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About The Times-herald. (Burns, Harney County, Or.) 1896-1929 | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1920)
PiIro HIv T II 14 T I M M H II ITU A It I) II V ' N H t " A ft N 13 Y V 'I Y , OK 11 (I Hut imliiy, .June an, I'l ) DEVELOP RESOURCES, STATE CHAMBER'S AIM Expansion Movement , Now In '"Pronress Will Allow r Ader Activities. What iloca Oregon nccdT Wliub-U It woru popBlblc to nntnc tliu ehlof fiie'toi (loOH It inout need In crtlor to develop with a uiuxliuuni of HUCCCBB? Tins tpiesllon la linppnslblo to answer. There Is no "chief factor;" Tlie eolu. tlon Hen not in oiio lmrtlculur need, but ninny. Oroon today, facing on era or do -vclopmcnl unparalleled In Iih history, ruist fill Hugo needs If It cxpiets to go Uhctul. . Ot Hut ninny fuo$yra tlmt must Ik employed If the mute Is to progresu .ImnlUriitlon ntitl colonization huiihI pro-oinliiont In order to solve tha vital problem of Intitl settlement. Irrigation, loclaiiintion of Ihml anil drainage imiHi lio developed w aiioth mufhod of bringing about the, .solution ot this problem. Kurnr labor tniiHt lu brought In. HomcHcokorH who In turn become food producers, muni be en couVngcd and madO to see the' jiohhI btltliB tlnt au'uit them lu (ho great northwest. Good roadH must' bo built. As tint vast trncta of wlldorncsn wt.h their billions of foot of timber nro concerted into lumber, highways must, bo pro vldcd over which commerce ran bo carried and tlio hcchIc beauties of the State vlowod by tlio tourlHt. Among other needs Are industrial ex mbbIod, railroad extension and water power development Advertising and publicity must be carried on if Oi-egon is to bo msdo known an a country for tho homcsock cr where Opportunity beckons. Its scenic beautlon rauBt be advertised to attract tlio stream of golden dollars from tourists .and pleasuro seckera. Other Btatcs, moBt ot tliem with fowcr advantages to attract, aro realizing mil llonn each year from tourists bocauso they realize tha vnluo ot advertising and making public what advantages they possess. Oregon must dovolop its wate transportation, its mineral lakes, lit ports and reach out for foreign trndu and It must develop tho ntnlo to pro (Into tho exporis which nro to go down to tho sen In ships. It must expand Its ('durational facilities as an nihil tlonnl advantngo to hold out to thu .homcscckcr with children to educate. Tho Oregon Stnto Chamber of Com merco is tlio iiiohI logical agency to carry on thin development work simply because a statu organization of this nature can work for the miitunl good of all communities lu thn state with out favoring any particular one. mmmK'W CONDENSED i CLASSICS ! LES MISERABLES 1 By VICTOR HUOO Victor Mario tin fro was horn at llouniicon, Franco, on Kuk' nr., puny iitifltifunt tlmt It wan not believe I lie could Jug oglrnonllniiry difficulties, lit' went .to Amis, where the trial look place, 1 ami Just iih tlio Jiulgtf wiih cmidoinnllig tlio wrong mini, lie cimfoMNod he wiih tho missing convict tlmt hint rubbed (hp bishop ami tho hurdy-gurdy boy. ir)V Judge let him go; hut .Invert whh Implacable und apprehended, him at Fnntjno'M death-bed. Ho, was lodged In Jail, htit having ononnons strength, he broke out and returned to IiIh house to secure his great fortune. He Imd time to hide his money In the haunted forest of Montfermell, hilt was cap tured mid sent to the galley for life, Nino montltH Inter at Toulon he broke his chain iitul mi veil tho Hfo of a sailor who wan bunging henil down from, tho .tnpmiiHt of it ship, but ho Himself either fell or Jumped'on? from tlie spur and wiih reported drowned, Tim buttle; of Waterloo liml taken place itnd the Tlionndlors, who hipl been guilty of robbing the ileuil on the j fntnl field, kept a Wretched Inn lit Montfermell. They I rented t'nxolto, live, lie wan tlio , now eight yours olil, v 1 1 1 1 grout cruelty, third ann of n ttlii- chlrstinns, I8SI, wii.i II Umax of her !;) ' r wretchedness! she wax sent after dark Hi came front i l fetch witter frotil u Spring lu the ' sturdy but tint ( dreadful fore.it. A poorly drcwd ' nnceMimi on bin ,,t''ttiBor,insnIti. curried her heavy i ,., I Illll-klll. At Hill IflVIII'll llll lll-lltllKtllll I ihg boon Himidd l her from her mlstroHs' threatened (,lur,,ly kllow w,,al 11 W,,H t0 ,,u w,tn lieimuntn. punishment, and tho next morning, lie out a hoadacho. All my life I havo MockUU J, ; Pnl1 'n.enndler 1H0O fri.ncH nnd took boel, 0 COIIHl,Iml0l, t,lt ()Vcry ,luy Pnuido nml In ' ('ozetto to I'nrls, where ho occupied n I ' Kiiitln, wbero bin tutnlilo-down luibltntloti Just outside I for '"ar" 1 hnd to taku a laxutlvo. nnkr under Na- t,f t,") c,,'! t,l( P"ll'Ht plnce In' all ! My tonguo was always coatod and I polcon's brother. '"o gloomy boulovard. Hy day ngly. at I lu wuh n nrrcn- I twlllitht IllirillirloiiK. and m nlirht hIii- clous lad, wrJtlnK Ionic plays In vorso i iM,.r. ii,, (imAht td-iself swim. Didn'tHaveWeli Day for 25 Year s v SaRFrancitcoWoBManhasGained Thirty Pound. By Tak ing Tanlac , "I had not noon a well day In twonty-flvu yearn until I started tak ing Tanlric," said Mrs. Virginia Stapp of 185 Valencia .Ht Ban Francisco, Cal, "I was beginning to think' sho continued, "that I would havo to boar my wretched health us long .as I ' ' If it i il 11 Hin I tti nl tn ii trml tlritif t rti j . . uhm.i III tr WiittWift T liltl ttlktn ii mil tt -7 . . hour ovury n,8ht' Cftn (1" y hot,; nnvtliltfcr I titniinn wltlmnt nnv liml ' "UM nttor offocts and I havo actually gain- .wor,i wUh 0,100 t,ml 1 h,lVo o mM cd thirty pounds. 1 haven't had a ow lifts and onorgy that I Ju( f J hoadacho In so long 1 havo almoHt flno all tho timo." forgolton about thorn. My constlpa- Tanlac Is sold In Burns by tod condition has boon relieved and I Brothers, and in Crano by Cr nnvor havo that bad taste or coatod Morcantllo Co, A4r; lived. I had no appetite, and when I managed to oat a few hltus I could not dtgont It and tu I could get no' strength or nourishment I fell off , twoiity-tlvo potindH In weight. I nml prone while hardly ntoro tnun a child. Uoforo bin Slot year he hnd won nevernl, IiIkIi prison for bin vorio. lluU thrown on hln own resourenn by thn drnth of hln mother, bo found It 01 111 cult t6 live by hln pun. !! moved Into an atto, whrro he hud bin only oxpp rlonco of actual poverty. Ill writ Injrn, however, noon beenrnt popular and ha wan able tr marry, nt thn sk of 21, Adelc Pnuohi-r, hln plnymoto of ohlldhood dnyn. It wan a hnppy mr rlnira for 10 yearn. Then Hugo bo carno Infatunted with an nolnnn to whom he wan devoted SO yonrn. From hln youth until hln denth. on May i:, 1RB3, l!uo wrote rn pi illy poemn, playn and noveln. No otlmr man of hln time hnd nuoh an Inter national reputntlnn. Hwlnburni drilled him nn "thn arreiitent mm born nlnou tbn death of Hhnkenpenro." Hln most fnmoun novel. "Iex Mln- ernblvn." wn published In 1802, but he hnd been wnrklna on I, for 16 yenrn, Thirty yenrn before bud nppearud bin nmt Kront prone romnnen, "Notre Dnmp." and tho third. "Tollers of the Hen," .enmo out in 1 HOC. A" ItOirr tho time of tho French revolution, Jean Valjeiin of Lit Mile, a dny-ltihorer, earned a Kcunty living for his sister and her i-even children. One time, when the family wiih atiirvlug, lie xtolo a loaf of bread, wan caught nml condemned to tin' galleys for live your. Twice ho attempted to escape nnd fulled, lie wiih a convict for 1 years. When ho was discharged liilltylB ho was wicked, there, hut his benevolence made lilm conspicuous, mid the old cure-Inker, be Ing full of envy and imdittrltuhlciiess, grew suspicious of her lodger. One day ho saw .Invert. Ho took Cosetto and again fled. Hut .Invert wan on hln track. Only hy unex ampled adrottnemt and by hln colossal strength did he cscapo by climbing over H high wall. He found himself In tho garden of tho convent of tho Petit Plcpus, where worked Pen' Fnuchelevent, whoso Ilfo M. Mndelelno has saved when ho was mnyor of M . The gardener, out of his grati tude, got lilm appointed his assistant by representing him to he his brother. Cosotte was tnkoit into the convent school. Kin? grew up Into n charming girl; bounty suddenly came to her like the hloHxoiun to n cherry tree In April, ami .Icnu Valjeiin, hnppy In loving her iih IiIh ihiiightcr, ns bis granddaughter, us the only woman he hnd ever loved, guarded her as u sacred treasure. He had good reiiiion to be wary, for tho TbeuiidlerH hnd com1 to 1'nrln mid Joined a baud of robbers; and .Invert never forgot. He bud several desper ate eurouuters vlti them. On th one side outlaws; on the other iimlcvlutlng law personified, lie took part In the abortive revolution of 1.1'tO and saved .Invert's life, at lust winning the nil- had a bad tasto in my mouth all thn; timo. My condition wan so bad that . I I I ..... I I.I. I II.. silent, chaste. Ignorant mid ferocious; """ ' mm impomioie ...... his arrectlomito nature 'had been , honorable mini. poisoned against society. Hut ho Imd ""J J,,Pru fnM on" ,,l",,,r, frnm " IIH.II III! VIM. HI IHIl inill'CI I, (11(1 le tn rend, and ho OREGON PLAYGROUND FOR TOURISTS AIM OF STATE CHAMBER Switzerland used to ho the poorest country, per capita. In tho world. Now It Is tho richest. TourlHt travel did It. Main nnd ('-dorado er.ch re ceive Jtio.ooO.OOO per, year from their tourists; Florldn gets l-T.O,-000,000; California, half a bil lion a year. O.-ogon gota $5,000,' 000. A three year'a advertising cam paign by the Oregon Stnte Cham ber of Commerce may bo expect ed to bring In at least oun-half of what Main and Colorado get, or $25,000,000, which should In crease on a rising scale. taught himself bow had thought. Itofused shelter or food at tavern or private house, ho came to Monslgu I our Myrlel, Hlshop of l , In tho foothills of the Alps, Ho was treated like a prince, but In tho night ho stole hoiiio of tho bishop's silver plate, was ; the most beautiful thing lu the world, wii.cn neveruioiess socmen io mm inn worst enemy love. Ilaron Mnrlus. tho son of a man whom Thenadler had robbed nt Water loo and Incidentally Mtvcd from n terrible death, hud been turned out of ""mi if iittT innHirii n mini iiii iin i . . , . . . t . caught us he mnde off and was drought 1 '' house by .Is roynllnt gri.ndfi. her Imek to the good bishop, who. with it I I', "1 W,,H ,,M"J,n-' " VP "V'1 1"M"1 ,,v smile, assured the gendarmes that tho nture. He saw her and they met. articles weiv not stoh-n but given, Adding two sliver eaiidlestleks, tho bishop said to lilm: "Take them nml become mi honest man. My brother, you no longer belong to evil, but to good. I have bought your soul of you. I give it to nd." Ah ho lied, he yielded to one lust fhelr love went through more than iln usual vicissitudes. Purlin; the lunar reetlon .lean VnlJwnn curried the youth through the mnr.es of the Purls sewers nnd brought lilm desperately wounded to his L'rainlfallier'rt house. Tho old mini relented ami consented to the t murrliige. dean Valjeiin gnve CiMelte tempt,, lo to do wro ng; he U; ft rn n " ' ou 'V Vf n,,r,,Jt tmw 1 n hurdy-gurdy boy u two-frane piece, n,n,,T '"; '! " ""w wf lf(Ttl.v but almost lmmedl..tel.v. Illled will, :,,rnp " told his lif story to Mnrlus, STATE CHAMBER SEEKS TO DOUBLE POPULATION ON FARMS IN 3 YEARS Oregon hns water resources to Ir rigate -1.000,000 acres of laud now .un productive, und which would support In comfort, 200.000 .new population, or about 10.000 new families. a, I remorse, ho tried In vuln to find thu boy. Two years later a stranger, dressed llko a worlclnginan arrived at tho llttlo city of M siir M . .rust iih ho arrived a fire broke out In the Town Hnll and Jio rescued two children belonging to tho cnptnln ot tho police. This ftuviil him from hav ing to show his pnssport. Ho mndo an Invention und soon becauio prosper ous. Ho built grent workshops, en dowed n hospital, founded schools, pnld high wages and was mndo mayor. Kmplnycil In his factory was Fantliie, a girl who bud been deserted In Purls by mi unworthy lover. She hnd left her baby, Cosette, with u omfty und if lu Its threo yoar a campaign, to hideous pair mimed Tlieniuller. When put families on Oregon's vacant Inml. tho Oregon Stute t'liitmber of Com merco can bring 1,000 families In utll izo this laud and, water, it will mean lu expenditures alone for hucIi commodi ties as clothing, food, furniture, ctct of 71,000,000, calculating tho expend! turca fo'r, an entire family at only -11000 per year, to say nothing of tho wealth produced by those now settlers. I .and settlement Is one of tho chef aims of tho Oregon .Stale Chamber or Commerce ev r--ntfrHn, j jtH movement to aid in tho development of tho State. 1 Oregon has IC.000,000 acres of till able lund now uncultivated. Oregon produced 20,40000 bushels of wheat In 1910. If Oregon's 16,000,000 acres of till- able but uncultivated land were planted In wheat and the yield were tho Ore gon averago for ten years 21.9 bushels per ucre new production ' would bo It was learned that' she had mi lllogltl mate child, she was discharged with out the knowledge of M. Madeleine. tho benevolent manufacturer, and wiih reduced to such poverty that sho could not pay the Tlienudlers, who took Cosotto'a clothes for their own girls and wrote Fantlno for more. Tio girl sold her beautiful blonde hair; then thoy Informed her that Cosetto wns III, which was a Ho, and demnnded 100 frnhcfl. To obtain this sho sold her front teeth to n traveling dentist; then sho went on tho town, ami when u dissolute dandy, to annoy her. nut snow down her bnck, nIio scratched his face and was arrested by .Invert, Inspector of police, n brutiil nnd ovcr nlllcloHH tyrant, who had boon attached to tho galleys when Joan Valjeiin wns theco und suspected tho mayor of M of being tho former convict. Tho mayor freed Fantlno. Sho suir- poscd ho wns tho cause of her nils- fortunes, and snat In IiIh fnc-e. II -350,400,00 buahelH wujch, at tho,pr,lcu hook the affront meekly and Invostl- today or ?J per bushel, would mean.ii' gated her oonmhilnt. She wn lit nf cash valuo of $1,051,200,000. consumption und ho nrovlded for her The Oregon State Chamber of Com- and promised to look on, for- her chtiii - morco expects to doublo the number of farmers In throo years. ir this means doublo tint vhcut crop, It will mean an additional yield of 20,400,000 bushels of wheat, which at tho pro vailing price would, mean a cash vuluo Ja now, money of 191,200,000. About the sunn timo tho nollco nr- rosto'3 nnother man who throo former convicts sworo wits tho missing Jean Valjenn. Joan Vnljean's conscience would not allow nn Innocent person to be punished lu his place. Surmouut- who, not uiiilerstaiidliiL' the grandeur of the spirit that had never done ntiy thing but good, allowed him to go away with n broken heait, Thenadler, how over, onmo to tho bnron to blackmail him and unconsciously revealed what n noble life Jean Valjeiin hud led. Mnrlus, taking Cose tie, hastened tn the old mini's death-bed, nml gave him one last taste from the cup of hnppl noss. Ho died In their nrms. Victor Hugo oiiIIh "I.oh Mlrnhlos" 'u dm ma In which the hero Is the Infinite, the rccnnd chnrnctcr Is Man. It Is In reality u melodrama In which nro mingled scene" ilf history, u host of Chnnietors from tin highest to the lo.west, Improbabilities which strain one's credulity, u vast amount of rare nml curious Information on nil soi-Ih of subjects, dissertations on philoso phy, science, polities, nnd religion. Its treatment of social Injustice had n powerful Influence on public opinion, not onl, In France but In many countries. It hns been an epoch-making book. Copyright. Ifl'fi. by the rout I'ubllHhlng Co, (The lloston Post), 8non a Lent Art. Among the lost arts of the world, It is to bo fenced Hint Indian bosket mak ing must-soon bo Included, Ami It Is n very grout pity, too. It Is a wonder ful nrf, and one tlmt bus been created at vast pains and sacrifices, Tho younger generation of Califor nia nnd desert Indians ore not learn ing to mnko baskets. Like tho young er generation of tho whlto race, they aro not fond of hard work-, And who over buys an Indian basket for a few dollars has rvldoin a realization of the work und the palleiico t'lmt bus boon expended upon It, As a Fav6r. IlorelolghI expect to xtnrt for Eu rope lo-inorrow, Can I do anything for you? Miss Hlunt Yes, you can take nhr-t tieular euro not to miss tho uteumer. llwitou Transcript, I could get llttlo sleep, but would roll und toss about all night long. "I'm here to Teii You" ays the Good Judge That you get full satis faction from a little of the Real Tobacco Chew. The rich taste of this class of tobacco makes it last longer and cost less than the old kind. Any man who uses the Heal Tobacco Chew will tell you that. Put up in two styles RIGHT GUT is a short-cut tobacco W-B GUT is a long fine-cut tobacco Fisk Jubilees at Chautauqua Noted Colored Quintet From Fisk University Comes on Last Day with Twe Concerts n-i ,.. . .. Ml ' " " l'r"ct.cay t, mnin.ons tlmt the songs of the slaves In the South laid tin. foundation for the nwit entrancing nuslc of our duy-lhe Jubilee Hongs, or l'lantutlon Melodies, an they are often called. . :.V " "V" "w '"'""'' oonc more to popuianre und perjetunto these smigH than Fisk unlvornlty Ia . ,, ,,., mi.ir KnMIm , nnKi. ,IVo ,.,, tmvellng tho length nnd breadth of this ct- ;. ml ,! L'! ,,,.,J!L!V,'l noVl'l,mi"V VlU t,m,l,wl w,,h nggregatlon of alngers over sent wt d,. . .. Z. V n. i"""Kn..,. record ,uv immense sellers throughout tho nutlon nnd tho quintet la io ticuiiind everywhere. 'Ihoy prownt two concerts on Cliiiutumiuii's closlnj; day. THE UN!Vr3RSAI- CA Marcl3, 1920 the Ford Motor Co. advanced the prices of Ford cars because of the incresed cost of Production. No specific announcement was deemed necessary at the time, but it has developed that mistrepresentntions and misquotations of these advanced prices have been and are being given out. So to safeguard the public against the eve Is of Misrepresentation, we herewith give the present prices: . $550 Runabout Touring Gar Coupe Sedan with dual electric starting md iifhting jriUm . . $625 C7R with dual electric tUrtihg and lighting .$750 $875" $650 with dual electric darting and Ughtlag jrttem and dsmounUble rim $850 with dua electric itrtlngVandt lighting ytem and demoun table rhm , $975 X,-.,1 n,lJ-. with olid Ure and clincher rime 1 1 uurv viiauis (with poeumatic tier and den. rim $640) Thct pricM re U f, o. b. Detroit $61 Ford son' Tractor $850.00 f. o. b. Dearborn Mich. Burns Garage