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About Aurora observer. (Aurora, Marion County, Or.) 19??-1940 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1924)
w m m j > itm ir- *1 NEW OF SPECIAL INTEREST F R iG H T F O R BILLY MOUSE TDILLY MOUSE was inquisitive, there was no doubt about it. As soon as his father or mother came home after hunting in the pantry, Billy Mouse began to poke about to see what they had brought home for breakfast. Then when he was taken out in the pantry for a run when his parents knew that Puss was not in the house, Billy Mouse always ran to the highest s.hejf and peeked into all the boxes. And once he crawled up behind some drawers and was caught fast until Someone opened one and then he ran across the floor and ..Puss almost caught him. One night when his father and mother had planned to explore the "How Did You Get Out Alive?" Mrs. Mouse Asked. clinhag room to find birdseed for break- fast», Billy Mouse jumped out of his warm bed and ran out in the pantry all alone. ‘Tf I don’t begin to go • about myself I shall never grow up,” saidi he. “ Mother and father think I uni a baby, but I shall show them I am able to' take care of myself.” First, Billy Mouse found a meat pie which he nibbled at until he could eat no more. And then he should have run home. But not inquisitive Billy. He saw. boxes and drawers to explore, so to the highest shelf he made his way and nibbled off the paper that was around a box. to find what was inside. In the box was some wire that had been put in so tightly that when Billy Mouse made a hole in the box the end o f the wirb popped out and hit Billy on the tip of his nose, and sent him tumbling over backward off the shelf. It wag a good thing for Billy Mouse that the trap had been sprung or this What’s in a Name?' By MILDRED MARSHALL Facts about your name; its history; meaning; whence it was derived; sig nificance; your lucky day, lucky jewel would be the end of the story. But It had, so when Billy ran in head first he did not know that his tail and body were outside. He thought he was all hidden in the box. By and by back came his father and mother from their hunting trip to the dining room, and there they saw Billy caught, as they thought, in the trap. “Oh, my poor foolish child,” squeaked Mrs. Mouse. "He is caught in a trap, and I had such a nice breakfast of birdseed for him, and now he will never eat anything again.” Mr. Mouse led his weeping little wife away, and then Billy, who had kept very still all the time, backed out of the trap, for he did not know he was in a trap, you see, until he heard his mother crying. "I guess father and mother do not know how to get oflt of a trap,” said Billy Mouse. "You just run in and run out. That is all there Is to it.” But just then another silly little mouse ran into another trap and there he was fast. Billy Mouse heard one squeak and a (flick and off he ran for home. Mrs. Mouse tumbled over In a faint when she saw her son. "How did you get out aliveT1 she asked when they had sprinkled her with water. "Oh, I just backed out; that is all you have to d.o with some traps. I guess,” said Billy, thinking of the poor little mouse that was caught in the other trap. "you foolish boy,” said his father. "Don’t ¡you know that trap had been sprung or youicouldn’t have got out?” “But it is full of cheese, father.” said Billy; . “ only I could not reach all of it.” Out ran Mr. and Mrs. Mouse, and soon they came back with the cheese, and such a breakfast they had of birdseed and cheese. And while they were eating Billy Mouse said. "1 guess I am big enough to hunt by myself now that I have found all of this cheese.” Wise Father Mouse always shook his head when Mrs. Mouse said that Billy knew which traps were safe to.look into. f*I never could make out how he found out that trap was safe., I wonder if ‘something happened to drive him in there.” But Billy Mouse never told what happened on the top shelf. He kept to himself how he was cured of being inquisitive. ((g) by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) I CfheU?hy f of I I Superstitions § Brief Resume of Happening« o the Week Collected for Our Readers. Testing *of Klamath dairy and breed ing cattle for tuberculosis will be re aewed this week. The tenth annual meeting of th* Oregon State Drainage associatioi will be held in Eugene Thursday. A shipment of 48 Chinese pheasants furnished by the state game farm nedi| Eugene, was released near Pilot Rock Field work involved in the survey of a pipe line for Bend’s proposed nevj city water system has been completj ed. The first carload »of head lettuce ever, shipped from Umatilla countj was sent from Freewater to Nev] York. Reports issued by the Port of As toria show that 20,498 tons of freigli were loaded« at the terminals during the past month. The third annual exhibition of potij try and waterfowl of the Hubbata Poultry association will be held h\ Hubbard this week. Friday and Saturday, December li and 20, are dates set for the annua| Hood River county poultry show to be held at Hood River. tary of the boarvi of control, w aj ap pointed by Governor Pierce to succeed Miss Bollman. JUST ONE PURPOSE To supply the Men ana Young Men of the Willamette Valley with the best o f Clothes and Furnishings at Reasonable Prices. In accordance with a legal opinion CLOTHING & WOOLEN banded down by the attorney-general, MILLS STORE the state tax commission has announc 136 N. Commercial Street Salem, Oregon ed that the collection of the state income tax for 1924, based on incomes for 1923, would proceed as if the law had not been repealed at the genera1, S A L E A N D W A N T A D S . Pacific Slope Dairy Show-Oakland, Calif., election last month. Earl Fisher Dec. 10-16 state tax commissiener/ostimates ilia1 For Sale: Eight weeks old pigs. the unpaid portion of the tax will ex Fred Dentei, Rt. 3. Aurora, Ore 49-2p ceed $1,000,000. i Receipts from motor vehicle licensee, NOTICE: The sale season is at hand j during the period January l*to Noverh- and I am prepared to handle all kinds! ber 30, 1924, aggregated $4,753,915, or o f sales to your satisfaction. When an increase of $684,305.00 over those ready, call Will Heinz, Auctioneer, for the entire yéar of 1923, accord Aurora Route 1, or Canby 13-16. 34tf \ ing to a report prepared by Sam A Kozer, secretary of state. The regís D A N G E R — L u r k s in a ll w i r e s ; trations for the 11 months included 191,450 passenger and commercial ve Y o u n e v e r c a n t e l l w h e n t h e y [ hides, 2756 motorcycles, 600 dealers a r e h o t , t e l e p h o n e o r E le c t -1 14,566 chauffeurs and 47,155 operators. r i c . W a r n y o u r c h ild r e n . An unsolved mystery exists in En M o la lla E le c t r ic C o . tf. j terprise in the death of Samuel G. I Hickman, who was shot and killed We have plenty of money to loan on nearly a week ago. Cleve Melson was farms at 6 per cent. No commission. slightly injured when Hickman was Reliable Abstracts. Oregon City Ab wounded fatally. The two men and B enefit b y lo w w eek-en d stract Company. 44-tf>? j two boys were at a. cabin on Rail fares n ow in effect, o n sale creek and the men were preparing a Friday, Saturday and Sun Dr. Osmar K. Wolf, Woodburn, Ore. meal. A shotgun was discharged in day—return lim it follow an adjoining room, the shot piercing is fully equipped to fit your eyes with tf a partition and lodging mostly in Hick proper glasses. ing Tuesday. man’s abdomen, although some scat Registered Holstein bull calf for sale O r 15-day fa r e s * o n sale tering pellets struck Melson. Who cheap; from a high producing cow. fired the shot has not been learned. any day—return lim it 15 John R. Kraus. Aurora, Ore. 46tf BISHOP’S going away to Portland and return Why They “ Joined Up” for Better or Worse W ANTED: A position as practical nurse. Inquire at Observer office. 47-2p Little did I think what an interesting task I had set myself when I set out to inquire why some wives and husbands had married. Let us get over the unpleasant part first. I asked a young wife why she had married, since she apparently took little interest in her husband and home. "Oh, I wanted to be free. Mother Oscar L. Daniels, 57, of Mulino, wasl killed in the Hult Lumber company’s wouldn’t let me have a latchkey, and if I was ten minutes late coming home yard at Mulino when he fell from th', at night there was as much fuss as if top of a lumber pile eight feet to th the house had caught fire. So I es ground. caped with the first ‘boy’ who asked Oregon postmasters were nominated me. He’s not much of a catch, either.” Incidentally, that woman finds It Is by the president as follows: Alsea, impossible to do exactly what one Charles O. Hendered; Bay City, likes even when married. Her hus George C. Peterson; Grande Ronde, band "watches the clock” when she’s Edith Glover; Lakeside, Charles W. 1 out, tool St. Dennis; Lexington, Emma M, CL | Next a man told me he married his Brasshars; Oakridge, Sadie B. Jones; | wife because he was sorry for her. She Taft, Frederick C. Robinson; West I was unhappy at home and he couldn't Linn, Mary F. Schultz; Estacada, Ah | bear to see her cry. Now he sees what bert N. Johnson; Seaside, Erie Ni i a fool he’s been, and from what I gather It Is he who makes her cry now- Hurd. ! adays. It’s to be hoped that no other At a special meeting of the board i man will come along and pity her. of control at Salem Carle Abrams was | "Why did I marry?” echoed another elected to succeed W. A. Delzell a? ( man. "Why, because she is the sweet- secretary of that board. The selec j est, best and dearest little girl in the tion of Mr. Abrams followed the resig \ world, and I just couldn’t have lived nation of Miss Celia Bollman, since without her.” Pleasant hearing words May 1 private secretary to Governor like that, isn't it?—Vera Leslie, in Edinburgh Scotsman. Pierce. ' '^ell. retr*’ /Jr ' - The Jordan Valley irrigation project will fee completed by June 1, according to Harry Morrison of the firm of Mori rison & Knudsen, contractors. The old Aune barn at Bend, erecteJ when that city could be reached onl# by stage, is being torn down to be re-f placed with a business structure. Fcr Sale: O. I. C. weaned pigs. Wm Jeskey. 49-2tp Any girl in trouble may communicate with Ensign Lee of the Salvation Ar my at the White Shield Home, 565 Mayfair Ave.. Portland, Ore. 37-52t; For Sale: Nice big apples, free from worms, 65c and 75c per box. Call Herman Kuhnke, Needy Phone. 1 mile east of Needy. 50-ltp Sunday school, 10 a an. Evening services, ¡7:30 p. m. “ I am only one, but I am ope; I can not do everything, but I can do some thing. What I ought to do, I should do, and by the grace of God I will do.” Until after the Christmas vacation there will be no meeting o f the Christian Endeavor. “ Putting God to Bed” will prove an unusual and interesting subject next Sunday evening. Everyone cordially invited to attend. J. F. M athews . M j THE GRAY PINE (@ by Wheelei^Syndicate, Ino.) iB p N T the gray pine grows W HEREVER it is called "the unlucky tree,” because It is supposed to bring bad luck to anyone who stands nnder it— especially to women. This superstition is, apparently, a survival of the worship of the Phry gian god Attis, a worship introduced hito Europe through the Greeks. Attis has been identified with the Greek god Adonis and by some, also, with the Egyptian Osiris. At any rate the At tis cult was a most ancient one and profoundly influenced European my thology. Attis was supposed to have met his death under a pine tree into which his spirit entered. At the festi val of Attis, celebrated in the spring, a pine tree, the trunk of which was wrapped in wool, was brought into the sanctuary of Cybele and a young man tied to the tree trunk. Then the priests and the votaries gashed them selves until their blood covered the bound man. He was then * unbound and the pine tree taken out and burned. Originally the bound man was sacrificed to represent the death of the god, but later it was sufficient that he was covered with blood. This will explain why it Is "unlucky” to stand under the tree—the persqn so standing takes the place o f the victim of the old ritual. That the tree is especially unlucky for women is * explained by the fact that the ancient rite took place In the temple of Cybele—the mother of the god who was slain in this incarnate form—and also by certain orgiastic practices which characterized the sac rifice. That the superstition in ques tion should linger about the gray pine and not other pines may be accounted for by suggestiveness of its color—the colon of ashes to which the > sacred pine of Attis was ultimately reduced— or possibly the color of the natural wool with which the trunk of thè sa cred pine was covered at the Phrygian festival. Also as the sacred pine of Attis was always burned so the prin cipal use of the gray pine is for fire wood. (<8> by McClure N ew spaper Syndicate.) -O - p i t ' P ■ gP gH K tm t. ( 9 by MoCluro N ewspaper S yndicate.) THOSE DEAR GIRLS. Miss Old: I*d just like to see any man kiss me. Miss Y o u n g : What a hopeless ambition. ELECTRIC Toaster Percolator For full information about these and other round trip fares communicate with Southern Pacific Presbyterian Church \ 0& OFF LIST PRICE r p H E queen of Heaven, Maria, has A votaries called by the Italians Re gina or Reina. Reina was found more frequently in Florence. In France, Regina became Reine and Reinette, the former also being a favorite in Ger many. All, of course, are translated to mean queen. The natural conclusion would be that the name Regina is merely the Latin word for queen given a capital ized initial letter, but another explana tion of its origin, and one most gen erally accepted, is that -it is one of the many evolved from the Latin rego. meaning rule. If such is the case it has a history as full of adventure as an Arabian Nights and is indeed an heroic name for a woman to bear. The first Rganar was that hardy soul who, after ravaging France, was put to death in England, whereupon his fierce sons in revenge swept England with merciless devastation. His name there fore became a dread one and in some manner was changed to Rene. At once Renee became popular as a femi nine name since the younger daughter of Louis XH of France bore it. When she married into the IJouse of Este, her name was changed into Renata,, a form which is very pleasing to the Spanish and Italian. The old Dutch form, Renira, is quaint and quite pretty. The Teutonic influence makes itself evident in Reigl and Regl. The aquamarine is Regina’s jewel. Much superstition centers about this stone and it has therapeutic value, since by its paling color, it gives evi dence of the bodily weakening of its wearer. It is even held that its color will stain the flesh against which ft is worn as indication of some physical derangement. Thursday is Regina’s fortunate day and 7 her lucky number. The violet is her flower. M a k e a lly o u rg o in g a w a y plans to take advantage o f these low round trip fares. George Miller, Local Agt. I By H I RP I NQ KIN Q :J REGINA days, with stop-over at any point en route. P L A T E S Guaranteed to fit, and in many cases better than the natural teeth $10 .00 beautiful all pink plate $15.00 Plate with solid gold pin teeth and the very best of rubber. Why pay more? P A IN L E S S E X T R A C T IO N S Crowns and Bridge Work $5 per tooth C **R Vacuum Cleaner Iron Waffle Iren TRAINED DENTAL NURSE INSURES CLEANLINESS QUT OF TOWN PEOPLE FINISHED IN 1 TO 2TRIPS D r . P. G . B r o w n , Dentist Willamette Bldg., Oregon City Entrance Opposite Postoffice Hours: 8-6 \ Phone 562 m Electric Blanket Grill SC A L L! mm ■ GIVE PRACTICAL (jllFTS If you love your wife, you will give her an Electric Washing Machines. We sell severalmakes. SAVAGE- The G reatest W a s h i n g Machine Yet Produced . Special O ffer T o Our Readers It Wrings DRY—Ready for Ironing. McCall’s $1.00 BOTH m *50 Our Xmas Prices A re Real Bargains There is better D olly Type o f Electric Washer than the A n W n o fiV ii.U lO IT 13.llC REDUCTION OFF LIST PRICES — o f all Electrical Equipment for the month of December. TOASTERS, IRONS, WAFFLE IRONS, PERCOLATORS Give Practical Electric Gifts Molalla Electric Co., Oregon’ The Aurora Observer 1.50) save $ 1.00 L J E R E is your opportunity A * to get McCall’s Magazine for the coming "year and the Aurora Observer every week, both for only $1.50. 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