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About The Santiam news. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1897-1917 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1912)
MAN’S IMPOTENCE. It 1« Mad* ttrih-ngty Msnifsst Wh«a an Earthquake Com»l A traveler -ivea t - thr riz ac count of* an < :!. ... .. n '... far ea«t.:......... ' ...................................... “Th* one occasion I «aw a panu* wna in C»lcutta in June. IS. it w.i« a Satnrdaj o’clock It wn* panting!/ hut. and I tai one of a party of j i . . > I men sitting on the roof of a high house living tea “We were in the midit of a mm/ chatter when the whole building begun to tremble. We were in •tantlv hushed and looking at one another with blank face« until n feeling of terror took p>>M«*« on of •a and amnabody abo it u. ‘Mj «■ 1« an earthquake!’ “We stampeded. There were three flights of stairs to go down, and of course the fattest and slowest num was m front and blocked the way. The walla were cracking and uwu >ng; the pluster was falling in chunks. “We were all barefooted, but that didn’t matter. In front of the house was the mcldan. the gr<*ut open space in Calcutta. We ran there. A great part of the adjoin, ing house came down with a roar. The who!* front of a newspaper of fice crashed into the street. The top of the cathedral spire came • ff and fell through the roof into the chancel. “llorscs were stricken with mad ness and were careering furioudy beyond ail control. Tha natives were shrieking. European«, blanch cheeked, tore from their houses, and many of the women fainted “The thing I will never forget was what followed. There was the crunch of ripped walls, ami the whole earth wa« le aving and trvni bling very much like a ship that has banged against a pier and taken ! . I ■ ' I tlon was the feeling of linpotetii e “The earthquake lasted only five minute«, though at the time it teemed like hour». Men could only stand on the heaving, seasick ground absolutely helple».«, unable to s[>eak, but staring into each oth er’s white countenance waiting for the earth to yawn. That was the terrible thing—crowd« of folk re duced to mute horror, help!«-», just standing with bic, wide op« n, affrighted eyes, and the brain crumped in contemplation of what might happen next moment.’’— Exchange. mid* inter." “And why not?" she asked, "Because." replied Field, “thav might spoil my ap|H-tiie for pruned. ’ — New York Telegraph. GERMANY AND ALSACE. Vary S «pc ««« D«<l »«d a Rui» T> »1 Ss»se a Life. F»r many year» after it »a« tak< n liver bv the German» the pruvtuce fliíMt I . t las* - i »f Al«ace had many dit.fi ¡Every posaihh* pre. anti >n was taken ». guard again t air demoiistra n >f tre Frem ii ii.it..>ibu •:• it, i '. hough the children wore allowed o learn the language ol their an- -rstors, they wci< not allowed to I»- aught it by Firm h in- ru< l<«r«. rim following mntatv >'» tmlii .it«' he extent to v. Inch th«' •overnim’nt 'arrictl it- practi««' <«f watching the leople; Icelanders and Inuit. Ic>'»mb r* have a w.i> of their owu fur taking snuff The »nuff i- made into l>ur* after the manner of plug tobacco and is »old in that shape t<> the ti.lines. nearly all of whom .ire addicted to it» il*c .in«l prefer it thn> prepared The Ice- ■ • ' ■ . • bund thumb to grow long fur the purpose, and when u»mg the snuff • -ntches it off the bar with hi« nail tm the bac of Ins left band and applies it to hi* nos«. 'of at i the phen lUlfU na that coiifront ! us h * tüí* tilt» i nature timi t' <■ i tail oí th«' cu inH . visible through ' »uch a vast ti ' «* f «pa-.-«-, is on«' of the :n>-t tr,i' ’1* Jhi Wilt of object ». net is tinu-h more The t.l 1 f ll." ■ ■ ' : tram the garth's st at it- lirai would m ■; »here, as t ‘ illl i ««piiqiir curtain i III b ulk a> t r- ■ •tur» ari MN- ii alm wt as «ha linci li thro gl ll tl lf' coiio't*« tad as ut <ii<>»p(i<re orni nod ap- 'i u «th th«* ut nost rapidity v back utn '■dilv awav from like a courtu»r <>ut of the Snaskm* Personal. i “ What kind <>f u fellow is thit « doil which was dre- .-I in r«d. man ll«>!i. hv ?” a.«kc<l th«' travel- . a - ll -.i ■ i ill of the corner gr.M .-ry i .he ofli.-ial were ar.nts.'d, for it «•er- man. lardr was <Ir>- d/tll to «<••> ti >' . ' ■ “I! inc-t n- the day is Ion.-,” as if tir«' G«-rm ll. empire «<• Gnd!v i ! i » it lhrratene«l. The child a i« tra> *«-l »' .<-.*• I ! ' ,»» “ll'iW «lo voli I I or thi«t I • I- o it. lion»*, nml th«'r>' tin i. !«« er earmd that the <|.>il wm« n pr<«. nt i “Ile sava -o him-elf But, sp He immvdiately procc«-d.-d to the in' per-oiiu!. I'd advise intere roman »lot had gi «-n ,t to the > hi d part i-« t«» k iep an ev«> on in«i obt iin«’«! the addr. -* of the after -ai.down." -t’levolatul I .hop where th«- dangi'rous plaything lb i!, r A*8tr«ng- Survival. It i< illegal tn sing, hum or whis tle the “Dead March” outside of u church or a cemetery in England. At one time this law ret) •truth enforced, and even today a «oldier found guiltv of singing or otherwise rendering the famoi s march other tl an nt a military fn neral would la* ••v»rr>lv censured. l.ld I mi -H IxlUgilt It w.l .. >»-i-l< -t L.FE IN THE ARC..C. tittle «•«l.lbli-.lli-«-lit, hilt the «>•’ er An Adventure In a VY a's’oit end • futind it nt la«t m ff tli«'n «!:■ ->v A Flight Dowwn a Mountain Sid* In Night of •red that till doll hud lx en lll.tde Front of a 8nuwol«do- Mr II if Uh ? ri» . i <!opt- and «Ire*-«'.! in Ixipxig. Tin« wns n That living alone in the high surprise, but the v rerdnl not end •d l! • i I l> -l<- of ilfr .. ”>| mountain« in a tiler is not nc- •» In r-', for th«- tranuf.i tnr-r m I.« ip- shared with th«- native* their daily sunlv monotonous t!rs experience, lig wa« otlii lully reqtiv-tcd uot t • privation« ami llieir duiigvrs. till« «Ic-cribed by Mr E. A. Mill« in «end any more red, white ami blue in In« <«k, ' limit.iik* U itn the E» "The Spell of the Hockics," suffi lolls ll» Al met*. kiinn»,” tin* itorv of an adventure ciently proves. Going into the Sen in mi op« ti w li„li')»>at mi arctic 'I he o'lu r ■ t rr is ll. it tv •> «!< r Juan mountain- during the firat nmn< were walking one .•old d.ir <m seas aii'i of tin- unhappy night week in Man ti to Icurn aoniethmg the banka of a large p ml when which foll-'uisi on l.md: of the luws that govern snowslide«, niv of them fall in. Ii«« < >ui<l not st if brci'/e was blowing, an-l he climbed on ski* well to the tup «wm and rirsm- l for nd. I W -Il we p, -<d tu. ..Ill Iltxo c uf the range. Thoiijnd» uf tun» of ither, who was an odicer, <ii«l not Etuh it |w-K «-pt.bly incrvas d SmG snow that rovered the precipitous fr«-l incliiicil to tai«' so cold a were *<-t and we wore making good peak« were ready to plunge down plunge and > ilmly riut. lied the . progr«--» wlvn. without warning, a and sweep the very spot on which struggles «if the «inking .•nan. All puff broke the step it hu b held the lie stood, \lniost U< fore be realix it Ollc«' the mull in ill«* wal>- began tn. -t in place, ami la-fore tin- -ml cd I iis danger th«- snow on the up to »mg a ver»«- <>( tin- "Maro-iF <-ot:ld la- low« rr<l two laxir«!« Hi tile per st<q p<-s suddenly flew up as if lai»«-,” urn! th«1 offi< .-r jiimp. d in la>tti>m of the la>.tt split, and the from <m explosion. A general Elide forthwith, fur h>« »tru ' >>n - w. .<• boat la-gan to leak «<> ) mi ..:> that I had started. j to urre«t any per« >n whom he lo-iin! fcaretl it would lid with water m l I whirled, pointed my »kis down in..'." • tl t | .-a •-»..• I nil- sink (for it wn« lictivily loaded) be- the slope and went. In less than fortunate cihz . ii was imp. i»..*i«-«l for fore we could mule the nv.'ire-t half a minute u tremendous »now •ight months, but that r. <- i>< tier Inml. which w«> headed for nt m.<r. n \ a lune lie. I sms or perhaps ?<>0 feet than dr«»wmu-'.■ X«-w Y >rk I'r. •«. F«»rt.ine favored ns. however, and, deep utid 500 or <>00 feet long, thun although crew aril outfit got a tlior W>lh>a Celli»»' Fat Villa.n dered over the spot where I had ough s'laktng, we readied shore Hero i> it »torr that wa- t«>ld hv L^ suïl I a . stood. Th< re was no chance to dodge, Hail < ame eonii-rnmg Wilkie < ««I “Although the temperature wa« no time to s Innb out of the way. dim: "The most sun«---ful charac- but 31 <!."_';< ■•«. the . r u.i» cutting, My only elinucv of escape lay in out • ter ¡n ‘Th«- Woman In V>',.it< un» ami I wn* «liilii-d through with the n«>t a woman, but a man I'«>*<<>, runtun/ the »'ide wetting. In vic* of thia, ll-«' *tcii<l . As I «hot << r<>ss the lower part of t «• fat rilla n. \\ <- ii the l<- k wa ily mi reusing gale mid tin- fuel thnt was talking the ridge, about to plunge idtndly produce«! cvervlxxlv we luul no facilities for nuiknig re Wlul- the into the gorge, I thought of the pos about the fat villain. pairs, it was decided to walk buck author was staying with hi« mother sibility of liecomtng entangled in to E'eli and return in the morning, <1 to the hedgelike thickets of dwarfed, a visitor came. The ladr if weather furore«!, to iih - ih I th«.' Ths Great Amaxon River. i Collins: gnarled ti.ni»r line t.ee». I also Ixi.it mi l resume our journey. Six “ 'You M«em to lime m.ide a great In South as in North America realized that I might d i«h against a miles it was over the lull«, uml a nature tiw» her work on the prund cliff or plunge into a deep canyon. i «ma-«’«« with to.ir li'.un m “ I'll«- hard «it mile«, too, u! loig.'i the W oui . ui In Wi'ite." I Imre r »1 the scale, and one of her nofivat Of course I might str ke an o|w-n i - xi r> -e was m-«-de«l and w ■•o|c»«»iiir. achievement» is the Amazon river. way, but it was certain that I could ' mi •». I hare -tndiid tin- villain, “ I’h.it night I will long remem 'but he i« not half a rd 1 .mi You Rising in the Andes, it Hous acroa not «top or ace the beginning of the ber. With every minute the wind the contim-nt and discharges into gorge or tell what I should stride lon't k'l-er a r< d rillnri, nml f incrciU I m velocity until it at next t-nie you r.ant t<> do ii villain the Atlanta ocean at the equator. wheu I «ent over the c«!ge. tained the proportions «f n terrific •i, ■ to me, 11 ■ ■ The vastnes« of the area which it As 1 shot through the air I hail gale, uml ut the same time the tein- drain*, amounting to 2,368,000 a glimpse down into the pointed I Imre gut om* con-tuntly in my i«erature fell rapidly. The roof got »•ve — in fact, it is my own hualuind:* square miles, will tie evidcut when snow laden top« of a few tall tir l.Mwe, ami we cmle.ivnrcd to fix it. "Wilku- t'olli i« often to!«l this it is borne in nnud that this is more trees that were firmly rootcvl among Then th«' Stovepipe bl«'W off, and III »tor«, but wilhlu'l«! th«- nil'll»' of the than the urea of |{u»aia in Euro|xr the ro< ks at ttic bottom of the the gale it was found impossible to and Austria-Hungary. It has a gorge. Luckily, 1 cleared the gorge Indr. It wit» th«* w if«« of Sir Ed- get it hi place again. At length, Btilwer Litton. ” ward length of nearly 4,000 miles, is nav- and landed in a pla< c where the only partially clothr«l, 1 hud -to igablc for *.’,300 miles from the sea snow was unbroken. climb out on the r<x>f to hold that Tha Curia o< Srotlaed, and is fed by numerous stream«, The heavy slide thundered after nine hi place until it couhl lie secund Among tin reasons why i which in any other country would me with umliminishcd sficed and of diamonds ha« l«c«-n < all« «I the and in the process was half frozen. be rauki-d us great rivers. In the came crashing into the dead trees curve of S<oliami lire the follow i ng: Then, as a last straw, the fire went wet season, which lusts for about so close behind ms« that broken Diamond«, nine of, culled th«' out. The only way then to get eight months, it» w dth varo-s from luubs went tlymg past me as 1 shot curse of S-otinml, from a Scot, h warm was by retreat to my sleep five miles to 400. No wonder the down off a steep moraine. member of parliament, part uf ing l«ag. and so the night passed." Amazon has been called a gigantw- At the b -ttoin of the moraine 1 whoae family arm« i« tiic nine of reservoir rather than a river. was force«! between two trees, flung diamond», voting for th«- introduc off my lailunce, and my left ski tion of the malt tax into *- «tlaml Why Ms R-tused. «inavhcd against a tree. Two fret — “Chronology ; or. Tlo' Hinman'« The following program wm given be \\*lnle the late Eugene Held was of the heel were l«r»ken off an«! ths* Companian,” Fourth Edition, by fore an appreciative audience at the yet a struggling newspaper man he ' remainder split. The slide did not Thomas Tegg. Lomlon. I*<.’•> Christian church, last Thursday, eve once accepted an invitation to din slow down. 1 could hear the rocks There i« n Georgi* Campi» ' m«-n- ning: ner from a woman famed for her and splintered timbers in its mass tioned in Burton’s “History of S< <>t- epicurean art. Among the rare «ong. America, !e«l by school chorus. grinding together and thudding land * a* having canard the nine of dainties stirred were strawberries, Invocation, W. H. McLain. against the olwtruetions over which diamonda to Im called t ■ ir»<- of which, being out of season, were ex l»uet. Just Before the Hattie Mother. it swept. I threw away my staff Scotland lie. .io- he stole nine '11 1- ceedingly axpenaiva. Addreaa. Rev. J. M Morris. and “let go." I simply flashed down monda out of the rovai crown in Field passed the costly fntit Solo and pantomine, Star Spangled the slope, rounded a cliff, turne«! the reign of Mary Stuart, in <-on-e- The hoetesa noticed the incident awkwardly into Aspen gulch and qtlence of which «II S<>t It nd wua Hanner. Mrs. <’. W. Warner and Em ■nd was disappointed. meline Carwon. tumbled heel« over head into safety. taxed. “0b, Mr Field,” she said, “you Song, school chorus. Then I picked myself up, to see the don’t care for strawberries?" Tail •< th« CAmet. Duet, Tenting Tonight. slide go roa'.ng by within twenty imr1»®- 1 never eat them in Benediction. W II McLain. wonderful It IS our *>f the feet pt me RACING AN AVALANCHE. MEMORIAL EXERCISES I ’ LETTERS FROM OUR j ? coomr | i CORRESPONDENTS 9 Saoliao Farm Tames Art (¡ii ix'S of St. Johns haa a man hauling th«' 500 cords of oitk grub wo « h |, cut on the M. C. Gaines* furin, to Cralitrc«« and loading it on the cars for «hi|>- im nt to Portland. Cecil < ’mines and wife of Provi dence were down Sunday «>n a vi .t with Yin. t’rutnes* mother, Mr ti«-«». Bilyeu, and called nt th«' Fat in for a supply of berrien. Mrs. Annie Gaines and daugh ter Hazel of St. Johns, also Mrs. 1. ..I <’. rues «if Portland, were up the (al w«. k <>n a visit with the former’s sister, Mra. .M l’. Gaines a id retun «•<! h°me Sunday. \\ i'.ii«' liife they calli*«i ever for a ipplv of lurries, Mrs. M. (’. tiaim sav I mother. Mrs. Poin dexter, went with them and will vi it with Mrs, Anni«* Gaines. Mr. and Mrs. Price Neel of Scio, spent Sunday with the Int- ter’s sister, Mrs. Roe Shelton of Racoon Hollow. (¡«■o. Bilye't ami S. W. Gaines are i-ontempliiting a trip up to the Brightinb-i-h h .t spring» as they I «' of but little account at home or any pin«’«' «'Ise. They think of staying until harvest. John Davenport of Roaring !liv« r wa.. down l<> th«« Santiam I arm Friday fora load of hay. lie ha ien a|.|M>inted tir«' war den for th«* Roaring river to the Cleveland rock, where he has to mnk«- daily trips to and from the rock, a distanc • of twelve milea. They will have a telephone in stalled at Ch'vciand rock so as to notify any out break of fire at abort notice. B -ri i«' • Santiam Farm, straw- berries in the patch 20c, gath er« ■ I 21K'. (;>>>:.clM«rries 20c on bushes, gathered 25c. Logan berries and currants in season. S. W. Gaines. P ie E ater . S dc ¡al Clnbbing Offer to Onr Oil Soo- sobers and Their rnends The year 1*12 Is U> be ihr moat Im- l»>it« t year in our history. H<-»lilra gr« nt aclivitiea in th«- Northwest, a pr< .»lent ««f the t’nit«-d State« ia to be elected. Keep up with ttw new« of the world by taking advantage of one of our «fxx-ial offer». Our offer: The Daily ar»t Sunday Ore- gonian, 12months, |X.00, -antiam New» 12 monuha ILS», total |2.2f>. Both may be obtained for a limited time only for tM.00 which ia the aub- acription price of the Oregonian alone. To those not desiring to take the big Sunday Edition of the Oregonian, wr have thia offer to make: The Daily Oregonian 12 month». <M j ; The Santiam News 12 months, (1.25, total 17.26. Both may I- had for a limited time only for *COO which ia the subscription price of the Oregonian alone, In other worda, you arc receiving the Oregonian and the News for the price ot tne Oregonian. Don't fail to take advantage of this special offer. Send in your remittance today. Try the News for fine job printing. Prices reasonable.