THK GAZKTTE-TLMES, KEPPXER, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1918. PAGE TWO HOMING INSTINCT OF TOADS Like Pigeons, They May Yet Be Mad Useful Beater of Messages, 8ay Naturalist Annies may yet use toads a mes sage bearers In place of carrier pi jseons if this incident related In a let ter to the editor of Every Week 1 found to have general application: "P;il!ns Lore Sharp, the naturalist and writer of nature books, told me th:it hoptoads possess the homing in stinct. Take one awny from the spot where It has always lived and he will return, even though yoa have carried him ten miles.' said Mr. Sharp. "I it-solved, theu, to try an experi ment with Toddy, the hlg toad who lisis made his home In my garden In AVi'kt'ld for the past five years. WKtuu' my mime on a tag. I tied It to T --1;Iy's hind leg and took a train to Ti.wtnn. Then I transferred to an ele vated train which carried me to Chrles!ov.n. on the outskirts of the city. At the corner of Terklns and Haverhill streets, Charlestown, near the B. end M. signal tower where I rim employed on night duty, I let Ted fly out of the box. He blinked at the lire lights a second or so, darted out his tongue and gobbled a few Charles town mosquitoes, and began straight way to hup along the side of the street to Mystic avenue. When he reached the corner he made a bee line for WaTcefiolii, hopping oft In the darkness at a lively puce. "It was just 11 :1!5 p. m. when I went on fliity at the tower and 8:20 when I reached home the next morning. Im p.g'ne my surprise and pleasure when, on entering the yard, I discovered Ted dy in his accustomed place, under the sill cook, against the side of the house, tailing a bath I presume after his Ir.ng, dry and dusty hop of nine miles. The tag with my name was still tied to his leg." SOMETHING MORE THAN "TOY" Quaint Old Legend Having to Do With Plow Is Peculiarly Appropriate ! Just Now. I There is a quaint old legend of Al sace, recalls the Christian Science Monitor, concerning a family of giants who, once upon a time, lived In a cer tain castle In the old country. The moral of the story seems appropriate at a time when the French minister of agriculture is making special ef fort to encourage the cultivation of land. The giants lived, says the legend, far from the peasants of the plain and one day the daughter of the house, who though quite a child, was already thirty feet high, strolled toward a' plain .and saw a laborer peacefully plowing his fields. She picked up the peasant, the horse ind the plow and put them in her pinafore nnd returned to the castle to Show what she had found to her father. "What you think is but a toy," said the giant, "is what produces the food which enables us to live. Put back the laborer and his horse where you found them." From that time onward, adds the tale, the peasants were never molested by the giants. Women Soldiers. Advertisements of Molly Pitcher of Revolutionary fame as the first femi nine soldier in the United States have appeared. Perhaps she was the first, but certainly she wasn't the only one or the last. There was Nancy Hart of Georgia, who took ten Tories prisoners; Debo rah Sampson of Massachusetts, who en listed in the Continental army, fought In battle after battle, her sex unsus pected, and headed military expedi tions; Frances Hook of Illinois, who served In the Union army during the Civil war; Frances Wilson of New Jersey, Mary Owens of Pennsylvania, Major Belle Reynolds of Illinois. Most famous of our Joans of Arc were Major Pauline Cushman, a Fed eral scout, und Capt. Belle Boyd, a Confederate spy, who saved Stonewall Jackson's army from destruction. All the women who won reputations bs soldiers proved themselves as brave, efficient and hardy as uny man could be. Here's wishing more power to their elbow ! Spokane Spokesman Review. Medicinal Literature. The London Lancet departs for a moment from the austere halls of sci ence to adventure into the fields and gardens of literature, though keeping one foot safe within the accustomed medical precincts. The Lancet dis cusses nothing less worthy than the works, writings, theories, maxims and : pleasantries of Master Francois Ita- j belais, the point being thut his diver-. sinns Into letters were simply part of his day's work as a practical medico. , Ho wrote, the Lancet assures us, not : for the untold generations of the fu-! ture, not for the delectation of our j own selves, but solely and strictly to i amuse, hearten and brace up the splr-; Its of his patients during the tedium j of their illness, thereby aiding hlsi cures and adding to his stature as a j member of the faculty. j Master Francois was a great bellev- j er In the therapeutic value of litera ture. The Lady or the Tiger? "George," she said, "before I give you a final answer you must tell me something. Do you drink anything?" A smile of relief lighted his hand some countenance was that all shy wanted to knowt Proudly, triumph antly he clasped her In his arms and whispered in her shell-like ear: "Anything r-Gargoyle. FAMOUS "FIELD OF BLOOD"' Said to Be Spot Juda Purchased With the Silver for Which He Sold Hi Master. Just outside the walls of Jerusalem, in the Valley of Hlnnom, is a rock; plain known as the Aceldama ot Field of Blood. It is the potter's field, purchased with the 30 pieces of silver for which Judas sold his master. Here for centuries visitors to the holy city, dying while on their pilgrimage found a resting place. Gray and barren, it is a desolate spot, solitary but for the chance vis itor and a few withered gray-clad monks from a nearby monastery. For a small fee, one of these ancient re cluses will show you the sights of the place. Caves and underground pas- sages, honeycombed with tombs, are cut in the rocky field. Your guide ' leads you down age-worn steps, cut perhaps in the sixth century, into crumbling halls. His torch casts flick-, ering uncanny shadows on the dniup gray walls. The place seems to re-1 sent your Intrusion; it Is the "place of sleep," the hall of the dead. On one side is the tomb of some warrior monk who followed the fortunes. of Richard Lion Heart of. England to the holy land, dying at the very gates of the city his master had hoped to con- quer. He must have died penniless, too, as so many ot these zealots did, acreage for winter wheat in Morrow else his bones had not rested in the county as follows: Minimum 41, potter's field. 190 acreSi maximum 52,700 acres, Near Aceldama is a ruined enamel tne season j8 favorable so lets forget house, said to have been built by the the fellow who is continually saying Crusaders for their dead. It is a turn- tnat the Morrow couutv farmer must bllng ruin. . nearly, thirty feet long by ' sow spring wheat and do even better twenty wide, with one side of naked ' ;hail tne maximum, rock. Beneath it are two of the larg-; The varieties that have given the est caverns, their rock sides pierced Dest re8ults over a Deriod ct years with tombs and shallow graves. In are Turkey Red, FortyFold, and the roof of the ruin are holes through ; Bluestem and in that order of im whkh the bodies of the dead were portance. Hybri(1 63 is ahowjnK owered. grEat promise and after another The l iehl of Blood is on the north- in ,.i,w it ,i.nH. eastern slope of the Hill of Evil Coun- cil woere ..: ition says the villa of t alphas stood, and where the chief priest and elders plotted the execu- SAVE MONEY FOR FARMERS direct Testimony Showing That the Woodpecker Should 3e Protected by All Agriculturists. We are assured on high authority Unit if birds were as numerous today :is they were 60 years ago it would meun a saving of many million dollars to American farmers. The sluughter of migratory birds is surely followed by the increase of destructive insects. Among the farmer's bird friends are the woodpeckers, especially the red licuded members of the species. In proof there is cited the following instance: A pair of them nested in a dead Cottonwood tree near an orchard. One day the observer watched them through a pair of glasses. The young birds were about half grown. - The parents made 06 trips in one hour, each time with a worm. It is safe to say that they saved 96 apples in that hour a box worth, say $1. If the birds worked ten hours a day. they were worth $10 to the owner of that orchard, or, In the three weeks the birds were in the nest $210. It is plnin, then, that no farmer can afford to kill a woodpecker. All Wrong,' Napoleon. "The dull, drab years of middle age," is the way a Y. M. C. A. work er classifies the period In a man's life from thirty-live to forty-five. He says that men of this age' are frequenters of saloons, that they are mostly mar ried nnd that they are not as desir able In the way of citizenship as the male individuals of seventeen to twenty-four, who-spend much time with their sweethearts, or the male Individ uals more than forty-six, for that after passing forty-five and presum ably surviving the "dull, drab yearx," a fellow turns his attention to things spljitual, generally to church work, nnd begins to live again. "The truth 1s," said a pawer of the rail, "this Y. M. C. A. gink seems to have lost, as a good many academic students of the saloon lose, the real solution. No bet ter explanation ever has been made or ever will be made than that men go to the saloon because they have no place else to go that gives them the same sort of unconventionnl welcome. They go there not because their years are dull nnd drab, but because the gregarious instinct calls them." New York Sun. Primitive Submarine. In the early part of the seventeenth century a submarine was successfully navigated in England from Westmin ster to Greenwich. The Inventor and navigator Cor nelius Drebel, a Dutchman enjoyed the patronage of James I, and the credulous king was only prevented from taking part tn a submarine trip by the assurance of some of his cour tiers that Drebel was "in league with Old Nick." The boat was so constructed that "a person could see under the surface of the water, and without candle lighj, as much as he needed to read In the Bible or any other book." It was also pro pelled by oars. Wgh Society. Miss Rlchen-Friscky My parents' wedding as very exclusive, doncha know. They were married in the Lit tle Church Around the Corner, In New fork. Miss Pooren-Sassy Pooh, that's nothln'. Mine went up In a balloon at the state fair and took the preacher with 'em, i Farm Notes by The County Agent Some time ago the county agent .vas notified to send out blanks to all owners and operators of threshing machines nntifvinc- thani tfiaf tliev were required to make a report on the acreage and amount of grain threshed. A number have' answered promptly while others are apparently not taking this request as applying to them. 91 farmers have reported harvesting 21,991 acres yielding 1S4.529 bushels or a little better than eight bushels per acre. With 'most of the winter wheat averaging from 12 to 20 bushels one can realize the advantage gained by sowing in the fall. Spring wheat iu some cases made as much as the winter wheat on the neighboring farm but the average must have been les thaa half in to lower the average t.a eight bushels . The National Council of Defense has notified the county agent to urge the planting of winter wheat for an increase of ten to forty per cent over last year but this urging hardly seems necessary after a glance at the figures given below. The Extension, Division of the state with the Farm crops department has announced the compared to the leader Turkey Red. . The famer , knoW8 hIs land win have mUe difflfnt In cnooslng the - r, ht and ncw the time to NO REASON FOR IT When Heppner Citizens Show a Way. There can ba no reason why any reader of this who suffers the tor :ures of an aching back, the annqy ance of urinary disorders, the pains and dangers of kidney ills will fail to heed the wcrds of a neighbor who has found rollef. Read what a Heppner citizen says: I. R. Esteb, says: "I am a strong believer in Doan's Kidney Pills and whenever I get a chance I recom-i mend them to others. I don't hesi tate to do bo, for I know they can't be beat. When I feel in need of a kidney medicine, I get a box of Doan'3 Kidney Pills from Humph rey's Drug Store, and in a few days the pain in my back is relieved and my kidneys become normal." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the Bame that Mr. Esteb had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y. Tum-A -Lum Lumber Co RETAIL LUMBER AND FUEL W. L.HOLMES, IV; gr., Lexington. Ore Years ago men asked the question: "Have you got it?" And, it was not so long ago that the usual method of making inquiry as to man's money was: "How did you get it?" Today, tomorrow and for all time, the quection will be: "How are you going to spend it?" Farmers, at least the progressive kind, will not be asked: "How are you going to spend it?", for the years spent in earning It wore ac companied by years of planning as to how to spend it. Mature plan ning of ones work invariably results in getting value for the' money spent. The first and most natural call for money on the part of the farmer is to improve the farm, for every dollar spent can bo looked upon as an investment: it is the farmer's way of expressing his con fidence in the soil that he has tilled. Real estate men devoting their energies to selling farm property will tell you that a well Improved piece of farm property calls for loss salesmanship than does the piece of property that has been neglected, for neglect in this instance has a tendency to create a suspicion that the property Is not a money producer. Money that you have saved can be put to no better use than to make not only needed, but necessary repairs. Farm machinery should be housed properly; steps should be taken to protect live stock against severe Winters; sidewalks of wood or concrete should be built from barn, dairy shed and other buildings to the home with an idea of keeping the mud out of the home. No more worthy improvement can be made at this time than to build a modern, up-to-date, convenient, step-and-labor-saving home. To delay building Is to deny yourself and family the comforts and pleasures you are entitled to. Labor should bring its fruits, and the farmer will realize them perhaps more quickly by building than will be the case with the average man. Too many farmers pui. off building through tiiior fall an to realize that each year spent in the old home robs them oi a year in the new home. In this respect, it has been hard for us to understand why farmers content themselves by living in the old home year after year, waiting until they are ready to retire, then move to the city See Lew at Lexington Irrigon Boy Takes In State Fair. Irrigon, Oregon, October 3, 1918. Editor Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon. Dear Sir:- Mrs. Shurte asked me to send copy of my story to one of the local papers for publication about my trip to the State Fair, so I will ask you to publish the following: "I took up the corn growing this summer as I could see a double advantage to it. Having taken up the pig club work, I had to have something to feed and fatten the pigs before could market them but did not think much about getting a freo trip to the Str.te Fair until our School Supt. Mrs. Shurte informed mo tt the County Fc.ir that I had the first prizo on my corn and a fre-, trip to th2 State Fair, not only that but a second prize on' my pigs tco. ily father needed me very bad to help out on the chores as we have six cows and other stack besides 25 pigc but he Eaid I must go and T did and sure enjoyed myself and learned a lot about corn and other tlm:;;3. T'ao speakers at meal times interested me and I tried to get every word they said. The corn Judge gave tho boyo a talk on how to Judge corn and how to select good seed. I got fitfh prize at the State Fair and am going, to try to do better next year. One afternoon we took in the sights at Salem, the Capitol Build ing, asylum and the penitentiary. Saturday morning we packed up our things and said goodbye to every body. I will never forget the good time I had and will do everything I can to get others to take up the club work next year. Yours truly, LYLE SEAMAN. Henry Smouse, extensive farmer of the lone section, was a pleasant caller at this office while in town on Thursday last. He has Just finished threshing his crop on the M. R. Morgan farm and received a yield from 12 to 18 bushels. Good rains have prevailed during the week in his section and he looks forward to getting his fall sowing dene undr most favorable conditions. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Barlow of Fairview were visitors in Heppner over Friday night. Mr. Barlow states that he has never saw the pasture in the fields better than at present in his neighborhood. The recent abundant rains have put tho ground in fine shape for fall work and grain now sown is coming along rapidly. i ' F. E. Bell, former Blackhorse rancher, but now a resident of the Spokane country, his postofflce being at Soap Lake, Wash., was doing bus iness in this vicinity the past week. He contemplates selling his Black horse farm, for which he has been offered a good price. Tum-A-Lum Lumber Company RETAIL LUMBER AND FUEL Large Shipment of Sheep to Seattle, J. W. Beymer disposed of 10 cars of sheep to Fra'nk Pennington ot Vappittish, Wash., the past week and 1 .he mutton was shipped out to the' attle' market on Saturday from the ' ca! yards. , Mr. Pennington was aklng the sheep to market via Top- pinlsh, where they would be de trained for feeding. He was accom panied by Frank Roberts. 1 FOR SALE A registered sow and boar, also some pigs ready to wean. 26-4t A. E. PIERCE, lone, Ore Wool Consumed in August. i Manufacturers used a million and a half more pounds of wool in Au gust than in July, 1918. August figures being 63, 900,000 pounds, grease equivalent, compared to 62, 300,000 in July. Monthly consump tion has averaged about 67,000,000 pounds, grease equivalent, since January 1, 1918. Stocks of wool consumed In Au gust in pounds, by classes, as given by the Bureau of Markets, were: Grease, 37,769,216; 4 scoured, 11, 732,697; and pulled, 2,014,544. The' reports show Massachusetts still leading in wool used, followed in order by Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Rhode Island, New York., New Hamp shire, Ohio, Connecticut, and Maine. According to the latest available information on wool textile machin ery equipment there are 6,377 wool en cards and 2,263 combs in the United States. The three firms whose reports are not included in the consumption figures- have a combined capacity of 15 woolen cards and 9 worsted combs. This, it is pointed out, shows that the consumption re port includes 99.7 per cent of the woolen machinery In the United States. How The Forest Service Helps In War. The Forest Service of the United I States Department of Agriculture Is ( mobilizing the country's forest re- sources for war by helping the War, ; and Kavy departments and munitions manufacturers get the kinds and quanities of wood needed for rifles, airplanes, wheels, and other spec ialities; finding out what kind and grades of wood are suitable for war ' time's special requirements; train ing inspectors of wood materials; improving timber specifications; and investigating and testing material, processes, and products U3ed in manufacture of war supplies derived In whole or in part from wood. It is also stimulating the production ot meat, wool, and hides on National Forest ranges; cooperating with EDITH A. THORLEY " TEACHER OF PIANO VOICE LESCHETISKA METHOD ITALIAN METHOD FUNDAMENTALS AND HISTORY OP MUSIC . rupu oi rortmnd (Joniemtory of Muiic or small town and build their final mansion, the enjoyment of which scarcely is in keeping with the many years of toil and sacrifice. It is not our intention to discourage home building by retired farm ers in the town, for we must have towns since they are the salvation of every farming community. What we believe in is this- that more farmers should stay on the farm, and with this In mind, their homes should be made more comfortable, more liveable. With an idea of helping our customers secure value received for the money they spend in home building, we are now propared to render prospective home builders a helpeful service; one that will eliminate the old idea that you have to build three homes before you gat what you want. It has come to pass that there is more truth than poetry in this statement, but sad as it may seem, it is due to the fact that the average farmer goes about building without proper forethought, which has resulted in a modern saying that hits the nail squarely on oullt " 868 are bullt' then. Panned; homes are planned, then It is not the idea of our Service Department to completely plan your home, for we realize that we can serve you better by incorporating your Ideas in a set of plans that will be practical in every sense of the word. To work your ideas into the home will result in your having a home that is yours, because it is like you and because it feels like home. You have home-making ideas and personality. Still, it may be difficult for you to express your ideas of a home to your contractor or builder, so what we dosire to do more than anything else is to help tell you why this or that should not be done. The important step is to make a record of these Ideas ; to draw them up in a set of plans so that there will be no misunderstanding be tween your carpenters or contractor, which method is the only one that can be relied upon or depended upon in giving you exactly what you have in mind. No charge is made for this service. The satisfaction resulting pleases you, and, as you know, we have always counted upon our satisfied customers to help increase our business. Do not wait until you are ready to dig your foundation, but come In , and talk over the building of your home in advance of the time you are ready to place your order for materials. Yours very truly, stockmen to lower losses from poisonous plants; aiding the Fuel Administration to increase fuel sup plies through use of wood; and is teaching the conservation of natural resources. It has helped recruit two regiments of forest engineers for ser vice abroad, and has contributed more than 375 members to the colors. PUBLICLAND COMPANY Successors of J. T. WILLIAMSON Township Plats. Land Office Work Solicited SIRS. J. C. WALRATH, Manager, New Foley Bldg, LaGrande, Or. Phone Black 1051. Cole's Original HOT BLAST HEATER Prevents colds and doc tor bills. Don't shiver and freexe. Dress mornings by the warmth and cheer of this remark able heater in your home. Dtcidt Today I GILLIAN & BISBEE HFPPNER OREGON No. 770 Main 535 Bill at lone