Sherman County observer. (Moro, Sherman County, Or.) 1897-1931, October 08, 1909, Image 1

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    Or Hist.Soc., City Hail.
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55*SHS95
C0NHMIII JOB n u e ;
RM AN
ae»»ws»s su m e s t e s • • » ■
j The World
Of Books
Tfci (rain (rowers [onvantiwii
Are not «lone odnfined to Rural Free Delivery o( mail
and the Telephone.
There ie another convenience which all
farmer« should have — and many do have — a checking ac­
count with a good bank.
The possessor of such an aooount
avoid, the risk of having bis money on his person or about
hb home where it is in danger of fire and thievee.
HU bills paid by check are not only a valid receipt, but
also a convenience in bis home transactions where very often
the neoeasary change Tor concluding settlement is not at hand
Don't stop to think this over, but start an account now with
$
R
*
(ink, of ffloro.
MORO PHARMACY
Experienced, Registered P h arm a cis ts
fled icines C a re fu lly Compounded.
Complete Assortment of 8llverware and Jewelry
FORMALDEHYDE. RUBBER GOODS. PERFUMERY.
BRUSHES. COMBS. SPONGES. CIGARS.
Jor Obeyne of the British
army. In a «Ilk hat. and other attire
that is conventional fo r matrimonial
occasions Mr. Haggard looked to he
quite a young man, although he Is now
fifty-three years o f age. I t Is probably
as the author o f “She” that he has
gained bis greatest fame, sod In speak-
of bis early work recently he said;
'M y entrance Into literature was
purely an accident. Even a fte r my re­
turn from A frica 1 had no Idea of en­
tering the profession. 1 went to A f­
rica as secretary to one o f the gov­
ernors. I was In the country at the
time of the war and left disgusted at
the outcome. W hile In Africa I made
u close study o f the habits of the na­
tives and the country generally. In
consequence 'When 1 returned to Eng­
land 1 was In a position to describe
w hat I had seeu and beard. These
materials, w ith a sufficient amount of
romance blended w ith them, are made
use of In my tales o f A frican life.
“As I have already stated, my en­
trance Into literature was due to
chance. W hile practicing at the bar
I conceived the Idea of w riting a work
on politics. This, my maiden e ffo rt
proving successful, 1 was Induced to
Any and all K inds of P aten t M e d ic in e Altoava In Stock
m
i m
m -i H - i u n
h + i - h ii i ii i i n i i h - u i i h i i h - i - h -,
O re g o n C allB
“ MORE
PEOPLE
I
Tase the w ord to y o u r re la tiv e s and frie n d s to com e now
H LO W COLONIS R T A T E S
... I»- '
To O regon W ill P re v a il F ro m
the
_
East
S e p te m b e r 15 to O ctober 15
VIA THE
BII> EH HXOOABI) AMD DAOOHTBK.
: Oregon Railroad & Navigation Co.
----------- A N D ------------
S O U T H E R N PACIFIC
w
(LINKS IN OREGON)
~
F ro m
C h ic a g o .............. $ 3 3 - ° °
“
S t. L o u i s . ........... 32.00
“
O m a h a .................. 25.00
“
S t. P a u l................. 25.00
“
K a n s a s C i t y ........ 25.00
F A R E S CA N B E P R E P A ID
Deposit the aroonut of the fare w ith the ueareet O. R . 4 N . or S. P.
Agent and ticket w ill be delivered In the East w ithout extra cost.
Heud oe the name and address of any one Interested In the State for
Oregon literature.
W rn . M c M U R R A Y ,
Ï
General Passenger Agent. P oj tian d, Ore.
m ï m i 11 h t'*‘* 1 »111,1,1 n » I » n
H
» h i
M
otel
H I I H I H -H -H -H -
oro
Nea-est Hotel to Business Center, Banks and Depot.
S u n d a y D in n e r 35 cents.
T a b le th e Best th e M a rk e t w ill A fford
Opposite Post Office
Moro, Oregon.
«
3 .--------
Q/J" O
w rite romances. 'D aw n' was my first
effort. Then followed other romances,
Including 'She.* ’’
I t Is said of M r. Haggard that he
was once in a farmhouse which was
occupied by some Boers, who began
discussing a plot against the British,
and he knew that I f they discovered
be was Engtlsh they would probably
shoot him on the spot as a spy. H e
whs debating bow he could get rid of
them before they made the discovery
when one of them lit his pipe and
threw the match, still burning, to the
floor. Haggard leaped up and stamp­
ed It out.
“ W hy do yon do that?” asked the
leader of the Boers
“Because the British keep all their
dynamite under this floor," he replied.
In two minutes there wasn’t a Boer
left on the premises.
W illiam Dean Howells, who recently
sailed for Europe In search of health,
la one o f the most kindly and modeat
of men.
When approached by the
struggling author or the reporter he
does aot play the
grandee, but rather
Indulges In pleasant
r e m in is c e n c e . A
w riter asked him
recently what par­
ticular hit of prnlae
bad Inspired b I m
the most, and be
said:
“I t was Just a
chance r e m a r k
W. D. HOWEL1.S.
made hi an out of
the way place when I thought my­
self an out of the way and very,
much hidden person.
I t was years
ago, when life was harder than It Is
now.
I was In a Canadian hotel,
roaming about the place, not knowing
what to do. Bo I went, to the desk
and conned the names on the register.
Another man w ith a friend evidently
felt the same way I did, for they peep­
ed over my shoulder. One said to tbs
other:
“ ‘Say, I guess this place la all right;
Howells la here I’
“This was the first tim e J had ever
heard myself spoken o f by strangers.
I t gave me a peculiar kind of encour­
agement, different from any sort of
sensation I have felt since."
* /> • /- • M e p » o p l» it o p
The Umatilla House
T h e D a li« « . O re a o o ,
i H eat.
Rlectrio L ig h ts
Electric Call Ball«.
H O T E L R A T E S T O S U IT Y O U .
All O R & N Trains Stop at Front Door
Railway Ticket Office tn the Lobby.
T . N. C R O F T O N ,
~-7y -5=
lbber Stamps Furnished.
• — J io» T yp ew riter^ Typewriter
BuppUse, Ribbon«, Eta.
P r o p r ie t o r .
C o u n t y , o R ^ o n , F r i d a y , O c t. 8
What Authors
Are Doing
> Ford Madox Hneffer*« new book,
“The H a lf Moon,” comes at a time
when It Is especially fitting that the
life of the discoverer of the Hudson
should be revived. Hendrick Hudson
was first of all a navigator and had lit­
tle patience w ith the spirit o f greed
and conquest that characterised his
age. In the words attributed to him
In the novel. “B u t we do set our name«
upon the hllta that are more lasting
than brass and upon broad rivers
that shall flow when all libraries be
burned."
Egotistical, brooking no Interference,
possessing an almoet nncanny ability
to read men. equally ready to break
sad play »Mb hta get
'
mice, the glamour of romance win al­
ways euvelop hie name. - The dab of
the story is in the eerly years «f the
reign of K in g James I.
T h s » <*ne
of action for the English
of
the story ie In the town o f Bye, one
o f the cinque ports, which had tlVJ
then their own laws, rights and no
plllty, quite apart from those of the
rest of England, and for the rest of
the book the action takes place on
board the H a lf Moon, the ship in
which Hendrick Hudson first came to
the Island of Manhattan. I t is, how­
ever, In no sense a colonial novel.
prtttt»>
George Bernard Shaw, the author,
playw right and wit, who Is to spend
several months In America, generally
manage« to keep bln wits «U n it him
on all occasions. When his play “The
Arms and the A lan" was first pro­
duced In London there were loud calls
for tlie author, and M r. Shaw went
before the curtain. Aa he did *> one
derisive voice from a displeased play­
goer In the gallery smote his ears. and.
pausing, he looked In the direction
whence it came.
“ Yes, I quite agree w ith your opin­
ion." said M r Shnw, addressing the
person who had uttered the eatcall,
“but w hat can two of us do agaulat a
houseful?"
Except for w hat Richard Ilnrdlflg
Davis has done In that direction, the
novelists of the time seem not to have
paid much attention to B««uth America
In selecting their «hern «tors mid io
the weaving of their plots. At any
rate, there Is a rich field of material
for romances there which has not yet
been worked for all it Is worth. W ith
the growing Interest In that part of the
continent It might seem that the co
mancera of the United States would
cast their eyea that way. One who
has done ao la Iaurence D itto Young,
whose a to rf “T h e ’ Climbing I>ooin,’’
pnbllsbed by the G. W . Dillingham
company. New York, Is a romance
rather out of the ordinary. The action
Is partly In South America and partly
In the United States. The plot Is cer­
tainly Ingenious and turns on an epi­
sode supposed to have hapi>ened dur­
ing the later career of the Spanish
conqneror Pizarro. Some America' ad­
venturers stumble upon a city fa r up
In the Andes where live descend nntu
of the ancient Incaa and their people,
ruled by Queen Zarra, whose genen
logical tree goes back to the Union be
tween Pizarro and an Inca prlnrcHx
These people have scarcely changed
since Plwirro’s time, according to the
story, because access to their city and
LXUBMMOB D. TOVJMI.
egress from It are barred by the char­
acter o f the surrounding country The
only entrance to It la through u pass
held by a tribe of gigantic ante "the
climbing doom," w hich oyerv helm
travelers and whose bits Is death The
pass Is atrewn w ith the blea h ln j
bones of those who have attempted
its passage.
The A m erica«* of the
story were able to get by these Insects
w ith the loes o f only one o f ttueli num­
ber through the scientific* loth of one
of the expedition who was «alighted
on arriving at the Inca city tv vflnd
such a wealth o f material before him
for ethnological and historic iu«r>arch.
The queen marries one o f toe ad­
venturers, a big fellow from «‘lijo, and
a fte r some years the Yank««»« make
thetr escape from captivity In the re­
mote and ancient city through a series
o f weird happenings, the king by m ar­
riage carrying off his baby «laughter.
W h at hapitens when thin «laughter
grows to womanhood forms another
part o f the romance.
The plot Is certainly Ingenious, and
the adventures of the American« «re
diverting. The author dedicates bis
story to his mother, Julia Ditto Young
of Buffalo, Poet and essayist. And it
Is Interesting to learn that ho began
work upon It as he lay upon a sick
bed, condemned, as It was thought, to
die.
"To die w ith nothing accomplished,”
aald ha as he heard the verdict Of the
physicians, "Is out of the <pi.-«tton. I
w ill w rite a book." His Qpiivnleeeunee
followed, and “The Climbing Doom"
was the fulfillm ent of his promlgg.
1909.
After Results That May Ceme From
Hunting It W ith a Light.
The folly of bunting for a leek ba a
gaa pipe w ith a lighted match Is not
ao much ttecauae of the danger of an
explosion as o f other damage, as Is
shown by the experience of a house­
holder not long ego.
Oue or two small leaka were detect­
ed by going over all the pipes a
bolding a lighted match to them. The
smell of gus ceased, but was replaced
a few hours later by the smell of burn­
ing wood.
Another visit to the cellar showed a
charred floor Joist a little distance
above a gus pipe. There was no ap­
parent cause for this until a very does
examlnatlou resulted in the finding of
a tiny Jet of gas which was Issuing
from the pipe beneath the beam.
I t was lighted, but was so small as
to be blue In color and dearly Invisi­
ble. It bud been lighted by the match
used In the first Investigation, but had
not been noticed.
,, j
“I f that leak had happened to be In a
lead Joint Instead of an Iron connec­
tion." said, a gus man, “there wpuld
probably have been work for the fire
brigade. The smallest itoaalble Jet of
lighted gaa Issuing through lead will
In time heat and melt the lead and
.make the leak larger until a big flame
Is Issuing.
“This may make a fire hours later
In the dead o f night or at a time when
no one la In the houae. The ouly prop
er w av to look for these very small
leeks la to paint the suspected pipe
w ith a smooth soap lather. Just as In
the case of a bicycle tire, the tlqleet
leak w ill blow a bubble In the lather,
and there you are." — London Tele­
graph.
MEXICAN JACALS.
: Uncle Sam's
Victory
a
a
eeeeeeaeeeeeeeeeaeeeeeeeee
U 8 T n ow th e
door of the far
east, by reason
o f A m e r ic a n
liartk'lpatlon In
th e H a n k o w -
8zecbuen rail­
road, Is opened
to the capital,
trade artd gov­
ernmental
In­
fluence of this
country.
The
participation of
th e U n ite d
States In the
Chluese l o a n
I h on an equal
bants with the
British,
G e r­
ma n
and
French
Inter­
ests. The ar­
rangement Is a
distinct victory
for the T a ft
adm inistration
P . C. K 5 O X .
and for Secre­
tary of State Knox, On the face of
the affair the first Impression Is that
It Is a brilliant diplomatic move, and
the Impression grows as the whole
question develops.
In a word, this
move w ill prevent Europe from selx
lng the empire.
The Initial act, or the entering
wedge, as It Is caked, of American
predominance ta k e * the form of an
allotment to bankers tn New York
city of one-quarter participation in a
loan negotiated by the Chluese gov­
ernment for the construction of the
Hankow-Ssechuen railroad. The total
amount of the loan la >30,000,000, of
which 97,500.000 Is to be taken by an
American syndicate composed of the
National City bank, the First National
bank, J. P. Morgan A Co. and Kahn,
Loeb A Co. Ths sum, so small for
W all atreet. Is truly a mere wedge,'
but the principle Involved Is consid­
ered of worldwide Importance and
opens the door for things far greater.
Americans are to have equal oppor­
tunity to supply material for both the
8aecboen and the-Canton lines and the
branebee. They wlU appeJnt euboedl-
uete engineers, and they w ill have also
one-half of all future loans of the Bce-
«he Was Slew.
The shop assistant bad shown and
reshown the toys to the undecided
shopper.
Rabbits, monkey«, Jacks- luthe-bok.
Jumping Jacks, trains, velocipedes—ev­
erything had been displayed, manipu­
lated, operated and explained to the
shopper, but still she could not make'
up her mind.
“I wanted to get something suitable
for my little nephew," she reiterated
for the thousandth time.
“Yes, madam,” responded the weery
assistant.
“You told me that when
you came tn, but I think your nephew
has outgrown all these toys while you
have l>een at this counter."—London
Opinion.
Hie Tranelatlen.
A dignified elder of an Australian
church was presiding at a charitable
concert. A Mias Brown wae to sing
“Ora Pro Nobis,” but a t the last mo­
ment she changed her mind, and a nets
was passed to the chairman Intimating
that abe would give "The Bong T hat
Reached My Heart."
H e therefore made the following an­
nouncement: “Miss Brown w ill now
sing 'Ora Pro Noble,’ which, being
translated, means T h e Song T hat
Reached M y H eart.’ "—London Chron­
icle.
\
No Hurry.
He-^-Then you have decided to accept
the proffer of my heart and hand?
8he—Yee, dear.
H e -T h a n k s !
You
have made me thd happiest of men,
but we must have aome regard for the
old maxim and not be married in
haste
She—Don’t worry about th a t
I am perfectly w illing to w ait till next
week —Loe Angeles Times.
Maple Drop Cahee.
Tw o cup« of maple strop, o®e-hglf
cup of creem or milk, two egg«, one-
h alf cup of melted butter, three tee-
spoonfuls of baking powder, flour
enough to make a soft batter.
In gem pens.—Good Housekeeping.
Explained.
The Anneuiweme»*« Pejlowed.
“W hy must we settle ao much money
She—They say there evfi garmi
on o at titled son-in-lawT" asked M r.
klaees. Now. what do you sugpoee ■
Cumrox.
„
X a .. ...
• “Men
never
understand
thorn girl could catch that way?
things," answered hla wife
’Hla an­ i H e— A, husband.—Ladle«* Home J o u r
cestral pride positively demand« that ■el.
he be removed from danger <>f hnmllla
A pound of care w in not pay
tlon by looking like a poor relation.“
n
i i i h h h i >»»
i - i i i i i i-i i 11 u i i i 111111 i - n . n m
MONKLflND CASH STORE-
î
In China Î
Prim itive Huts In the Villages of the
Native Indians.
The Mexican Indian huts In the v il­
lages and upon the ranches of the
lower Rio Grande bonier region of
Texas have a atyle of architecture and
construction that la distinctly their
own. This type of primitive building
Is rapidly passlug out of existence. At
many places on the border families of
Mexicans have abandoned tbelr Jacals
and moved Into more pretentious
homes.
No money outlay la necessary In
erecting the old style picturesque «true
fures; neither Is ■ knowledge of car­
pentry needed. A double row of up­
right poles firmly set or driven Into the
ground forms the fram ework for the
w IIHa ' Between these two rows of
poles are placed ether poles or sticks
of shorter length, forming a thick and
compact wall. At each of the four
corners of the building poets are set
reaching to a height of about eight
feet. Roughly hewn stringers are laid
from one post to another, and to these
stringers are tied other poles that term
the framework of the walls.
The
strong fiber from the maguey plant or
strips of buckskin are used to tie the
poles Into position. The rafters arre
tied to the ridgepole and the stringers r
In the same manner. A t one end of
the building Is built the opening
through which the smoke of the Inside
fire may ascend. Htovee are unknown
among these M e i leans, and the cook
lng Is all done upon the ground.—K an­
sas City Htar.
«acoedteM
F iv e C e n ts
edeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
a
A GAS LEAK.
..........................
— s»ee
E C E N T L Y Rider Haggard bad
the experience o f giving hla
daughter In marriage to 11a-
The UJaseo Warehouse (Hilling (n.
«I
Quick and C heapl
M oro, S h erm an
E À s t a b lia h o d 1 8 8 7 ;
E x p e rt,
O f r vury Description to O rd e r
■ •
“
’’
OUR LINE Of SHOES IS COMPLETE
»
o
A n d b y th e 1 5th o f O c to b e r s t ill m o re a re d u e * "
to a r r iv e .
F o r Q u a lit y a n d P ric e s w e h a v e
;;
;; A SELECTION HARD TO BEA TJ:
A Full Assortment of Men’s ties, socks, an4 shirts.
Special attention given Mens Furnishing Goods.
C. A. NISH,
Manager*
- H - H - H - l 1 I-II- M U l
Church and Clergy.
Unde Sam's treasury la of a differ­
ent opinion.
A fter 27,000,000 were
struck off recently he decided that only
the Initial “B ” (uh^yJA H 'V C ir OU U>«
jxmny. M r. Brenner, however. Insists
that his three Initials “V. D. B.” show
on every Lincoln coin Issued and says
he w ill take the matter up to Presi­
dent T a ft If necessary.
W hatever the outcome, the fact re­
mains that the new pieces are In great
demand and have t*een sold on tbe
streets In various cities for many times
their value. The face of the penny,
besides the Lincoln profile, has the
word "L iberty” and the date, while on
the reverse side are the mottoes “ In
God W e T rust” and “E Plurlbus
Unum," surrounded by tw o curved
feathers.
These pennies eventually
w ill replace the Indian bead pennies
altogether, as no more of the latter
w ill be coined.
W hile 8t. Peter’s cathedral at Rome
was being built forty three popes lived
and <11* m 1
Rev. Joseph Cor key, a Presbyterian
pastor of Londonderry, Ireland, has
eight living sons In the Presbyterian
ministry. Where’s the other denomi­
nation that can show such a patriarch
xa that?
Miss Hilda B. Clark Is serving her
second term as assistant to her aged
father. Rev. Dr. De W itt 8. Clark,
pastor of the Tabernael« Congrega­
tional church, Salem, Mass.
Smith
college trained her.
Rev. Dr. W illiam Reed Huntington,
rector of Grace church, New York, w ill
turn back Into the work of the church
the >40.000 presented to him by his
parishioners on the twenty-fifth anni­
versary of his rectorship.
SAN FRANCISCO’S PRIZE
Things Theatrical.
Amundsen’s Famous Vessel to Lie In
Golden Gate Park.
The placing recently In Golden Gate
park, San Francisco, of the steamer
UJ oh bus revived Interest In Captain
Roald Amundsen and the famous lit­
tle vessel on which he sailed through
the northwest passage. Born in Chris­
tiania, a Norwegian of the Norwegians,
Captain Amundsen first came promi­
nently before the public as a member
of the autaretlc eipedltlbn of the'Bel-
glcn, which vessel lu 1807 0 cruised In
the south polar sens under M. Gerlach.
Rettlfnlng from this expedition, he con­
ceived the idea of an arctic explora­
tion, the object of whk*t> would be the
discovery of the northwest passage
and the l<x-atlon of the magnetic pole.
Science Siftings.
Amundsen told his friends Nansen,
the explorer, and ITofessors Schmidt
Light passes from the moon to the and Neumayer of Germany his hopes
earth In a second and a quarter.
and laid before them tn detail the
On July fi the earth la farthest from
the sun than at any other time In the
year.
Mercury, the swiftest traveler among
the planets, moves through space at
the rate of thirty tulles per second.
Heat sufficient to melt granite Is be­
lieved to exist at thirty miles under
the earth’s surface. This la the maxi­
mum depth to which geological theory
extends.
Blanche Ring Is to make an Aus­
tralian tour
Mnude AdstnH has beguu her season
In “W hat Every Woman Knows."
Hilda Spnng Is appearing In vaude­
ville in a play called “A Man and Ills
Mate.”
I^ n n Ashwell produced a new play
in Ixrndon with the significant title of
“G rit.”
8am Bernard wants to get a play In
which he can show himself superior
to musical comedy.
Wlnchell Smith's new play, “The
Fortune Hunter," Is to be produced
shortly with the author lb the leading
role.
Animal Oddities.
A pigeon cooes without opening tts
bill.
Rats In the Bermudan often build
their neats In trees.
An eagle can live twenty daya w ith­
out tasting food and a condor forty
days.
The air fox, or flying mouse, of Bor­
neo Is a moth. This queer creature
has a head shaped something like that
of a fox or a mouse.
WranABD ». STBAJOHT
THE LINCOLN
COINS.
chuen railroad and ft* tranche«, with
the corresponding advantages. W il­ Designer of New Pisces and His Con­
lard D. Straight, our consul general at
troversy W ith Sscrstsry MaoVeagh.
Mukden, will represent the American
The letters “C Q D ” which have
financiers Interested In the affair and been seen so much lu print must for
arrange all the details In Pekin.
i time give way to "V. D. B.”
Not
The novel and uuagual feature of the
transaction Is that the United States that the latter have anything to do
government for the first time In Its with steamship disasters or wireless
history officially backed a syndicate of telegraphy, however. They are the Ini­
private baukers and helped them In a tials of yietor D. Brenner, the design­
profitable transaction. Some weeks ago er of the new Lincoln pennies, whose
the American ambassadors at London, controversy w ith Secretary MacVeagh
Paris and Berlin were instructed by over the colna la attracting ao much
tbe state department to convey to tbe attention.
governments of England, France and " I f you have secured one of the new
Germany tbe Intention of the Ameri­ Lincoln pieces you have probably no-
can bankers to participate In the Chi­
nes« railw ay loan, then ponding exclu­
sively In Europe, baaing the claim on
an understanding arranged in Pekin
several years ago by diplomats re­
garding the parceling out of future
loans.
The state department has fought sue-"
ceosfully the European group which
sought to exclude American partici­
pation. The victory, tbe state depart­
ment officials say. augurs wall for
the future.
State department officials do not hes­
itate to declare It W«« not the mere
amount of money Involved tn the pro­
posed loan that was at stake. I t was
« matter of principle. The question Ie
a broad one. and tbe settlement ar^
rived at In Pekin Aug. 17 Indicates
that tbe products of American Indus­
tries w ill be used In the construction
of tbe road, and American engineers
w ill assist In Its supervision.
This relatively Insignificant railw ay
teen proved to be the critical Incident
to bring to a focus the International 1
diplomatic game that powerful na­
tions have been playing, w lih the
VTOVOB U R U X IX X
vast, unknown Flowery Kingdom as
the most magnificent spoils at stake tlced the letters "V . D. B." on them.
since the days that Rome was annex­ You thought this was all right, of
ing practically all the world to pay It course, as long as you could get full
- .
T i l l OJOA.
plana which. If followed, be felt
vlnced would solve two of the three
greatest of arctic problems.
These
frleuds.
thoroughly
believing
In
Amundsen, realized at once tbe merit
of hla arguments and unhesitatingly
Indorsed his scheme. Accordingly the
GJoa, a single masted sloop o f forty-
seven tons, was designed and con­
structed to weather the roughest of
arctic storms and seas, aud on June 1.
10011. she sailed away from Christiania
harbor on her long voyage to the
frozen north, end after suffering greet
hardshliMi Amundsen gained undying
fame by bHntr the first to m il a ves­
sel completely through the northwest
IMumge.
Recently the famous little vessel
was beached near the Cliff House, Bon
Francisco, and moved oo rollers to a
pond In Golden Gâte park, where It
will
commemorate
Its
own and
Amundsen’s deeds, having been pre­
sented to the city by the Danish d tl-
Provertoa.
To live long Is to suffer lon g.-D an-
Ish Proverb.
There Is never wanting a dog to bark
at y o a —Portuguese Proverb.
Good counsel Is better than a thou­
sand bands. - German Proverb.
An ounce of favor goes further than
• a ouac« o f Injustice.—■‘ranch Proe-
erb.
;
.
D e n tis t-N o w . w hat cuu I do for
you? Patient (whose heart has fatted
at tbe last moment»— Oh—e r—BQT teeth
are perfectly alt right, thanks. E r—
w het I really came for wee to safe If
you would -er—care to play golf wHh
me- e r -some time this month e r aexL
C h ild r e n
O ry
S
, .C A S T Q ^,1
FOR FLETCHER
—»
4S