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About The Maupin times. (Maupin, Or.) 1914-1930 | View Entire Issue (May 25, 1922)
PORTLAND I . , '--"-J-1' 1 Portland, Orejon TraTTOJyf VAUDEVILLE PHOTO-PLAYS I I lTiT5TTiT5li'i I I Complete Change Sun. and Thurs. ltU L11 91 fi.9 Mil Matinee Daily. Twice Nightly i hi in .7iiMriiini I Saturday, 8unday, Holidays, Continuous 11 GO WHERE WAVES ARE WARM IN WINTER fVlV! ' i ftl WlT I Equals Any California Beach. Special Winter Rates Now in Eflect 'Vlfe(SSTPhl Paved Highway to Seaside Completed. CLssJ-ifrW SEASIDE HOTEL I SEASIDE. ORECON MEDUSA Waterproofed P U TT IT TM T will make llQf fiVTWArtffin tho hast fnr " i VVV lowaUoes W I it A 1 A HEMSTITCHING AND PLEATING. Buttonholing Buttons Plaiting Tucking and Chalnstitchlng All Mall Orders given careful and prompt attention ELITE SHOP, 128J Tenth near Washington BAB'S RESTAURANT SSSS nnnTl liin llinr O III nil I fun I LHnU niUCfiSIIUULbU. bides, pelts; wool, mohair. 105 UNION IVENUE NORTH, MRTUHI), ORUOK. Write for Prices and Shipping Tags ESTABLISH MEN f Grand Avenue at Yamhill PORTLAND. ORE. EXPERT Dyeing & Cleaning EXCELLENT SERVICE By Pittce! Poit. Return Postage Paid Write for Circulars and Prices. "At Your Beck and Call' LAYTCN COOPERAGE CO. Manufacturers of and Dealers in New and Second-hand BARRELS PORTLAND. ORE. RUBBEP STAMPS and MARKING DEVICES. "Entry-, thine " the Offis" INCOME Expert advice on any Income tax -problems. Several years' actual TAX I1 KU BLt RlO those unable to visit our office. State your troubles briefly and eend in with 1 and we will give you hon est to goodness advice. It will pay you to a-et In touch with us now. E. J. Curtln, Room 806 Lewis Blda-, Portland, Oregon. Fire Proof and Modern RITZ HOTEL PARK AND MORRISON STS. Depot Morrison Cars direct to Hotel. Popular Prices. Center Shopping and Theater district. FRANK A. CLARK, Prop., formerly with Clyde Hotel. Hotel Hoyt Located Sixth and Hoyt Strictly Fireproof and Modern. Near both depots and convenient car service to all parts of city. Radio Outfits The Set Complete or Parts. Write for prices. MYERS BLACKWELL CO. 462 Hawthorne Ave., PORTLAND. ORE SHIP US YOUR WOOL Wool cleaning and carding. Wool bats and mattresses made to order. We do custom carding. Write for prices. Crystal Springs Woolen Mills Established In 1905. Main Office and Factory. 760 Umatilla Ave., Portland. USED TRUCK BARGAINS 1 to 6 ton CMC, Republics, Whites, etc. Overhauled Guaranteed. WENTWORTH & IRWIN, Inc., ni.trihiitnra for GMC Trucks 200 Second St., Cor. Taylor Portland, Oi RAINIER HOTEL Kit.. $1.00 ins up. 128 H. W St. Porllaai, Ore Very Centrally Located. Convenient to all Depots, and one block from main Postoffice PILES VTSTTTT.A.FISSURE. itch lng and all other rectal conditions except Cancer permanently cured with out a surirlcal operation. My method of treatment saves the tissue Instead of destroying It. It is pain less, requires no anes thetic and is permanent. There is no confinement to bed. no Interference with business or social engagements. I guarantee a cure or iu mum. ju. Call or write for booklet Mention this paper wnen wriung. dr. c. j: dean AAsn4 id Mnrplaan St Portland. Or a. fcOOPCRAQEU;) ', :M I COMMJIV Armajt rr-f .mi BEARS STILT ROAM IN NEW YORK Shooting of Bruin Shown In Official Report of State Conserva tion Commission. Albany. The report of the conser vation commission for 1913, published here, shows that one bear was 8hot In that season. A New York county hunter brought him down. In 1018 c bears were shot. A total of 15,990 ducks, an increase OFFERS A MARKET FOR YOUR PRODUCE Silos, Granaries, Basements, etc proof, Hotproof, Ratproor ana fireprooi. Medusa Waterproofed White Portland Cement Is Ktnprn Plaster on outside for Bunsra- not stain and dirt can be hosed off. Write for Literature, tsoia Dy McMILLAN & CO., 120 Union Ave. N, Portland nft We Pav Highest Prices for CASCARA BARK. Address Department B KODAK FINISHING REST RESULTS-LOWEST PRICES. Developing roll films. 10 cts; packs. 20 cts. Prints, all sizes. Velvet 4c. Brilliant Gloss 6c. Roberts Photo Shop. 716 Selling Bids., f ortlana. ure. Fire Proof and Modern NEW HOUSTON HOTEL A. E. Holcombe, Manager Weekly Rates to Permanent Guests Sixth and Everett Streets, Three Blocks from New Postoffice, Four Blocks from Union Depot, Portland, Ore. PATENT ATTORNEY We can show you how to turn your patentable ideaB into cash. Oregon Licensed Mechanical Engineer. THOMAS BILYEU. 202 Stevens Building, Portland. Ore. INFORMATION DEPARTMENT. AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS Farm Implements New and second hand, special prices. P. E. Esbenshade, 36Q-3C6 E. Morrison St East 91. BRAZING, WELDING & CUTTING Northwest Welding & Supply Co. 88 1st St CLEANING AND DYEING For reliable Cleaning ana Dyeing service send parcels to ., - Wo nav rptitrn noutae-e. N. Information and prices- given SstMlKw upon request. Sb6 ENKE'S CITY DYE WORKS nrmnd1 M " ' J . . ' . " Established 1890 yjBi CUT FLOWERS & FLORAL DESIGNS Clarke Bros., Florists, 287 Morrison BL FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORKS Commercial Iron Works, 7th & . Madison LADcce miii re RnunHT. SOLD it. s. STABLiSS. 3116 Union Ave. Draft horses bought and sold. yiruiMPRV ' Send us your Inquiries for anything In Iron or wooaworKing jviaciiuiery, uugsuie, un.mlU rr,r.traftnrk' TCnilinmeDt. LOCO- motives, Boilers, Engines, Crushors, Kail, Caoie, Belting, etc. Burke Machinery Co., 628 Railway Exchange Bldg., Portland, Or. MAI VR RADRHR POLLRR Teaches trade in 8 weeks. Some pay while learn ing. Positions secured. Write for catalogue. 234 Burnside street, Portland, Ore. urilvil iiu cmts-f. an and Pine Sta. Otto Schumann Granite & Marble Works. DrnsnN ai Marry if Lonely; most successful "Home Maker"; hundreds rich; confidential; reliable; years experience; descriptions free. "The Successlul Club," Mrs. nain Box 556, Oakland, California. PIPE REPAIRING Dl DITC Repaired by experts. I If EiO pipe Shop, 272 Wash. PRIINP TRFFSII PRUNE TREES!!! Before buying elsewhere see us. Columbia r:ursery uo.. usu union Ave., ruiuauu. SANITARY BEAUTY PARLOR We helo the appearance of women. Twenty-two inch Bwitch or transform' tlon, value ,(.to, price z.si. 400 to 412 ueaum isiag. SUnR RFPAIRINQ IN PORTLAND Model Shoe ltepalr, 272 Washington Bt Davis Bros.. American Shoemakers, 108 4th St. VETERINARIAN Cattle a Specialty Dr. Chas. M. Anderson, Kenton, Portland. Wedding Bouquets and Funeral Pieces Lubllner Florists, 348 Morrison St. STOCK DAIRY RANCH FOR SALE 176 Acre Ideal Ktock ana Dairy itancn, 7 ml. East Albany, Oregon. 160 A. culti vated; 15 A excellent pasture; good draln- 8: trout creek through pasture; pro duces excellent grain and clover. All fenced new woven wire fencing. New fl room bungalow; fair barn and outbuild ings on good gravel road. iJrice iuu.uu per acre. Claude Hale, Milwaukie, Oregon Route 1. For Violin Backs. When any figure appears on a smooth surface as though in relief, tl is called mottle, says the American Forestry Magazine. The fiddle-bacs mottle appears a series of hills and valleys and derives its name from tha common use of maple with such figuri in making the backs of violins. Seven Wonders of New World. The Seven Wonders of the New World is an appellation sometimei conferred upon the following group ol natural objects in the United States: (1) Niagara Falls, (2) Yellowston park, (3) Garden of the Gods, () Mammoth Cave, (5) Yosemite Valley, (6) Giant Trees of California, (7) Nat ural Bridge. In olden times if a girl were willini to marry, and not engaged, it was th custom "tor her to wear a ring on the first finger of the left hand. If sh wanted to remain single, then sh wore the ring on the little finger. - of 5,332, were brought down, while hunters bagged 8,304 rabbits, an In crease of more than 1,000. Jacksnipes killed numbered 719, on increase of 120, while the skunk bug for the state was 52, an increase of SW Only 27 foxes were killed, a de crease of 101. Two others were caught, an Increase of two over thy preceding year. In ail 6,010 licenses were granted, 2,000 more than in 1918. anrx m n M M M - H M H N H M H N Where Men Were Scarce By MONA COWLES M X-XXXXXXXXXXX.X , 192, by McClure Newspaper Syndicate. Jane Burchard in college had vowed that she would never teach. She had been encouraged by the success that came to some of the girls who had graduated from Reynolds college In war days. But the men were back from the war and wartime stress of business was over. The situation be came apparent to Jane Burchard when, a week after her graduation from Rey nolds, she discovered the best job that she could find through the aid of agencies and newspaper want adver tisements was that of a learner In a candy factory at $12 a week or a job selling ribbons In a department store at $15. So Jane decided to teach. But she knew her friends and classmates would not forget the derisive remarks she had expressed anent the teaching pro fession. "I know why you don't want to teach," her young brother had ex plained. "You think teachers never meet any men, get to be old maids and never marry. You're afraid you won't get a husband " ""Jane Burchard was annoyed. "Pre cious little use I have for men," she snapped. "And Just to show you, I'm going to start in teaching next autumn." , But Jane didn't want to face the Inquiring faces of her friends after she had begun her career as a teacher so she chose to select from the posi tions offered to her that of teacher in a district school in a remote end of the state. It helped a little to feel that she was filling a job that no one else wanted. A special appeal had been made for teachers for these remote districts where several schools had actually been closed down because no one could be induced to take the posi tions. Moreover she wanted to show that impudent brother of hers that men didn't count in her career. Human beings of all descriptions were scarce in the rocky region around Berwick district school, but men young men were singularly unfre quent. "You'll be perfectly safe to live alone in the little cottage that goes with your job," the county super intendent of schools had told her. "There isn't a man in the district, not even a tramp. Oh, there's the minister and the doctor and a dozen old farm ers and old Stebblns that runs the store, but they aren't likely to annoy you." So Jane Burchard was Installed as district school teacher In Berwick town ship, pleased in knowing that, though her salary was not large, she did not have to spend any of it for shelter and would be able to save more than with twice the salary in the city. For two or three months all went well, it was not until after the Christ mas holidays that Jane became dis turbed in her little cottage near the school. One day Jane took pains to dismiss her pupils all on time and overlooked the fact that several of the older chil dren had deserved to "stay in." Back In her cottage she donned heavy walk lng boots and neat, though certainly not very Jaunty walking togs. Then she started out in her search As she walked through the country roads and lanes that afternoon she enumerated to herself the occupants of the various farmhouses and cottages she passed. She was looking for something, and It was quite apparent that none of the houses she passed contained It. So she walked In the region on the out skirts of her district, where there was an occasional house with which she was not familiar. Finally she drew up beside a small but recently renovated two-room cot tage. A man of uncertain age, but surely not aged, was sitting out In the cold winter sunshine on the front steps of his diminutive home. He was smok lng in solitude. Apparently Jane had found what she had been seeking. "Excuse me, stranger," she said, "but I wonder if you will help me. Tin the district school teacher, and I've been out looking for well, the truth Is, I've been looking for an able bodied man. They are all rather old or feeble up by the school. I wonder If yon would do me a service." The rather unkempt young man rose with an alacrity and good manner that rather surprised Jane. "By all means I'd do anything in the world you asked me." ' "Well, I'll tell you," Jane said, a lit tie embarrassed at the obv'otis urbanity of the younger man, "I live alone in the cottage. Lately some one has been prowling around it seems to be a man, and I hear him every evening Just about the time I'm getting tea, and then as I git by the table getting ready the next day's lessons. I don't want any of the neighbors to know I'm timid. Besides, I am quite as well able to protect myself as any of the men down there. Fancy old Doctor Warren or Parson Jones trying to stand up against a man-sized tramp. So I've been looking around trying to And a well, regular man. . I thought maybe you'd come down one or two evenings and when the prowler appears you'i go out with me and scare him off. I'm a little afraid to do It alone." John Dawson, the young man thus addressed, insisted on coming that very evening, and then he Introduced him self. Jane showed her good faith by asking him to return with her then. It would be nearly tea time when they returned and the prowler usually came as soon as her lamps were lighted. Both Jane and John Dawson were 111 at ease as the meal began, but be fore Jane had poured he.r guest's sec ond cup of tea and had persuaded him to take a second helping of the light omelet she had made for their repast all their embarrassment seemed to have vanished as If by magic. "It is funny," Jane was thinking, "when one hasnt seen or talked to a young man for months how easy conversation seems (o come. And John was thinking, thought I'd feel embarrassed and shy when I first had a chance to look into the eyes and hear the voice of a young and pretty woman again but I was never less shy In my life. Meantime they forgot the object of John's visit. It was not until John said something about going home like sure enough caller that Jane thought of it. "I forgot all about the prowler," she laughed. "He might have come and gone while we were talking." John laughed heartily and suggested that they try the experiment again the next evening, only S'of course not for supper." And Jane said tea would have to be Included as It was tea time that the prowler always came. So It was agreed and after John had gone down the road Jane re proached herself that, while she had told John Dawson all about her own work and her own anxieties, she had not succeeded in getting him to tell how It was that he was living out here on the inhospitable rocky soil of Berwick township. Next night they listened attentively for the prowler, but no sounds were heard. After a half hour of vigilance. Jane took up the subject In mind. The explanation was simple enough. After two years in France, Dawson ex plained simply, he had come back to this country, and then at the end of a few months' effort to get his grip back on the affairs of the business concern that had left a place open for him there came the collapse that made him and his doctor realize that his war time experience demanded a complete change and rest. It fitted In with his mood to go as far away from human kind as he conveniently could without taking a long and fatiguing journey. Hence his retirement to a cabin In Berwick township. When he had explained all this to Jane he rose to go. "But we haven't heard the prowler. He must have seen you come and been frightened away r" John Dawson laughed. "The prowler couldn't come when I am here because, Jane Burchard, I was that prowler. I didn't dream that you heard me or that I annoyed you. But as I was getting my grip back on things I grew Infer nally lonely I wanted to see and talk to a woman. So I used to come around here and watch you when you lighted the lamps. I knew you'd forgive me if you knew how It helped Just to get a glimpse of a human being when l wasn't aulte sure I had my nerve back again." If Jane had shown resentment and a lack of understanding, that might have been the end of it all. But in stead she put a hand out to John that showed an Infinity of comprehension, John Dawson took the hand In his and looked deep Into Jane's frunk eyes. "I can't keep It from you any longer, Jane," he said. "I'm ready to go back and buck up against the world again and I want to take you with me." And when Jane came back to town at the end of the school term one of her old friends commented that she must have exaggerated things a little. She said there weren't any men In Berwick, but she managed to nnd one." MUCH METAL IN HUMAN BODY Blood Contains Iron and Copper, and Scientists Have Found Arsenio In the Liver. Many curious substances are found In the human body, and It has been discovered that, among other things, It contains a large quantity of metals of various kinds. Some years ago a famous chemist announced that he had found Iodine in the thyroid gland, and this led scien tists to believe that other equally un expected elements may find their way into the human organs through some exceptional circumstances. They discovered that there was Iron and in some cases copper in the blood and that copper and other heavy met als occurred in considerable quantities In the liver. Some scientists have re ported that they have found even ar senic In small quantities. Bromine Is found In the nerves and muscles of some animals, as well as men, but there Is never more than one part in a hundred thousand. Although bromine and Iodine are very similar In their chemical behavior, they are not found In the same parts of the body. Tit-Bits. How to See Radium Flashes. Radium Is one of the strangest of substances. It Is a metal, white like Iron or aluminum; but so rare that only a few people have ever looked upon it In Us uncomblned state. It Is peculiar because it is always decom posing or disrupting Itself. You -can see the helium particles being shot out from radium. Take a "radiollte" watch dial Into an abso lutely dark room and look at It with a low-powered lens. The letters will ap pear to be spangles of dancing points of light Each of these points Is the flash of a little explosion as an atom Is loosened and tears Its way through the salts of the compound. Wages That Folly Earn. Want and sorrow are the wnces that folly earns for Itself and they ar generally paid. Schubert . T WT W W W W V WW WW W V T CTflTP TVTTTTT TC t IN BRIEF. A A A A WwWVWWWWWWwWWWWVWWVWW Corvallis. The city council has awarded to the Warren Construction company two paving contracts, one for paving Fourth street for $51,352 and the other for paving Twenty-seventh street for $6678. Albany. Systematic efforts will be inaugurated soon for a larger and bet ter Linn county fair this fall by the employment of a manager to begin work weeks ahead arranging for ex hibits and making general plans for the fair. Scio. The city attorney has been instructed to draft an ordinance to control public dances, following an unusually noisy Saturday night dance. Several men were drunk and horse racing took place down Main street at 1 o'clock in the morning. ' Enterprise. Bids were opened Sat urday for all work on the new high school at Wallowa to replace the building destroyed by fire on January 19. The total of the best bids received was more than 50 per cent in excess of the $45,000 available for the work. Salem. Bids for the construction of approximately 60 miles of road and four bridges will be considered at a meeting of the state highway commis sion in Portland May 31. The cost of the projects under consideration Was estimated by highway officials at $400,000. Bend. Because of the law making the state tax a preferred claim Des chutes county's general fund of $19 153.30, included Saturday in the turn over of taxes collected for the first half of the year, Is wiped out and the county is still shy some $4000 due the state, County Treasurer McKay said Salem. There were three fatalities due to Industrial accidents in Oregon during the week ending May 18, ac cording to a report prepared here by the state industrial accident commis sion. The victims were W. Hodgen, logger, Kerry; Otto Hansen, superin tendent, Salem, and Howard Kiser, Bend. Albany. H. H. Hewitt of this city, local attorney and formerly circuit judge, has been chosen to deliver the annual address at the 60th annual re union of the Oregon Pioneer associa tion at Portland, June 15. Judge Hewitt is one of Oregon'B oldest na tive sons. His father was an Oregon pioneer of 1843. Eoseburg. The temperature record ed in Roseburg on Tuesday and Wed neBday of last week is the highest re ported by the local United States weather observer Bince 1912, according to Observer Bell. The temperature the last two days has been 90 degrees. The highest ever before recorded during May was 94, ten years ago, The Dalles. Harold J. Blnney and Leslie H. Low, motion picture produ cers of Portland, who were in The Dalles recently," looked over available locations for establishing a motion pic ture studio here and listened to Induce ments offered by local business men, They expressed themselves as satisfied with the climate and scenic advantages of this location. Marshfield. "Cap" Robert MacKar- row's "varmint dog" has a record few dogs can match. He haa treed 35 wild cats, seven panthers and four bears, all of which were killed by his owner. The latest kill was made in the vicin ity of Coqullle, "Cap's" home, where the dog chased a wildcat into a tree and held him until his master came up and ended the hunt. Marshfield. The ranchers of the Myrtle Point district are co-operating with the Holt-ChaBe Canning company to increase the canning of vegetables, and the company promises to take care of 60 acres of broccoli if the ranchers will produce It. In addition the community will raise sweet corn nnd Brussels . sprouts, also for the cannery. Canning broccoli is new to this section. Klamath Falls. The Klamath irri gation project carrying a $700,000 ap propriation for 1923, has been ap proved by house and senate conferees, according to a message received here. The project was allotted a Bimllar amount last year. H. D, Newell, proj ect manager, said that thei coming year's program would utilize all the money if it Is made available by con gressional ratification of the conferees' decision. Albany. Active work will begin in the next few days on the paving of the Pacific highway southward from Al bany to the Linn county line at Har rlsburg. This entire sector is to be paved except a Btrlp through the Cala- pooia bottom between Tangent and Shedd, where a new grade must be al lowed to settle. The work will continue most of the summer and when it is completed the entire highway through Linn county will be paved except the stretch of about one mile Just north of the Calapoola river. Sarah Lamb . How's Your Blood? Do You Need a Tonic? Help the Climate to keep you well East Bakersfield, Calif. "Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery 1b the best tonio and blood purifier I have ever taken. I have taken and have used 'Golden Medical Dis covery', in my family for many years. I find it excellent for coughs, colds and as a blood purifier and Spring tonic. Whenever I become rundown or have a tired and worn out feeling, I take the 'Discovery' aid it builds me right up and gk'as me new life. 'Golden Medical Discovery' is a very essential family medicine and can be-relied upon." Mrs. Sarah Lamb, 1008 Pacific St. Obtain the Discovery in tablets or liquid from your nearest drug gist or send 10c for trial package to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel. Buf falo, N. Y. Look Upward. If we look down, then our shoulders stoop. If our thoughts look down, our character bends. It Is only when we hold our heads up that the body be comes erect. It is only when our thoughts go up that our life becomes erect. Alexander McKenzie. He Has a Big Head. A fujl-grown buck antelope Is small er than any adult specimen of our American deer, and quite different from any of them in form, says the American Forestry Magazine. It has a big head, which is held erect upon a short, thickset neck. Unethical. , Blobbs "I was pretty well down in the world when an idea suddenly struck me." Slobbs "It's a cowardly idea that would strike a man when he is down." The End. , " ' "I'll never ask another girl to marry me as long as I live," groaned the un happy fellow. "What! Refused again?" asked his sympathetic friend. "No, ac cepted, you fool!" PAINS ACROSS SMALL OF BACK Husband Helped in Housework. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Made Her Strong Foster, Oregon. "I used Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for pains across the small of my back. They bothered me so badly that I could do my work only with the help of my hus band. One day he saw the 'ad.' in our pa- Eir tellinfr what ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound is doing for women, so I began to take it - It naa helped me wonderfully. I am feeling hne, do all my housework: and washing for seven in the family. I have been ir regular too, and now am all right. I am telling my friends what it has done for me and am sure it will do good for others. You can use this letter as a tes timonial. 1 I will stand up for Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound any time." Mrs. Wm, Juunkb, Foster, Oregon, Doing the housework for a family of seven is some task. If you, as a house wifo, are troubled with backache, ir regularities, are easily tired out and irritable, or have othw disagreeable ail ments caused by some weakness, give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetablo Com pound a trial. Let it help you. Danger in Too Muck Talk. Talkative people who wish to be loved are hated; when they desire to please, they bore; when thoy think they are admired, they are laughed at; they injure, their friends, benefit their enemies, and ruin themselves. Honey That Intoxicates. The honey obtained on the banks of the Euphrates Is ot an Intoxicating nature. used for baby's clothes, will keep them weet and snowy-whlts until worn out. Try It and see for yourself. Atgroctn Are Ifou Satisfied? gSESr Is the bluirest, most perfectly equipped Hunineas Training School In the North went. Kit yourself for a higher poHltlon with more money. Permanent poeltlona assured our GrnduateR. Write for catalog Fourth and Yamhill, Portland. P. N. U. No. 21, 1922 Mrs. IIIIIP'UIIIIII mw mm I f I 1