Friday. Juno 30, 1922 INDEPENDENCE ENTERPRISE Page Seven -NT ir7- !:-"::'i:k Don't Neglect Your Floors It's fun to paint yourself- F LOOKS that have a pood fin. jhh d not pet scarred and worn, the fininh takes tho wear. Well finished floors' olwoys look better, too. If your floors need refinisliing and you can't get a pointer to do the woik, rrfininh them youritelf. You can do it easily "it' really fun." Our "Home Service Paint Dc Eartmrht" was organized just to elp women refininh thing about the home. Write for free advice, telling u what you wont to re finUh and how you wont it to look. Our expert will explain every tep of the work and recommend the right material, brushes, etc. There are special Fuller Paints, Varnitthei, Enamels, Wall or varnish them -easy too Finishes and Stains for you to uhc. They are the best products of their kind that wc know und we have been muking audi prod ucts for 73 yenrs. Take advantape of Fuller' Free Advice and Fuller's Prod ucts in lieuutifying your home. The results will urprie you. The work will fascinate you. Fifteen-for-Floors FiflM lot t !..,.. V.inUk. l 1 , ... . ., r . Ilf "d mm of tpplictiiua, Hullioj famliart; builiui l.l. h.l intika, ..f,l., 4 l'r l..t m thit i'r. U.Ue tu4 't Im auk, OtMonl Vu. lah Si.ln,, Ail puittuw Vf. P.i.l. ..!.. 1. 1, n.l.h, '. Aula .iuml, full.i'i Hm n,r M fiol.li Ik.lKHfliwI, Pf. ..a M.a i'.i.l, tad 1'IOM.LK U III IK LtAD. r- r iiD "J.WIC, llfcl Fullorb V MHCIHCATIOM "Homo Ssrvice'Palnts Motifctured by W. P. FulUr A Co., Dept. 41, See Frencitco Drtk. In I CidM In Itx W.il Kullrf ' "fum Brftkm" I'ttiiU arc tuld by lb foUooluf lo four city. Willard E. Craven Hdw. ALBANY WILL HAVE TWO DAY CKLEBRAT10.N Albany will hold h race meet and rtlcbration, July 3 and 4. The race program will be In charge of Wayne Stwrt, well-known in racing circles n the volley, and it U expected that there will be several lively tilts by Willamette horses. In addition to the rued which will take place on the county fair ground, there will be a Ull game ami a lone Hat of minor port, a big parade and other feature. penitentiary at Salem by Judge Tucker of Portland hint week. Hun- Jnicutt la well known in Polk county He was sent to the state prison for ' theft, serving- about a year and then Knl li ir nnrnllml . Dnllnii Observer. ---.-n, j-" - - Hunnicutt ta 1'rtson One Year Harry Hunnicutt, an ex-convict, who confessed caily in May that he and Mm. Irene Zuideruin had framed evidence of robbery against A. L. Zul- ierduin, husband of the woman, in effort to have him sent to prison jto that hu "would be out of tho way," jas sentenced to one ycur In the state Snow Four Feet Deep Morris Hayes and Bittner Hudclson went on a fishing trip in the moun tains out of Black Rock last Friday, returning Sunday, and encountered snow all the way from two to four feet deep. They went as far as Black Hock by auto and walked in the re mainder of the way, a distance of aomo miles up the mountain. Al though there was plenty of snow the fishermen did not suffer from the cold. They found the water still too cold for good fishing, with the re sult that they niado only fair catches. Dallaa Observer. Tha Enterprise is still 11.50 a year M TELL your dealer you want to sec a Fisk Tire beside any other he offers you. He has it in stock or can get it. See for yourself what the Fisk Tire has to offer in extra size and strength, ho w its resiliency compares when you flex the tire under your hand, how the depth of the non-skid tread looks beside other treads. This is the way to buy tires! There's a Fisk Tire of extra value in every size, for car, truck or speed wagon j j GSfcAT DISCOVERY BY YOUTH (rlmnta of 6vantan.Yar-Old Wen Qav Drjn China to an Apprtclatlva World. kIuk'h falih In tin) transmutation f nietala and the ukUl of an apothe eurra aeventeeu-yenr-old mm eniinod the dlaeovery of tlm celebrated Drea-Ui-n ware. The. khuf whs AugUMtun of Saxony and the boy was Dottier, who compoHed u tincture that was supplied to be enpnble of being trarinfonned In to gold. Hut being a genius waati't uiucli fun for Itottlger. for the king locked him In a complete laboratory and refused liliu freedom, "O'Dalr" wrlten In th Milwaukee Kentlnel. The reHtralnt aliriOHt urilmlnnced the boy's liilnd, "Jt foamed at the mouth and knocked IiIm bend ngiilriHt tho wall and trembled mo violently tbut two aoldlera could not bold him. And be drunk VI cans of beer a duy without getting drunk." Jt whs thought advlnnble to move the hoy to Dresden arid give him eertuln liberty. While continuing his experiment there he dlm-ovcred the MelMwen poreelnln, eommonly called IircNdcn ehlna. TIiIk discovery re joiced AugMMtUM mid he ttpent large suiiih In cofiMructlng th .lupiin pal ace. Many workmen came from Delft to in like the new turf, and soon all Kurope wnn buying Melnsen. In gnilllude the king gave Itottlger Ida freedom, a ring with hi elllgy, two apen, a young bear and credit with the royal bunker, and In addition the prolltH from the porcelain factory for life. Hut what do you think ! Iiottlger died of dissipation at the age of thirty-four. FOUND HIS PROBLEM SOLVED Stroke of Luck Said to Have Come to Man at Work on Idea of Un inkable Boat. Among the "accidental" Inventions may be mentioned (he lifeboat. In the cource of a country stroll William Wnuldhave, the Inventor of the self rlglillng lifeboat, came across a woman who asked his help In lifting a heavy vessel of wnter Just drawn from the well, n the surface of the water there flouted the broken half of a wooden bowl. Wouldhave was drawn Into conver sation, and like pinny another man who cannot keep his hands quiet while he talks, he idly toyed with the flouting piece of wood. Naturally he turned It over and found to his sur prise that It Immediately righted it self. He Inverted It again, with the same result; nnd since he was nt the time actually at work on the problem of an unslnknble boat he Immediately realized the Importance of his tdmnce discovery. It Is an experiment that anyone can readily make for himself. All one re quires Is the fourth part of a hollow "prolate spheroid"; or to put it In more homely language, the quarter of a coconut shell split from end to end. I'ut the shell In a bowl of water and you will find that It will not remain capsized, but will return at onee to an even keel. In scientific language, It will float only with tle convex sur face downward. New York Times. ANC,E,'.T BUILDING A MARVEL Magnificence of tho Labyrinth Qreek Writer, Herodotus, Found Almost Beyond Hla Description. The ancient Kgyptlana had at Ar alnoe, near Lake Moerls, In the Fayoura district, west of the Nile, one of the most noted buildings ever In the world -the Labyrinth. There was one on the Island of Lemnos, In the Aegean sea; another on the Island of Crete, in the Mediterranean, and one In Italy. Hut that of Kgypt was by far the most ancient. Myth, tradition, legend, mystery and awe are to be found In obscure say ings about It In remnants of Greek classical literature. It was composed of ri.(MH) chambers, 1,500 below the earth's surface and 1,500 abote. The grand hlerophants permitted Herodo tus to enter some of the chambers above, but not below. The Greek writer could scarcely find words with which to describe the beauty and splendor of the famous edifice. He aays: "The upper chambers I myself vis ited, and I pronounce them among the grandest efforts of human Industry and art. The almost Infinite number of winding passages through the different courts excited my highest admiration ; from spacious halls I passed through smaller chambers, and from them again to large and magnificent saloons almost without end. The walls and ceilings are marble, the bitter embellished with the most exquisite sculpture; around each court pillars of the richest and most polished marble are arranged. "At the termination of the Laby rinth stands a pyramid 100 cubits high, approached by a subterranean passage, and with Its exterior enriched by huge figures of animals." Edgar Luclen Larkln In Seattle Post-Dispatch. HOW SOUND IS TRANSMITTED TELL OF WEATHER'S CHANGE Early Workers in Copper. From the very remotest times cop per has been a favorite with metal workers. The Assyrians, Egyptians, Persians and Greeks were One metal workers and claim some of the best specimens of the art, Including the hnnd-hnmmered copper statue of Pepl I, a great Egyptian king, who reigned in iilKK) B. C. Another great work of art is the Great Gate of Chalmaneser II, an As syrian king contemporary with Ahab of biblical times. The British museum contains a niRrterpleee of hand-hammered copper known as The Slrus a pair of shoulder pieces for a suit of armor, picturing a Greek warrior and an nmazon in combat. Scores of European cities partic ularly In Belgium have beautiful statuary, roof ornamentations and other large pieces of huiid-huimuerod copper. Many Flowers Give Warning of tho Coming of Rain, if One Will Stop to Observe Them. Many ilowers are said to be eicellent barometers. For instance. It Is when the blooms of dandelions have seeded and ure In the fluffy, feathery condi tion that the weather prophet faculties come to the fore. In fine weather the ball expands to the full, but when the rain approaches It shuts up like an um brella. If the weather is inclined to be showery, It keeps shut up all the time, only opening when the danger from the wet Is passed. The ordinary clover and all its varl etles, Including shamrock, are also ba rometers. When rain Is coming the leaves shut together like the shells of an oyster. For a day or two before rain comes their stems swell to an ap preciable extent, and stiffen so that the leaves are borne more uprightly than usual. This stem swelling when rain Is expected is a feature of many flower ing grasses. The. figures at which the leaves of the horse chestnut are made up keep flat and fanlfke so long as the fine weather is likely to continue. Cleve land Plain Dealer. Vibration of tho Air Brings It to the Car Travels Fatter In Summer Than In Winter. Sound Is transmitted to the ear by the vibration of the air. When one particle of air Is made to vibrate It sets the adjacent particles to vi brating, and so a sound wave, If not obstructed, passes in all directions from the sounding body. Tue calcu lated velocity of sound In the air when the temperature Is at freezing point Is 915.09 feet per second. When the temperature increases, sound travels faster, and the rate has been calculated at a little more than one foot per second for each degree of rise In Fahrenheit's thermometer. Contrary to popular belief, sound travels faster In summer than in winter, and In warm than In cold climates. It might be thought that sound would travel more slowly through a dense atmosphere, but the elasticity Increases as rapidly as the density, and, therefore, the velocity of sound Is not affected by varying density. The velocity of sound In wafer, when at the greatest density, Is 4,707.4 feet per second. The experi ments by which this velocity whs de termined were made by M. Callaodln, ia 1820, across the, Lake of Geneva, from Rolle to Thonon, a distance of about nine mils. Water, therefore, transmits sound four times as fast as air does. LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE TO CREDITORS NO OLD AGE PR03LEM HERE Insulated Shovel. Where laborers ure at work on an electric railway of the third-track class there Is alwuys danger If ordi nary tools are employed, for the touching of the third rail with a pick, shovel or crowbar may lead to fatal results. There was patented some time ago a tool which Is Insulated for the purpose of protecting the work men on electric railways. In the case of the usual shovel there is placed an Insulating sleeve over the metallic handle so that there Is no possibility of grounding the current through the workman should the tool come into ac cidental contact with the "live" rail. Furthermore, there Is made use of an Insulating material of some distinct color, which is an additional precaution. Wild Oats That Travel. We are all more familiar with "wild oats" In a moral than a botanical sense, yet in the latter It Is an article of no small curiosity. For one thing, It has a semi-Inherent power of moving from one place to an other. Let a head of It be laid down in a moistened state upon a table and left there for the night, and the next inorninir it will be found to have walked away. This locomotive power possessed by wild oats resides in the peculiar hard "awn," or spike, which sets the grain a-tumbling over and over sideways. A verv laree and coarse kind of wild oats, brought many years ago from Otahelte. was found to have this ambulatory character In uncom mon perfection. If ordinary cultivated oats are al lowed to degeuerate, they revert to their former state, and acquire this among other characteristics. London Answers. , Adjustable Curve. There Is a most ingenious drawing instrument for making curves, which was Invented by a Massachusetts man. This device consists of a bow. 'a flex ible rule pivoted at" Its ends to the ends of the bow and having a pair of In wardly extending studs, a flat reinforc ing spring contracting with the inner side of the rule and having Blots re ceiving the studs and a screw-thread ed adjusting device extending between the center of the spring and the Dow. By adjusting the screw-threaded mem ber the curve may be changed to meet all requirements within the range of the Instrument. Perhaps the greatest aDDlIcatton of this device Is in laying out parabolas of varying sizes. Three Pithy Paragraphs. I have never yet heard man or wom an much abused that I was not Inclined to think the better of them; and to transfer any suspicion or dislike to the persou who appeared to take delight In pointing out the defects of a fellow creature. Jane Porter. I do not want to see the time come when any group In this country will become so powerful and strong that by its power it may work or create conditions of suffering among some other group. Hugh Frayne. One of the silliest of human de lusions is the Idea that time will bring sverythlng out all right. Haven't you heard people get that off and then proceed to do nothing whatever with time? John M. Slddall. Author' Noma d Plume. Artemus Ward and Mark Twain were literary examples of adopted names, writes Frederic J. Haskln in the Chicago News. Henry M. Stan ley, the African explorer, was original ly John Rowlands. For euphony In authorship, James B. Taylor became Bayard Taylor and James B. Matthews became Brander Matthews. Ulysses S. Grant began as Hiram S. Grant, Grover Cleveland as Stephen G. Cleve land and Whitelaw Held as Jacob W. Reld. Un of Oil Long Ago. Oil from natural springs In Sicily was used in lamps la the temple of Jupiter at Rome and oil-fed lamps were burned In other temples and In rich men's homes. Indians of the Andes Mountains Kill Those of Race Who Reach Fateful Limit. nigh In the fastnesses of the Andes mountains of Peru there lives a race which sets an age limit and kills all of Its people who reach the fateful mark. In each village an official Is appointed to terminate the careers of persons who live too long. Different communities, however, have different ideas as to what limit should be placed on human existence. In some places the only duty of the executioner appears to be to secure the presence of a man at ids own fu neral In the "title role." If a person becomes so ill that his funeral becomes a certainty in the near future, a date is fixed for the same, and If the lead ing figure shows a disposition to be un punctual, the village executioner takes the matter In hand. The Andes natives are of Indian descent, possibly from the Qulchau Indians, according to scientists. They live In adobe hovels and are said never to remove their clothing. They are very shy and have no diversions aside from chewing coca leaves, from which modern moentlsts extract cocaine. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned C. W. Irvine, has been ap pointd by the County Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Polk Administrator of the Estate of Jana E. Constance, deceased, and has qualified. All persons having claims against the said Estate are hereby required to present them, with the proper vouchers, within six months from the date of this notice, to the said Admin istrator at the Farmers State Bank of Independence, Oregon in said county and state. Dated and first publication June 10, 1922. C. W. IRVINE Administrator of the Estate of Jane B. Constance, Deceased. D. E. Fletcher, Attorney. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Notice is hereby given, to whom it may concern, that the undersigned C W. Irvine has been duly appointed executor of the last will and testa ment of Henry C. Constance deceased, by the honorable County Court of Polk County, Oregon, and has quali fied. All persons holding claims against 6aid estate are hereby notified to pre sent the same to the undersigned, duly verified, on or before six months from the date hereof and all persons know ing themselves indebted to said estate are hereby to make immediate settle ment of the same, with the under signed executor. Dated and first publication June 16th ' 1922. C. W. IRVINE Executor of the Estate of Henry Constance Deceased, Independ ence, Oregon. D. E. Fletcher, Attorney for Estate PROFESSIONAL CARDS SWOPE & SWOPE Lawyers Campbell Building INDEPENDENCE. OR. Improved Range Finder. The- largest range finder in the world Is more than twice the size of any used during the war, and has been constructed in England for use In coastal defense, says Popular Me chanics Magazine. It was designed by the two original inventors of the range finder that lias been In use In the Brit ish navy for many years, and that consists of a horizontal tube carried on a central frame, which rotates with the tube on a pedestal. New Powerful Machine Gun. Remarkable possibilities are con ceivable in connection with a power driven machine gun, said to have originated in Germany, but which is now being developed in this country, says Fopular Mechanics Magazine. Besides having several advantages over other machine guns, it is. or rather will be when It is fully devel oped, driven entirely by external pow er, such as an electric motor, or a gas oline ermine. "Original Package." In American constitutional law this means the package In which goods are shipped from one state to another. The United States courts held that where an article is imported into one state from another, it does not lose the protection of the Interstate commerce clause, while the original package re mains unbroken and is the property of the Importer. Interpretation of these decisions made it possible to evade state laws by selling direct to the cus tomers In "original packages." Tire Importance of this is in its bearing on the sale of cigarettes and other com modities about which state laws differ. D. E. FLETCHER Cooper Building Attorney INDEPENDENCE. OR C. C. WRIGHT, M. D. C. Veterinarian Residence, "Uncle HillvV Have Your Piano Tuned by an Expert Moore -Dunn Music Store Masonic Bldg., Salem Phone 506 Brotherhood of American Yeomen Meet in K. P. Hall 2nd and 4th Wednesday nights. Visiting Mem bers Always Welcome. Foreman, Bliss B. Byers. r Arthur Black, Cor. Efficient Service Courteous Treatment A. L. KEENEY Funeral Director and Licensed Embalmer Calls Promptly Answered Day or Night Reasonable Prices Phones 9821; 9822 Independence, Oregon I WindMill BarberShop j Guilty Suffer Doubly. Guilt has always Its horrors and solicitudes; and to make it yet more shameful and detestable, it Is doomed often to stand In awe of those to whom nothing could give Influence or weight but their power of betraying. Johnson. ii 01 NOTICE TO CDEDITORS Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned, by order of the County Court of Polk County, Oregon has been appointed Administrator of the Estate of Louisa J. Bezanson, de ceased, and has qualified. All persons having claims against the said estate are hereby required to present them with proper vouchers within six months from the date of this notice to the said Administrator at Independence, Oregon, in said County of Polk. Dated and first published June 30th 1922. W. B. CUTHBERT Administrator of the estate of Louisa J. Bezanson, Deceased. D. E. Fletcher, Attorney for the estate We appreciate your trade. tde, XBSHK Pioneer Employment Co. 14 North Second St. Portland, Oregon Furnishes Hay, Harvest and Farm Hands Write for Magazine Em ployment Service, our publi cation Free to All. Phone Broadway 2278 L. M. HUM Care of Yick So Tong Chinese Medicine and Tea Co. Has medicine which will cure any known disease Open Sundays from 10 a. m, until 8 p. m. 152 South High Street Salem, Oregon Phone SSS