layer of asphaltum saturated with oil of lavender. And though this discovery awakened world-wide interest at the time, this method could not be put Into general use, and not until 1839 did Daguerre succeed In producing the first practical photograph. After that date the art advanced rapidly, so rapidly, in fact that before 1850 the daguerreotype was common in every village. In every family. From the sliver plates of Niepce to the motion picture of today is a long step, a step which bnt Illus trates the rapidity with which modern civilization advances. Elm at Washington, Closely Associated With Samuel F. B. Morse, Will Scon Be Gone. Another landmark In Washington Is near destruction. Tho old "Morse F.hu," under whoso shad" Samuel l F.. Morse ll::ed to spend his leisure pours while workim on his invention of the telegraph, will soon be removed. The tn-f was plant -d in lVX In the early forties the future Inventor of tlie tciei-rnph used to foregather with his cronies and newspaper men and crack jokes about the "impossible" and "crazy" invention of the magnetic telegraph on which be was working. The tn-e was hi front of the old Wil lard hotel. Since those days the old hotel has been replaced by a jnodern eleven story hostelry. Morse, whose Inven tion came true in 1S44, died In 1872. But the tree remained. I ut It is now in its death hour in spite of many operations of "tree sur gery" and all known applications of "tree medicine" practiced by Washing ton's superintendent of city parks. ( :it,hv r.-'.s. i rs'di jiurnted ' autn st age line. ! Lebanon camif-ry t!i -dribute ! J'JOn,. fioti to jfrowers .ted workers. .Albany to have Cuhoid an h u; I porter fact'-ry. I Oregon tirv,! eriaen spent f'.h'.O,- ! 000 in V.V20 for forest protection. ! Ihmgl.-is County farmers' turkey poo' netted dP cents. The N'ortliwest will experience a ilistM'.ct revival of business within the next !0 days, predicts A. V. ! l io lierii I r. ! hii-h .1 h.u I. .'it; -V fiiUIit e-i , W:. !. i id' i dr. .,!:, r.v;o.! : . t t iiilli'U el :tv w.!! hi f -e lee jdiifo I Ol N'ew V. l'H V '" 1 it Re ,'f. 1. '. i: tl,' 'Ii, Ih-,r ! r.. Aft ( ' Mil!; ha Met. lieted Within. Week, ityonv i!!e t ' mpoyt.i .start e ! vrrii !ifi r. 1 fi .nl I-:iv-r Work hefmi en e crete- portals at. twin tt.'rtteli IWt eu here ul.l Mi. ier. Fanks ?l.!,7."iit.i1'i v.-.rtli st .-Uiiserihi d fjf new ere.ifii-ry to loilt tit iiinr, Saleiti - P,(l'in ,-icres iMtini"! i .tet ween For'ihimf nml A li!.,i;il Wb, t!- on ' "i ha i I I hill" !)',!'!: i, ri iio,."it-or tin fiey- We),' Itl ' ..f r o: llkni, 'd..-d !-.. up." !.vf!i-t! n-fntK- i.i-iv 'e !if be M:ii;;(!ti?ie. d b;- i Be i K'd I. p.-n-iili Dc i ilV a,! cotri-,)arcii to lO.Ono a f,.e years .'i 'ini a t-g..r n.l rathlanift to U an (titer"..' role t d Wti' hinrtoit to tk.v. 5e 1 hi 0' Egypt to Klavt Finet Hospital. The Egyptian goverxxmeot has de cided to build what bat officially de scribed as "tte finest and most com plete medical school axtd hospital m the world," In Cairo. It' hi to contain 1,225 beds, and will bave accommo dation tor 8000 oat-pa tteota a day. Attached Witt Im t completely equipped medical school, wttch wtH be cooncct e& wis) the pJeed unhersity, t peclstl dental department, and depsrt iscDts fw iwry branch -X nedlcal and urg3cl idenca. It Did Com Suddenly. An unusually interesting communi cation was received by a New York life Insurance company from the Dnhl strom Metallic Door company of Chi cago. A letter, pointing out the ad vantages of Insurance, was mailed to Mr. Dahlstrom on November 1.6. 1920. A part of this letter read as follows: "Have you ever thought that your tarn may come suddenly. Suppose it did" The answer to this supposi tion, as written by some unknown per son, is as follows: "It did. He's dead. Returning letter and postcard. Can't forward. Keeping blotter. Can use this." Home That Preachers Cams From. It Is interesting to note the type of homes that preachers come from. In the Methodist denomination 66.7 per cent of the preachers come from farm ers' homes and 11.8 per cent from preachers' homes. In the southern Presbyterian denomination 47.7 per cent come from farmers' homes and 18 per cent of the preachers come from parsonages. In the Presbyts (tons of ttie United States of America 88 per cent come from farmewf homes, wtdle 15 per cent come from person ages From Georgia Mettofflpt Con ference Notes In Atlanta C institution. Houses of Mud. Women In California are building houses with their own fair hands. What is more, they are making the bricks. The bricks, however, are of tlie kind spoken of In the Bible as made by the people of Israel in Egypt 1. e of clayey earth mixed with straw for a binder. The straw is indispensable, and It will be remembered how the Israelites "kicked" because It was not provided. Such bricks are merely sun baked. Missionary priests In California In the early days used them for building churches and other structures which. covered with stucco, were very hand some. These 'dobe buildings were also substantial, weatherproof and endur ing, as Is testified by many that still stand, unimpaired by the wear of cen turies. With labor so high and materials likewise, the idea of a mud dwelling, which one can put up for oneself, even the children helping, has Its attractions ABOUT OTHER PEOPLE AND ABOUT YOU- The Dress Problem In t m Orient The Yokohama Reform association recently sent a communication to the mayor requesting his co-operation In endeavoring to prevent coolies and workmen appearing In public places with insufficient clothing to conform with western ideas of propriety. The association's spokesman stated that the reason for the request is the pres ence of a large number of foreigners In the city, and the sight of the scant ily clothed persons on the streets and In the tramcars will tend to give them an unfavorable opinion of the city. From the Japan Advertiser. Knocking a Tradition. Turkey is a tradition. Because the Pilgrim parents were rotten shots and couldn't kill a quail on a bet, turkey was all they could find for meat on that memorable day. They had been on m diet of clams so long that mayhap even turkey tasted like food to them. But that Is no eicuse for wlshimr th blamed thing onto posterity and mak ing It a sacred duty to gnaw a bundle' of concentrated fiddles trinira on the last Thursday V every November. Topeka Capital, There are two kinds of news in the paper. Part of the news is about the affairs of other people; their sayings, doings and goings to do; things that have hap pened may happen didn't happen. But there's also a lot of news in this paper if you know where to look for itr-about your affairs. That's the part of the news you'll find in the Advertise ments. There's valuable news there about things you want or will want; perhaps about things you have that others want. Every Advertisement carries a message to someone. Many Advertisements carry messages of interest or value to you. You can't afford to miss the Advertisements because so many of them are news relating directly to you or to your affairs. Iv Dec Dec j C jav r $ i' .: fT Dec Pec ff. pre i Sep Dec 1 fun $51 tha- n IIIW the Thi Sep .. Dec V i Dec Dec Jt. T 'Cas ,Cas ;Cjs ;Cas b Tot; prol her oncf any free Tim f old " as i