PAGE SIX THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON Tuesday, September 16, 19 19 Your Bath Room- Is u most important room in your house and its ;-o)cr equipment will add greatly to the pleas ure and satisfaction you get from it. It there is a room in your house that should he convenient it should he the bath room. In our store you will find many things that will add to the convenience of the bath room and you'll wonder at their modest cost. People's Hardware Company ll TT-V ft -7TP A A TT I t. . . V. . iV.u siAXvCw. . AV.'.V.-Xv.V,', V.V.V fit.' . -. - S I-- t i ; , r I 4' I 1 I 1 r Jf IF ? M rtfi fir lSftvI"p f H . gj It A BOSTO.V VIEW OF THE LKAGIE THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON SCHOOLS AND DEPARTMENTS Tim ITtiivnntlty include tlie College of Mtratum, Hciwnoe u!l the Art, and the hpwUI Bohemia i,f twiw, M.iieine. tat Portland) , ArrliittctiiM, .Toiiruaiwm, Com mute), Ediicatiou and Muaic. 6PE0IAL FEATURES A beautiful cnmptu, facu'ti'-s of spcrial tsbi, ni'Ml'-m funilitU'H, low cwt, with loan cupurtuniUeB for nclf-hidp. "athletic fur everybody," a really ''mtjerati! Rtinuspheio and the famous "Oregon hpirit" For a fiatalomip, Iltnst ratyrl booklet or upwiffo Information, afldrwa: THE REGIS! RAR, UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, OREGON. i, li ft I It's Senseible Economy to Buy Bread These Hot Days NTo woman can afford to ruin her health and personal appearance fussing around a hot oven in the summer, when she can ge HOLSUM BREAD Fresh Every Day We've many other items on our shelves too, n that will save you the necessity of cooking B these hot days. Come in and let us make a suggestion tor a lunch today. Sam Hughes Company '-UN. i-ji. If1 J 1tV BE A LEADER . - . -. . 4 i . . An ('hi; 'iutlt-m in reconstruct i.m coiifrmm ttir present nrnt-r.it ion. At.- ,J nui your utmost ti pirp irr to !e.i t in its solution? A L, ..... . . fr?g Oregon Agricultural College niPMii f.MMMiii .,miivmi oim'ihik rommv phhua'v miic. Hi (II.ISU HIH'I rillN CIVII Nl.lNIHINO klll'TKII'tL kNK.INtSHINO. MitSH M. (S'.IMIKISn t'MVMICM. 1 N .1 N H 1NO I N lU S t H I L Bt. MININ., KNk.lNlkWINu. Ul.l.INU Nl.lNHHINO MILtTAHV ItllSlI Is I - t .r-SHr. (a B.i.,h R. ...vwi. t 4ft M.iKm.H-. Mltft L"w.fjM. ..' I I...' ... IfJKMil hdiiti k.in..i mn4 ill fwnl.m d ! tdMMI Tlu-f ren'iUr terms Full trrm tKii.ns September 21. 1419 r 7 ii i iVi I ""i,",' "' !i "; V'.'i'i iibi!' mi l ii mm' till UlulllllAH 0 n A4'a .! u.l I-,. 1.. ..I... f7V r - ...-J" - ltJVlJ ! ! ittttftt(iit:::rt Al Maidan. a New Street KOPI.E are npt to be disappoint eil in niiydiuj, but this is not un natural unless one bears elearlj in mind that what one sees to- duy is a conipuratirely modem Turco Aialiinn town and not the city of ro mance of Arabian Nights entertain ments that one has probably imagined. That old Bagdad, or rather l)ar-es-.Sulam us It was originally called, was built in the year 7ti.' A. I), by Al Man sur, the second Abbasid caliph, out ot the ruins of the city of Ctesiphon. It saw its palmiest days in the time of Caliph Iluroun-ul-Kascliid, the fifth of the Abbasid line, who nourished from 7SU to 800 A. D. The city soon after this came to Its end. I The caliphate was for political rea fons moved to Samarrah in 830 und when It was brought back again to Iiagdnd lu 81)2, n new city was built on the opposite, I. e., lcft, bank of tin Tigris, n mile or two downstream from 'the old site. Of Dar-es-Salam nothing now remains but a few indistinct mounds, says a writer in the Times of India Illustrated Weekly. It cannot even be said that the new capital of which we lmve just spoken Is the lliigdad that we know today.. The site lias remained the Mime, but' of tlie city there Is now nothing above ground that can be Identified as being nearly as old as H'.K. lingdad has suf fered more often and more severely from destruction and decay than Ku ropcun or Indian cities, even taking Into account such Incidents us the great tire of London or the sequence of events that hits produced the seven capitals at IMhl, or the cheery habit of the old Unman emperors of pulling down the buildings of their predeces sors lu order to build liner ones for themselves. Twice has Itiigdud been sucked: In 12." 8 by the Mongols under Ilulnkii Khan and again in 1 100 by Tamerlane. It has been besieged many times ami Hooded still more often. hiich a life would lie bound to tell on the constitution even of a well-hullt city and lingdad was not that. It was built with Inferior building material und us often us not with inferior skill, and lis sufferings have entirely cluing I'd It during tlie course of time. Few Old Bjlldlnfls Remain, i liow thm-iiii'dd) bad tin- eoixi ni.'tlor of .nun- buildings lins Itt-t-n - m.uv par ' tleiihiriy In iinid.-ni times tuny bt j J'ld:-ed from the f-e that two I irge I mlii. us Is In lunging i ene ,,f the j liniMiies of the illy, which ivith built j within the memory of the inhabitant ! of U 'ii.Iiid. have already lnl their top ' Htnriet. r.ut liy, ,,f enur-ie. U en ex j Heme cMnnple. On the other hand j I here l the Khan Aiirtinah, a large brick vaulted luilbllr In tlie ceni. r of I I he city, which Is, In Its wny, n w.in dcrful ii piece of coiiMnictloit m one j can see Hiiywheri-. II was built In MV.i n ml Is still In u and In envl i.b-nt preHervHllon. Tho MarliiMlynh I nioiiie, close by, nml having n- part , of Its endowments the Ini-oine ! i ivtsi from the Khan Aurtniah, Is mother ! line old Imlldlnf. It was built two I years befori the Khan and Is nf eon sldernble architectural merit. A few fragment of an curlier date are in lie found In different purls ot the city. Home- sirtlons of the old fort lfli-nt Ion of niutblr. fur eam pie. and III pernth century tultmrets of Suijal-tihsil and of the (Jntnnrtynh nnuupie and. at any rate-, iumie of the silt of the old Mustansarlysh rsilh-fe (eleventh esHitorj) insy be mentiimed. Hut there r Do other old hiilMtnc a roioplet as the khan and ihr Uionpie. Beiutiful From a Dittanc. Apart fnun Ihrse few essini lisi of an i-nrllcr "-rlisl, the licl,i. . know tmlsy Is of the vrntwnth ir eluhl-e.-nih and suc.wilitig reiitiirl.s. hli-h In terms of arvhlt Hire U . ua imrs lively nosleru. Juilgr in i! i. pht ti,-iiai la not dlAiliittiK. Ii U i Mrttetilsrtjf for a Meos'n .tn town ipilte a ilctihtful place, t rein the dla Through Center of Bagdad. tance It presents a most attractive pic ture. From miles away in the desert one can see the green mass of Kagdad flouring In the atmosphere and as one approaches nearer along the dreary, dusty track, its colored domes and gilded minarets can be distinguished showing above the palms and trees. As one enters the town most of this is lost to sight and one finds oneself in a narrow winding street. The walls on either side are usually viry bare. Every now and then one passes a door, sometimes plain, sometimes quite ornate with jolly brass door knockers. Above, from the first floor are pro jecting oriel windows, these, too, vary ing from plain brick and timber to carved wood of great richness with pierced screens, often of very beauti ful design. Hut be they plain or fancy, they cast a pleasant shadow on the roatl beneath and Incidentally block out from view except for a glimpse here and there, the domes or minarets which were so noticeable from outside, the city walls. Out of the maze of these narrow streets one would never emerge had It not been for the kindness of the Turk, who very thoughtfully cut a hronc' roud right through the center of the town In commemoration of the full ot Kut. Now, In our day, we uso It for the main stream of truffle. But the most charming feature of Bagdad Is the river front and this alone Is sutllclent to compel one's ad miration for the city. Basra in com parison Is all mud and shipping. Amnra is pretentious with a row of buildings of uniform design facing on a promenade, which reminds one too much of a terrace on the "front" of a small seaside resort. Kut Is pic turesque too, hut designed on a scale befitting Its size and ImiMirtance, and with Its mosques and public buildings, the palms and the trees ami more es pecially the numbers of delightful rlv rsldo houses, with their verandas ti ml balconies nnil their exquisite little gar dens overhanging the river, Bagdad )ms a character und a charm nil Its o-, u. "The League Covenant, prefixed to the treaty of peace, and now awaiting ratification, may have among its arti cles, some dubious propositions, and even possibility of risk to national security, but it is unquestionably the greatest document of political ideal ism and the most Impressive evidence of tlie world's desire for deliverance from the curse of war, which human history has ever recorded. Obstruc tion of its endorsement is to be ex pected from those who are concerned for nothing but their own immediate profit, or who fancy that they can save America and abandon the rest of the world to chaos. 'Short sighted self-interest, parti san policies and national'provincial- ism are the natural enemies of mag nanimous statesmenship. The view of religion is the precise opposite of all this. It holds that men walk not by sight, but by faith; that the things that are seen are temporal, and the things that are not seen are eternal. Whatever be the differences among" the churches, tlhey unite every day in the prayer that the Kingdom of God come on earth. In a sordid, selfish, shut-in world, they represent the re ality and efficiency of idealism. "Now. t! t Leaui; Covenant defi nitely represents this '.ew of life. Its proviilcns may n . be- immediately realized; its progiam may be amend ed; its responsibilities cannot be free from risk; but in a degree without precedent or parallel it expresses the faith of the nations in a hitherto un realized fraternalism; the great hope that the world may be diverted from armaments and bloodshed to concllu tion and peace. Of all the schemes of statesmenship whic'n the world has seen, this is the nearest approach one might say the only approach to fulfilling the prayer. "Thy Kingdom Come.' "Whatever, then, other people politicians, traders, little Americans or scoffers may have to say of cliis instrument now awaiting approval, there should be no doubt in the mind of the churches and their ministers. The course ot events has thrown destiny of the world into their hands. The" horrible experience of war has compelled statesmen to attempt a scheme of political idealism. What the churches have been praying for, with scant hope of realization, is act ually, and on a vast scale, proposed to the nations of the earth. If then the churches and their representatives do not accept this chance for promoting. 'however imperfectly, the ideals which are their chief reason for existence, it is likely to be the last chance they will have in this generation at least, to prove that they mean what they pray." Boson Herald. YOUCANTBEAT 'EM These cooling fountain 'rinks Ice Cream Sodas Lemonade Soft Drinks Cigars and Tobacco The ysure hit the spot these hot days make a "fellow feel just like work too. Try one then you'll know. McAtee & Aiken "Get this straight" says the Gocd Judge The tobacco tl;at ive9 you ihc mont tasting chow is the kind that saves you money. You don't have to take so many fresh chews. The rich tobacco taste stays right wi'.h it. Thai's why you take a snidllsr chew. THE REAL TOBACCO CHEW put uj in tui s.'j.'t j RIGHT CUT 13 a short-cut tobacco V-B CUT is a Ion fine-cut tobac PL hit ' ...1 III III CLO LONDON MADE MODERN Circumstance Under Which the Trav. , eler May See All That He Hat ; Traveled Far to See. St. Eiheldri'dii. In j:iy phice, Hot- , bi'r.i. London, I one of the old city tl'smlie tibniit which Hbkilix ihvliir d ii full half of hi pb'ilHiire In them nroe from their mystery. That they exUled In the dtre.-ti of London win a siilllclent xiitUfncthm to him. but po iilbly he would Iihvo ndded St. Kilu-i-ilredii tn the IIm of the three fiimu old churches h tinmen he admitted wer household words. If, on lilt nlRht abroad hp hnd heard the wnteh- I mini rry the hour, lis L'theblrisla'a I wntchninn d"n to this duy. old Lon don, lurking op byway and round 1 corner, I will to be dlscnvcivd by the rurtou who carry the Inntrrn of a certnln knowlisliienblenes. The cry, 1 "Past ten. past devrn." from the watchman nf the church with the 8m- 1 on name, lying off I lolls. rn with It asphalted pavement and motor buaea, ' bear wUdpm lo the asacrtlon. La wj It Laeted 47t Year. A lawsuit retarding Khodcslafl min ing right, which baa reached Ihe bouse of lord la Ita fourth year, la quit a legal Infant when emupared with aum that have preceded It. The Thellusmm will cas, for example, dragged out In the murta from 1TU7 to 1V7. Another almllir act loo at law, drown a the Ulnbop Ivmctra will rase, lasted 122 year. Kvrn this. how. ever, la ot record, for tn 1!" there waa as-tiled at Frlitua a lawsuit that had been In profit- alttre li-XI. The raising nf dam wa the point at Issue and It occupied the court fur ructlj t'i jeara. Farmers Exchange of The Inland Empire 1. A. McMcnnniin and I;. K. liruwn Rtioms 5 and 6 Roberts Tl(!pf. Hqpner, Oregon Consult Us Tor Auction Sales Realestate Income Tax Statements Insurance See Us Before You Sell Your Wheat l'honc or call for Information