EASTERN R ig h t CLACKAMAS NEWS, THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1927 ma» Find Ample Proof ot Elephants in America / , VHore Quality € tan t 7 \ Price Buys LliX «vhsre ¡'M m in% m i mi ~ >) : tUnn iu r fiL . more experienced you as a m otor car owner, A J 4 -II the better you will like Buick » * * P ow ­ ered by an engine vibrationless beyond belief, this car’ s perform ance w ill win your heart *■ «■ » And Buick value will am aze y o u — V a lu e m ade p o ssib le by great volum e and its savings— the earn­ ings o f leadership, which are used con­ tinually to further enrich Buick quality. Scientists Interested In the prehis­ toric animals that roamed the North American continent In times too re­ mote to calculate offhand have now and then resurrected from their hods of rock nnd debris the skeletons of mammoths nnd mastodons. those strange creatures akin to the elephant. That the elephant specie- was known to the civilizations of Central Amer­ ica not so many thousands of years ago_ seems to be proved conclusively by recent excavations made in Pan­ ama. A. Hyatt Verrlll, writing In World's Work, describes the strange sculptures of an ancient people, dug up from the volcanic soil of the little Isthmian republic showing the degree of artistic advancement achieved by that vanished race. Perhaps the most interesting and re­ markable find of all, writes Mr. Ver­ rlll, was a large sculptured stone fig­ ure thoroughly elephantine in form and detail. Hitherto the so-called "elephants” found In prehistoric (and modern) American ceramics nnd stone work have been generally accepted as conventionalized nntbears or tapirs with exaggerated snouts. But in this case It Is scarcely possible to account for the creature on this hypothesis. Not only Is the body elephantine, hut the large leaf-like ears could belong to no other known creature, while Hie hind knees bend forward, o eharncter peculiar to the elephant. It Is difficult to believe that any man unfamiliar with the elephant could have conven­ tionalized a tapir or an anthear to the extent of adding broad fan-shaped ears and legs bending forward, while, as n final touch, the creature Is repre- sented carrying a load or burden upnn Its back. Not Mach of a Meal for Real Hungry Men W H E N B E T T E R A U T O M O B I L E S A R E B U I L T , B U I C K W I L L B U IL D T H E M a.£C 0N STATE tiEWS LIBERTY THEATRE PRGti EF GENERAL INTEREST v»i Friday and Saturday, March 25 - 26 “ THE FLAMING FOREST" Brief resume of Happenings of the Week C ii cted for cur i.t-A-Ois. S. N. Croft, mayor of Bandon, has . PjC - d. A B eery club was Gocd River last week. organized in Th Cla"i:amas County Teachers’ Ass ■- iation mot at the Wcst*l.ltm Un­ ion high school last Saturday. G: vernor Patterson and State Adju­ tant General White inspected the new i- t uaal guard camp site near Astoria lust weak. Total amount of taxes on the Lane county roll for 1926 Is $1,925,311.06. ac­ cording to the figures announced by Sheriff Taylor. Mi< v inter weather was experienced in central Oregon $he past week, four i cites of new snow falling In the Cres- nt country. The Roseburg chamber of commerce th. i nd S2000 to its annual budget to - ivor ptoper-d extensions of the ac­ tivities of the order. A total of $26,453.75 was expended hy Coc3 county during the month of February on road, a slight increase over recent months. Con tvuction of an auxiliary reser­ voir for Ashland's municipal water system will be started next week, it v ; announced by Ashland city offi­ cials. Linfleld debaters won both sides of a debate with the Monmouth Normal debt era last week by unanimous de­ ck ons. The Chinese question was considered. Harriet Weatherson was sentenced at Eugene to six years' imprisonment for embezzlement of funds from the Flcijnce State and Savings bank In Lana county. Fire caused from an exploding gas­ oline lamp caused the destruction of the Reeder confectionery and restaur­ ant at Scottsburg, near Reedsport, early last week. Two large dredges and a big force of men are now engaged in draining the lands of the Warm Springs irriga­ tion project. An area of 30,000 acres is to be drained. C raze F ollow ed H yotcrta George W. Hug. superintendent Of A oln-slr exnmple of wliat popdar Imnelnntlon npplled to thè common the Salem public schools for a number spider eun do Is told in H.vgeia M 'ga­ of years, was re-elected at a meeting zine Itnly llt lite Middle nges was of the Salem school board at a meet­ swept hy a dancing mania or tar.uit- ing held recently. Ism. The Central Oregon Poultry co-op­ l’ersons Hit fon hy a spider cnlled Ilio erative, recently organized, handled European turanluln suddenly beenine extremely sensitive to imi de, d me'ng tnor8 than 17,000 dozen eggs last in a frenzv of eXcltenicnt tinti! the.v month. No eggs will be stored by the san!; to thè ground, oxlmnsted and al­ association this year. mo t Mfeless. ('criniti forni- of mu­ Hood River orchardists will start sic were cnnsldcred good l'or ilio ¡:f- the season's spray program next week, tlleted and bore thè mime tranli-Ka. when applications of lime sulphur will The cause wiis not a spldet's Ulte but be made on pear tracts. Apple spray­ a hysterln due to thè depleted men­ ing is three weeks off. tili ami physlciil oondltlon of tlie peo- The river road school building, a ple iis a result of thè frequent wnrs and plngues. The santo sort of thlng mile below Eugene on the Pacific high­ wns seen In thè craze for long-distnn.'? way, was destroyed by fire originating dancing In this country a few youra from thy furnace in the basement. after tlie World war. The loss exceeded $6000. Ninety-three pheasants were shipped A b b e y Is B attle P led ge from Malheur county to other parts of Battle abliey, near Hastings. Eng­ the stnte during the trapping season land was Imilt to fulfill a novel just closed, as the result of com­ pledge* made by W illiam the Con­ plaints made by farmers. queror .lust before Ills victory there on The broccoli harvest is now nearing October 14, HEM. When William was arming for the the peak with four or five cirs being tight he Is said to have Inadvertently loaded daily. Forty-seven cars have put on Ids shirt of mull with tie hind boon shipped out of Roseburg and side In front. Partly In order to avert Edcnbower so far this season. the had omen, lie vowed that, if vic­ Woodson Scroggins, who has been torious, lie would Imild oil the very t'r.dirg sheep for Charlis Burgess of site of the battle a great abbey. Pi-.> Creek, wss brought to Fossil, It was finally dedicated by William su ,‘ering with a bad case of spotted Rtlfus ill 1094. At the dissolti'lop of the monasteries under Henry Viti, the fever caused from a tick bite. Members of the Apple Growers’ as­ buildings were given to Sir Anthony Brow lie. who add. I to the Abbot's sociation who have an acreage of pears lodge n west wing for the u-' of his attended a special meeting last Sat­ wind, lite Princess Elisabeth The ale urday evening, when plans for the bey still is In excellent preservation. marketing of the 1927 crop was dis­ - E. G. Brabant. In "Rambles In Sus­ cussed. sex." The city of Canby has filed with the public service commission a complaint Em broideri :g Lo-.g Known w th relation to the electric service of The girl who uses an embroidery thj Molalla Electric company. It was needle today Is practicing an art that charged that the electric service is in­ was highly developed in Egypt 8.00.) adequate. years ago. fn cle Llje Waters was accustomed CASCADE MOTOR COMPANY to seeing good-sized squares of sponge cake or gingerbread on the Upper James M. Closner, prop. Estacada, Ore. table, ami when he had Ills first plate of Ice cream In a city cafe, he looked with some disfavor on the macaroons and small sponge drops which accom­ The Japanese W a y OBITUARY panied It. Drinking ton Is one way the Japa­ "How do you like It?” asked the nese have of embroidering the stuff James Jonathan Board niece, who was doing the honors of of nature and making life Interesting. James Jonathan Beard was born The Japanese even have a "Holy the city for her uncle. "The Ice cream Is certainly first December 4, 1880, at Afton, Iowa. Scripture of Tea,” whlrh directs ex- rate,” said Uncle Llje. “ I call It Died March 18, 1927 aged 46. netly how ten shall be made so that extra good; hut when you come to He leaves a mother. Mrs. Laura "each leaf should fold like n mist these tilings, he added, lifting one Beard, who lives at Withrow, Wash­ rlsiyg out of a ravine and be wet nnd of the lady fingers and survi ving it ington; three brothers, Clny, of soft like fine earth newly swept by doubtfully, "1 presume to say they're Mansfield, Washington, Gaylord, o f rain.” Centuries ago a Japanese right enough, what there Is of \ in but Palesade, W ashington, and Reid, named Hlkyu founded the ten cult and there isn't enough o f ’em— just nothing wrote an elaborate rode of ten eti­ but gape nnd swallow.” who is a marine in Pekin, China; quette that Is unchanged to this day. four sisters, Mrs. Grace Bedford, in —Tea and Coffee Journnl. Pasadena, California, Mrs. R. M. Vanwinkle, Aberdeen, South Dakota, C ra terul E xpectan cy Mrs. Blanch Rogers, Seattle Wash­ Herbert, aged lliioe, had been given ington, and Mrs. Clare Peterson ot Mansfield, Washington. His father nn orange hy a gentleman who had hus been gone 20 years, having died called. As orange- were a rare lux­ ury in Herbert's experience lie gazed January 6, 1906. at the fruit In rapt admiration, hut The deceased had lived in Esta­ could snv nothing. cada for eight years. Mother, after waiting for him to Miss Evelyn Haworth o f Stayton, telephone operator o f that place, has taken the place o f Juanita Brendlc in the home exchange. Miss Brendlc having returned to the office in Ore­ gon City. thank his • benefactor, decided to prompt him. so she said. “ What de you say. son?” "o h , thanks," said the little fellow hardly withdrawing Ills gaze from (he golden ball, “have you got any morel” E ’i I 7BQEGS532C30BKSSSÜÏ5ÎI! •n-sr^T-; Friendship Days F R ID A Y AND S A T U R D A Y $ £ .8 5 $ 6 -5 0 Gxfcrds BLACK — for With Suit $2 TAN Every Men’ s or Topcoat HATS for With Every Women’s Dress or Coat BRADBURY SPRING Suits & Coats & Topcoats $ 19-50 Dresses $2450 Dr. H. L Toney of McMinnville vice The accomplishment was brought from Egypt to Europe, and was also president of the beard of trustees of highly developed in early Greece and Lfnfield college, assumed the duties of Rome. The women of m ed ical days pre dent of the board last week, fill­ In Europe were excellent at it. and ing the vacancy created by the death many splendid ornaments were made of Judge B F Rhodes. for 1 bundles nnd monasteries At the Driven by hunger and crld from the pre-ent time the Orb-nt lends in the nrt, with the work of the t'h'nese snow covered hills of Klamath, gaunt and famished coyotes are brazenly probably being the most elnlsirate. ralcirs livestock corrals and pig pens on farms In the Hildebrand district, A ltvays P olite The manager of the isonne,I fa •tory cast of Klamath Falls. George W. J«fcn*ton. prominent had received a letter from a w >ut n - tut I1 : that 1er bn lend who w rk si Hanker of Dnfur and president of the In the factory, had -cut her no i Itl-f Wasco County Old Pioneers' associa­ for weeks alai weeks tion. annc.Biufs Stem-day. May 7. at 80 the manager. »! kindly mnn. *ent the date for the annual pionex t'rtcfc!Ir. -nlwgjr* my kirulcet fifth district la comprised of Hood Ri* >ard» *r. Wasco and Sherman ccuntie» WAS! AN3 FOR SALE ASS FOR SALE— 1-1L4. H. P. Z. Type Gas Engine. 1 5 H. P. upright gas engine; 1 spring tooth harrow; 1 bicycle, good as new. 2 drag s ’.ws Tuesday, March 29 Vaughns. , A lot e f garden tools. No Show POINTER’S Second Hand Store; buy what you want; sell what you Wednesday - Thursday, Mar. 30-31 don’t wart. 10tf “ FORBIDDEN W ATERS” Thursday Special WHAT HAVE YOU to sail or A Country Store trade? Advertise it in this col­ umn. Friday and Saturday, April 1-2 “ THE GORRILLA HUNT" SEE LONSBERRY and PERRY fot and wood. Second growth 16 in., full “ THERE YOU ARE” measure $6.50 pr cord. Strictly cash on delivery. OLD GROWTH $7.50 pr cord cut 16 in. 4 ft. length $6.50 pr cord. S eek Synthetic Rubber Th»- Amazon district of Brazil is the WOOD SAWING— pr cord $1.00 eat ruhlier-produclng country of the Cash. world, for more than half of the total ■■upply comes from there. The feder­ FOR SALE— 40 acres o f land. B. F. ated Malay states, the Congo region. Bullard, Rt. l. 24-7c Portuguese West Africa, the east ■oast of tropical Africa, Rangoon, BUILDING material— Lumber, any Penang. P.orneo nnd Mexico, the West kind— Brick— Tile— Cement, Grav­ Indies nnd Central America nre the el, Sand— Plaster Board. other rubber-producing districts. About one-tenth of the total yield WOOD— 16 inch 1st growth....$7,00 •"•aes front the Congo. 16-inch 2nd growth $6.00 delivered The rapidly Increasing cost of the COAL by the sack or ton irtlcle lias aroused experimenters, vlio have eirodnced substances that Get my prices before you buy. I can save you money. M. F. Sarver Five some of the qualities of rubber, Phone 39-7 Estacada. 't Is not improbable that they may dt ¡mutely succeed, as file chemists did ia producing artificial Indigo, In mak- FOR SALE— Choice R. I. R. eggs, 75c pr setting; cabbage & cauli­ ug real rubber by synthesis. flower plants now ready. Other plants in season. W. W. Holder Estacada Greenhouse. tfc Sunday and Monday, March 27-28 •THE LONE WOLF’ S RETURN" Columbus Prom ised Much In a letter to Columbus on the discovery of America, facsimile edi­ tion. 1S02. of the four Latin editions belonging to the Lenox library. Is the following passage: "Finally, that I may compress In a few words the brief account of our departure and quick return, and the gain, I promise this, rlmt if 1 am supported by our most invincible sovereigns with a little of their help, as much gold can be sup­ plied as they will need, Indeed, as much of spices, of cotton, of chewing gum (which Is only found In Chios), also as much of ales wood, nnd as many slaves for the navy of their linjestles will wish to demand.” The date of this letter is March 14, 1493— aiore than 400 years ago. LOGANBERRY Plants for sale, G. T. Beebe, Garfield. 24-5p i-UixEiiRED Light Brahma Hatch­ ing eggs from unrelated stock. Hens weigh 9&10 lbs.; Roosters sometimes 12. Don’t let anyone tell you that Brahmas don’t lay, Mrs. Sam Barr, Estacada 24-5 MONEY TO LOAN— Have two $1,- 000 loans to make. PIANO TO SELL— Have a good piano to sell, See, W. A. Heylmart tf FOR SALE— A complete business course in the International Corres­ pondence Schools. Course cost $105 but am unable to carry it FOR RENT— 5 room house, furnish­ out. Have only started and school ed. See Mrs. J. T. Irvin 2Bp will transfer scholarship. Will re­ FOR SALE— Wade drag saw. C. E. fuse no reasonable offer. — J. P. Care o f the News. tf. Greenstreet, Phone 27-65 25p R. I. RED EGGS for setting fr o m ' . ; ' ! " **“ " Large, selected, heavy laying, vel- LADIES- who can do plain home sewing and want profitable spare vet red hens, mated with unrelated time work. Send stamped addres- males o f the same strain, whose sed envelope for particulars. Glen- dams were also heavy layers. Mrs DALE CO., PUTNAM STA. N. Y. Henry Viles, Rt. 1 bx 34 ph. 34-12 FOR SALE— Loose timothy hay; 2 - FOR SALE— 1400 lb. horse, Ironage section harrow; 1-section harrow; spud planter. WANT Fresh cow cultivator; Oliver— 40 plow; team as part payment on horse. Roy o f horses. Geo. Walter, Currins- i Still, Eagle Creek, Ore. 24-5p ville tf FOR SALE— 13 acres adjoining city FOR SALE— 1 Guernsey-Jersey cow; limits. This would make a beauti­ 7 yrs. old, fresh Apr. 1, $50. Team ful chicken ranch. Reasonably well horses 2400 lbs. $130. William improved. Must be sold. W. A. Gilgan Rt. 1. Phone 43-3 24-lp Heylman, now only U —a host of Improvements N ew A C Air Cleaner N«wr A C Oil Filter N ew H ea vy O ne* P ie c e F u ll-C row n Fender* N «" Pillar* (Narrower to provide perfect, clear vision' "r r Headlamp* N ew Tire Carrier N e w C o in c id e n t a l U>ck (Combination Ignition and Steer* . . *«g Lock) Pfev.- Remote Control l>eor Handle* N ew D v co Color* N e r Jaaoliae Gauge Nr*v Radiator New Bodie* hr Fither N ew U indihteld on O pen Model* N ew and Improved TranmttMion N P r •h e and Clutch Pedal Clo* •nr# (P re v e n tin g W ith the beautiful Chevrolet Coach reduced to $995, everv. one can own a cloned car of true distinction, fine quality and modern design. And like all other Chevrolet models, the Coach provides Chevro- ler s world-famous smartness power and dependability-^ enhanced by a host o f new features and improvements. C Ä T - "—amazing low prices Th« Tourin g t C ' J C or Roadtter T he C oach $595 Th e C o u p s »6 2 5 T h e Sedan *£ 9 5 TICe5Sr