Independence enterprise. (Independence, Or.) 1908-1969, July 21, 1922, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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    Friday, July 21, m
Page Six
Pontine Sal!
AT MY RANCH 4V2 MILES SOUTH OF INDEPEND
ENCE AND JUST SOUTH OF THE HIGHLAND
SCHOOL ON
MAY BE PEAKS OF ATLANTIS
STATE SCHOOLS INCKKASK
OUTSIDERS' TUITION FBK
xoret, Madeira, Canary and Cap
varae laianda Posalbly Mountain
Topa of Vanished Continent.
S
slay a Mug
17 3
dbsa
STARTING AT 10 O'CLOCK, THE FOLLOWING
MACHINERY AND STOCK
2 HEIFERS
1 BROOD SOW
3 SOWS
8 PIGS
1 RABBITT
9 NANNIE GOATS
2 BUCKS
1 FARM TEAM
4 GEESE
8doz. WHITE LEGHORNS
TANCRE STRAIN
1 De Laval SEPARATOR
500 lbs. Capacity
1 NEWTON BROODER
300 CHICKS
1 P. O. SULKY PLOW
1 HAND CLOVER Seeder
BARB WIRE Stretchers
8 TONS HAY, VETCH
15 GAL. TANK
1 SET HARNESS
1 WAGON and RACK
1 HAY RACK
112 in. walking PLOW
1 GASOLINE ENGINE,' 1
horse, Fairbanks & Morse
1 CEMENT ROLLER
11 horse CULTIVATOR
Various Small Articles
FREE LUNCH AT NOON
Terms All sums under $20, cash ; over that amount,
bankable paper will be accepted, payable in 90 days.
Oren McElmurry, Owner
M. F. WHITE, Auctioneer
IRA MIX, Clerk
FUTURE HOP INDUSTRY
DARK, SAYS LIVESLEY
T. A. Livesley of Salem, one of
the largest growers and shippers of
hops in Oregon, who is at the
present time with his family visiting
the hop merchants of London and
touring the hoy-growing districts of
England, writes back that despite
the British restrictions on imports,
there is every prospect that English
contractors of Oregon hops will livej
up to their agreements, but he is
far from optimistic regarding the
future of the Oregon hop industry at
the expiration of existing contracts,
unless the Volstead act is amended
to permit the manufacture of light
beer. Otherwise he holds the Oregon
hop business is doomed.
'The English people cannot under
stand Americans being without beer,"
writes Mr. Livesley. "Here in Eng
land, there is very little drunkenness,
and the prisons and jails are being
deserted. There is no crime wave
sweeping the country, as in America.
We went to the English Derby where
there was a crowd estimated at
50,000 people and never saw an in
toxicated person.
"I see that Americans are getting
together, trying to put an end to
crime, but I think a good deal of
ciime is due to disrespect of law en
gendered by sumphuary laws that
take away the liberty of the indi
vidual. They might let the people
have their liberty and demand in re
turn respectability, law and order.
"England is becoming the play
ground of the world, where one can
have what he wants and have pro
tection, where there is a rigid en
lorcement 01 law and order, and no
infringement of personal liberty. Alt
Americans who can afford it will
come over here, and as a result the
United States will suffer." Salem
Journal.
'hum, la a theory thnt the Artec
and Inens of Anioilm, who had de
veloped a flvllkatU.11 on this continent
many centuries before Cohunlniw uune,
were ihvs.vml.Ml from the Athuitlunn,
me people wlio Inhublted a continent
which set out In the Atlantic oeeun,
between Europe and Africa un.l th
American const.
History seems to reach back to Asia
ana Africa iihout 5.1KM) yeurs before
Christ and in the earliest historic times
there was a tradition of a laud fur
west of Africa having hliih niouu-
tains, valleys, plains and splendid
cities. That land nilht have existed
10,000 or LU0OO years ngo. It Is
thought juissllile that the Azores, Ma
delra, Canary and Cape Verde isluuds
were some of the highlands and moun
tain tops of the old und vanished con
tlnent, the name of which has come
to us from the early tireeks as "At
lantis."
uvea m s runners, .sounding and sur
veying the bottom of the Atlantic
ocean, nnd deep valleys, mountain
ranges, towwlnjr peaks und wide
stretches of table land Uc-en hencath
the suiTuce of the sea. There was u
tradition in Asia and Africa at the
time recorded history begins that the
Atlantlans were about to Invade Afri
ca und Asia, when their land was
submerged. It might have been a vast
disaster due to volcanic action. The
bottom of the sea in that part of the
world ami the Islands that rise out of
it ure volcanic and there are still uctlve
volcanoes in the sea and In the Aaores,
Canary and Cape Verde islands, which
ure supposed to he fragments of Atlau
tis. Milwaukee Journal.
DIFFER AS TO GIANT RAY
Non-resident foes for students in
the college and university were in
creased from $H to $105 a year, ef
fective with the opening of the next
full term, by action of a Joint com
mittee of regents of both Institutions
in Albany,
The two Oregon institutions by this
action, taken us a menus of roduclnu
the burden of state taxation, puts the
two Oregon institutions on a par
with the state universities of Wash
inirton and California in respect to
non-resident tuition. In each of the
neighboring states the differential
between the charges paid by the
residents and those paid by students
from outside the state is ciiuul to
the ?105 to be charged in Oregon,
Graduate students in both institu
tions will be exempt under the new
fee. The committee of regents em
phasiy.es that the increased fee is not
retroactive; any non-resident who has
entered the university or the college
under the present fee of $(!0 a yeae
will be permitted to finish his course
at that rate. To put the fees where
they would be prohibitive and ut the
same time would be on an even basis
with other states, so that the flow of
non-resident students would neither
be entirely cut off nor become a
flood which would tux the institu
tions facilities, was the aim of the
committee.
Members of the joint eomtnittcw
considering fees were J. K. Weather-
ford of Albnny, chairman, Walter M.
Pierce of La Grande, and President
W. J. Kerr from the college una
Judge J. W. Hamilton of Roseburg,
chairman, C. E. Woodson of Heppner,
AI) MAN'S NEW STATUS
Do you believe that:
Within the next 10 y'r adver
tising men will be regarded as per
forming a hocIuI service ranking next
to that of the school and the church T
Do you believe that:
In the bunds of advertising
men ure shaped the desire " l'"1'"
if iiitt musses of people? If they
teach fallacies, the public will Deiiove
fallacies; if they tench extravagance,
the public will practice extrovngance
nnd wonder way uusim-n i" --
occur? Hut, if they teach economic
roth the miblic will leant the way
Lurk to business prosperity 7
One is the prediction, tho other the
tui..niit. of Rocer Italmon, tho
famous statistician.
n HKonm un extreme view, but
Ilabson bus a way of seeing further
into nf fairs economic thun most men.
In the letter of which the quoted
. . . . I. ft 1
material is part the History oi ywnen-
an business is charted. It leads the
statistician to the conclusion that lh
business of this country muid prepare
for u period of gradually falling
. . 1.1 A. I
prices Mitnlar to me interval muv un-
owed the Civil war. ,
Today's business men are accus
tomed to minor fluctuations, hut
liabsou thinks they must new learn
how to do business with goods price 1
on u long descending scale, lie
thinks this is the time for advertising'
men to assume a social well as u
business relationship to the affairs of
life. He imputes to them the jmwer:
of teachers and of leaders as well u.i
phrase makers. He defines them as
unalysts ami economists as well m
display copy writers.
They ure t demonstrate that de
liberate repression of production
If ftdvmtimritr men ("iit ,T.
ceptlon of their dut . ... ,ftn-
they indeed -ke rank with
preachers, teachers, buibMi
editor, financiers and wont. JT
Hut how many of thot.t
pr.trt t,,c existence of P1,lrt "J
in
la
.1.1 i i.
ji niniiiu in HN it .au.l.oi..
humur wel?-I'o,t'!. Journal
The Old (Jrny Marf
The old gray mure I v,,)( t() (, ,
Is out of use, but still ally,,
CI...'. I . I. . I 1
Who once was Lrlmniln. f!n1
speed. "
There's something lacking n i
That makes her seem to wmit to-"
Hut nothing man could d w J
Woul.l make m$ prt flom ffiy '
nmro ' "
For long we've known fad, t,
And many stories we roulj t,,
Of times when we flyjnjr Wwit
To meet the ones on ileUrt w
"IVas living sport, und p, to .
To keep her for tho fun we've h4
Her box stall, warm us any ,u
ii,.- i, ...... ..i... ....
rnu you snouid see ,
bored
At nie when cranking up my Pori
. S. Gilbert of Astoria, and Presl-i creutes inevtable depressitiri of pros
Economical
John "Just burned up a $100 bill."
Demijohn "You must be a million
aire." John 'Well its easier to burn
them than pay them."
ALWAYS IMPOSING
"He's such an imposing man!"
"Always so, but on whom was he
imposing when you saw him, may I
ask?"
Naturalists Divided in Opinion Con
cerning Structural Makeup
of Monster Fish.
The great devilfish or giant ray,
which ubounds in the waters around
Iteaufort, S. C, and Captlva Inlet,
Fla., has occasionally been found off
New York and New Jersey. The fur
thest north It has ever been tukeu
Is Block island, where one was
caught last year. '
This wus 14 feet wide between the ,
tips of the pectoral fins, 7 feet long
from head to base of tall, and
weighed 1.C86 pounds. This Is the
only specimen known to have been
weighed, but there are stories of lish
that are said to have weighed 10,000
pounds.
Dr. E. W. Gudger of the American I
Museum of Natural History writes of
the giant ruy in Science, und says that
nuturallsts who have described It
differ as to whether It bus a large
spine or sting on Its tall. The one
caught at lilock Island had none, but
there was a wound on the tall where
a spine was said to have been torn
off. . The late Theodore Olll. dean of
American Ichthyologists, doubted the
spine, as have other writers, although
some naturalists picture It with one.
dent P. L. Campbell from tho univer-
I ty.
Without uny actual work to do, the
head is just a loufinir nlai i' fur
thoughts and ideus.
pority and that increased output by
the individual is tho method whereby
the mojorty of people will xjisess
more goods. They are to teach the
people not only how to t? pond but how
t earn.
It I 1 1 X A I I'" nti.M ..
. imun anil quajjj
i.iocs, uve rooms with bth(
hum location. Keasonnble j)rjr,
reasonable terms, K. I. Buchan.
I.'..,.t.. 1 C..I
Hop Picking BASKETS
Made of Heavy Veneer
Solid Wood Bottom
Very Durable and Ser
viceable Portland Basket
& Handle Co.
1321 Macadam St.
Portland, Oregon
J
Moon Cake Day Chinese Festival.
September 11 Is a great day for all
good Chinamen, for then occurs the
feast of the Moon Cakes. The festival
lasts all day, and ull night, und Is
celebrated by the eating of cakes made
In the shape of the moon and llherully
sprinkled with all sorts of seeds. All
the Chinese grocers In the United
States sell packages of these cakes,
and the very poorest resident of China
town considers himself bound by the
faith of his fathers to purchase at
least one package.
The greater number of cukes pur
chased the greater Is considered the
purchaser's respect for the night's
chief luminary, and some very black
fate Is believed to be reserved for
the Chinaman who falls to eat a cake
before the festival Is over. This doom
Is expected to fall upon him before
next Moon Cake.
Sale Ends Saturday Evening at 9'oXlock
AIr .meanin oi a July Clearance Sale has been exemplified by un
usual offerings and big savings to all who participated in the monev savin
event.
MONEY SAVED IS MONEY MADE
grelt etventWhy sho,,1ln,t faiI tH bc l,rcscnt m the final wimliiof this
EVERY PRICE A MONEY SAVED
A lighted match to the wick and your
oil cookstove is instantly ready. It con
centrates clean, steady heat directly
on the cooking utensil.
No coal or wood to lug, or ashes to
shovel out-a clean, cool kitchen free
from dirt and smoke.
To obtain best results, use Pearl Oil
the clean-burning, uniform kero
sene -scientifically refined and re
refined by a special process.
Pearl Oil is sold by dealers every
where. For your own protection order
by name -Pearl Oil.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
(California)
PEARtoOIL
Kipling as a Strst Musician.
Kipling's verse, even where It Is not
slang, is rarely poetry, but i( Is, for
the most part, clean and neat in its
rhythmical swing, well adapted for the
purposes of the music halls, easy to
remember, even without tuiit;, praise
worthy In Its control of the means of
clarity, and, In short, a genuine article
of its kind. . . Kipling is like a
practised musician in that srrsnge
orchestra which we sometimes see in
the street, clinging around one per
former; he nods his head, ami the
bells tinkle ahout his pagoda-shaped
nui; ne scamps nis root, anil ttie drum,
stick hangs the drum and sets the
cymbals clapping on his back, ami all
the while he Is playing the concertina
with both his hands and perhaps blow
ing Into a panpipe with his mouth.
Arthur Symons, in London Quarterly
Review.
(.KEROSENE)
HEAT
AND LIGHT
as
STANDARD
OIL
COMPANY
C.lijim,. )
Quaint Custom.
A Quaint custom is still maintained
in one of the old streets off the .Strand,
the London Times reports. This is the
burning of a light In the hall of one of
the houses ull through the night when
everybody Is abed. This light has a
history, and marks an ancient privilege
and bygone right-of-way. The light is
maintained by the Westminster council
and not by tlie tenants of the house.
The lamp-lighter enters at twilight and
kindles the light, and on bis round In
the early morning he re-enters with n
latchkey and extlnpnils-hc.-i it. The U; U;
is the remaining symbol of a rlgbt-oj-
way formerly en,1'"d P
the street to pr.nv .1 in
water In the baseine.it, . .
their sole water supply.
If'
::..
!i sprlrr: -. of
icii was once
39c Japanese Crepe, per yard . .27
40 inch Permanent Organdie, yd. . .49
83 inch Japanese Pongee, per yd. .65
$3.50 Silk Stripe Skirting yd. 1.98
79c Loraine Tissue Ginghams, yd. .49
36 inch 25c Curtain Scrims, yd 09
36 inch Heavy Cretonnes, per yd. .12
36 inch Fast Color Percale, yd 14
36 inch $2 Silk Tricolette, yd. 1.39
40 inch Silk Striped Voile, yd. .79
65c 40 inch Colored Flaxons, yd. .29
36 inch Curtain Marquisette, yd. .19
39c Light and dark Dress Voile, yd. .19
rcnes
The last chance to get
Blue Ribbon Flour at $1.59
Lard in bulk, per lb. bring pails .14
Rolled Oats, 9 lb. sack .50
Com, Peas, 2 cans for .25
Breakfast Bacon, per lb. .25
Picnic Shoulder, per lb ,g
Bulk Coffee, per lb 20
Milk, per can, all brands, tall .10
Candy, per lb. 9
Chewing Gum, Nefties fruit flavor
2 pkgs. for 05
Plug tobacco, Star, Climax or
Horseshoe 7c
igareues, unestertield, Camels
Lucky Strike, per pkg ie
MEN'S $1 SUMMER UNION SUITS
Athletic and Balbriggan. All sizes
from 34 to 46
July Clearance Sale Price .......... .57
BATHING SUITS
Kegular values to .$5. You'll certainly
be astonished when you see these
values, marked to $1.93
MEN'S, LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S
CANVAS SHOES
Clearance Price, feach 98
25c 36-inch CURTAIN SCRIMS
in ecru and white only. Full 36-inch
width, regular 25c values, narrow,
medium and wide border.
Clearance Price 9c
v mi ?i CANNER'S APRONS
A siik-hke rubberized fabric with a
solid rubber back, regular 50c values
Clearance Price 39c
32 PIECE DINNER SET
fun dinner set of very fine grade porce
lain ware, gold band with blue edge
figure. $7.50 value
Clearance Price 4.98
TITIAN P.PAMiTr uadc
w f-Inuff of a11 Iarge pieces. Coffee
1 A, )ans' Vlmd stew kettles,
tea Kettles, water pails, etc. Regular
'5c values
Clearance Price 39c
IfPfrHfoin r
a k a mm w .
PREMIUM COUPONS
AS USUAL-i-
on purchases of 50c and
over in any department of
the entire store.
UK
L
o
CH
FDTr rxnr .
" "T K uAoULlNE We rn fun a
purchases of $15 in Dry Goods, Cbth W Vhl "e wav. to Salem on
' 1 v-w inno rauius 01 saiem
0