The Ione independent. (Ione, Or.) 1916-19??, November 21, 1924, Image 3

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    PORTLAND
Page
&CAn WE WANT
OUU Turkey & Fro-h Eeaa
ronianu, urrgon
eMallory
Select Residential & Transient
Ml aa TaatbfU, Portland. Orason.
Modtm Fireproof AmtrlcM Plan
RATM MODKRATK
Cash Every Day for Cream
MUTUAL CREAMERY CO., Portland.
nr
Q'.ync rMtarr.UirmkwkllMwIU. Offie. Stlaaronr.. 1 K. Braot.
JlZrO war honld. SBNOtOB CATA.Z5
HOME TREATMENT
for Chronic Disease
Individual Efftttlm ConwnW
Baek aaaa It sivao rmnnal attatiHon. Hit k
r afbVlaiit maailm kravoaad fur miIi (atltd
u. Tra.tn.anl liuad ua an. fcburatorr aa.
Baa far urinHuOi dtaamaaM bkuit. kkud laal
ahaatand full Inrora.
Da abllliaUua.
MnlC.1 HEALTH
tRSTITUTE
IwaetaSata M OifrmU
bimm ..a, Hull lit
OaluaM BM Waat
faf and Waahlna-taa)
lu.. patikMd. Unrw.
We Specialise tn
Baits, frits. Wst, Ktktir, TtJkw, Cue
Ortfot Griyt bat. Cm! Skat, Hint Ur
tkllo Tip A lataal Priw II
Portland Hide 4 Wool Co.
la soman! Man, naruat, mm
Braaak Paaatai., I44(
SHOP EARLY
and Avoid
the Rush
TAKE
BARK-ROOT
TONIC
A WU4 Laa.wv,
A tytum Bandar
And Avoid
Sickness
Al Ait
allaklo Draubtt
Dr. Lake, Divine Healing
ia fourth street,
Portland
Prostate Cured Without Ossratloa
Spatial attaoUaa Ataataak, Bawala, Banal
.tin rwtti iruullaa
!. K. A. PHILIOrt
Broadway BIJf. fartluA On.
Men, Women and Children Trested
M
Y non-turf Icel, soothing trsstment
fur ITst tad other KeCksl snd Co
loa dlooqNri li glvsn sansona from two
to over tlghty years of .go, thui proving
the mlMnttt of my satihoU.
Mr iucco In trotting thoutindi of man,
wvmm and chijdrtn aniblai ma to coa
fidtntlr OUARANTSB to cur any
cat of Pilot or rtrund tnapatltnt'ifaa.
My new Stattlt oSlcat an now preptrai
to cast lor patlantt from
Puget Sound and BrkUh
''A Columbia DlWrlrta. Sn
L. today for FREE book)
v'fgL,T TQL Wn
Unr fiTfirriraeATTii omtit.
f PMf WilHain. Bill III IkAr Ou
Three hundred Loulilao But uol
Tenlty freshmen whote heads vert
shared Tuoidny night by upper class
men went on a rampage Wednesday
and before things bad quieted down
bad Invaded the Baton Rouge blga
school, dragged students and tsaohsrs
L
t 7
Halt Funeral of Girl; Physicians Say She Lives
Parts. A pmillnr pathological rue
Is reported from Mile. A surgeon had
placed young time. Marquette, wlfs
of a weulthy riot It manufacturer, un
der chloroform preparatory to sn op
eratlon, when ha discovered that her
heart had censed to beat. He declared
her dead, and all preparations were
made for the Interment when a mem
ber of the family remarked that the
unnal aliens were lacking, the fact re
r W SiiMiisM sen 1 a,. 1 s
OFFERS A MARKET
FOR YOUR PRODUCE
Partita. Mm '
TAVoavitxa paofo-ptATs
OeanWta () SataWar, Alalia, Wats
tar kUaU.a, So.i BvniMa, Un. Oaallav
wUHl . dilHtw 18 mii Mm.
WrM. far Prtaaa
Cedar Che.ts ME? Tennessee Cedar
INFORMATION
DEPARTMENT
PUEATINO SPECIAL
Cut, am,
l.at aklrl
Uaanatllfhll
h.m anf mathlna 1 1 AA
I r.titr for band, el.ee
iair.tll.'hhif. pLotlna an lurking.
iASTaiN Novaut mfo. co.
life Kin Ktr..i l'prtlanc, Ora.
-... .... arii,
ywi riuiiui a tluraw natiONS
Clarka llrua , Klorl.lt, 117 Morrtton Mt
og. AiAMS SYSTSM '
for ail Caronlc DlaMMt, Madlaoa Bldf.
H6rfcAiAasiit-tBn.ai
iHchta traa. la I wa.ka. Nomt say
wnu iwwrniiia. r mum aornrao. wma
rar oaiaiucua. ll i Burnalda atraat, Part.
micto T(tuiirHrcTrd6r"
Trynka, Atito Irunka ia ard.r. Tfclrs
ami nna, roruariOj ura.
PLIATINO. HniiTiTrHiwn
BaHona, tMall.pla r-afl Plwt Ela, WWIa
SmMuhliii, tnlnnoary, feaUaa Holaa. AS
Va. fuaranlMt.
Smith riMHita ia4 fattea Warkt
. att a
IHoti lids.. fartUaa, Ota,
urn. all p, aiUI
Woana ani Ck.Ur.aj
rijTsirtA t Cf.Mw bms aoaosoit
iiriAuyiif: ot-TOkiiTaisT i .k."av;
OUaaM - PtM ih( Stti.la.rtM
ISS -.l.4 BUf. 0. Llama-WaUt
Maw rwaonlna M-thoKTlifm rroM ln.la.U7
fikasBW 1 ranr'. JbaUnaa, fattftjsf
HVDiR PRINTINa CO.
... Faaiura PrlnUn for laa
JIIJQiIrS Mlraat PrtljiiJ,Or.OB
AalatM ar tkoat taa aaa talk aaa aaal.
'Ir ar. SIOOO ta SI? o aa4 Ui. aal4
Aally. Soauiiimt . UaaS kr r.rr ataa
aaa ia anal onaint.
WrU I
IOI Oawk BM(., F.rUaaA Otafoa.
Par Hillaf Tit.
a)ii"TltTM SLI iaTWhllaVv'aWari;
Our Haputatlnn la mr fraal.at aawt
Pr. Kaana, Ul Waahlnf loo Sv, rorUaaf
AMERICAN BEAUTY SCHOOL
Oanolata InainiatHM la Baaay Draatk al tkta
IWrnlta la what wa aaTar aw IM.a Jm&
wHk aw UradaatM.
JM iMaSlrai Plrtg. JorOainSagoe.
NORTONIA HOTEL
ill S "o "I" ran aua- at Bam Ban
Ul I Sod tal Caavat-ltatattalt baa.
KtMllaat Can. Bnaalal Waakbr
ua a)., alt Ttalna. 1IU aa4 SMrk,
foKTUANU OHIOOH
ATTINTION I.AniSA,1 Tmn mmt
BaolUry kaaalf parlan wa fit r aol wa
atafca all ki4 af (air ataaaa aal af aaatUtaai
i?-"T,"k ! M:
S. rull anaiaa tl kaaalr aaltara, 110.
400 Paknai kailtlaa, ranlaaa. Orafaa.
HOTEL EATON
Watt Park aa4 Marrtana Hu.
Taka C.-r. rar al Dapot ta
Waal Park Btraat
Tka Baat Lecataa Hatal la
artland
I t . n hi 1 hi aai it uu aaaaa
IJIPfni b.aallad. Park S'Mt katwaaa
YOU WAIT A SHOW? Wi en hnhk I
Oranaatraa, Slnaara, rtaaaan, Cafaadlaaa, Uaai,
Sbabg
nttNiNr. Aim nvaiain
W r Mum. naMtaa uJ IW
A4m ewaai aaa n
l own.
INtMrmnrawnari
CMakHakaS ItM. Pankaaa. Ota
DRUGS UY MAIL
lf ataand rmi raw Praea ay auil-epaalal
m ssjej piTni srisui uauafp"
LAUk-DAVU BaUO OOUPANT
Traat taparu. 171 Tklrt St., Partkud, Oat
PWtkukl Bloat ttSt Mala SSM
Wig PHIS Hiie fTpBE Toupet
8n nan af Hair and Baaatr wark by aaatrH
anaabut Co.. IHIuk at., aaar Waa J1
from the rooms and cut the Lair el
three women Instructors, a number of
girl students and scores of boys. The
wholesale shearing process at the ua
rsrslty last night wm an annual event,
but he Invasion of the high soheel
was something not ea the fixed pro
gram.
raining Its color snrt the Ilmba Isck
Ing the rigor of death. Other phy
sicians were called, but none was able
to any for a certainty whether the
young woman was really dead or
merely In a trance. An eminent Tsrls
specialist line been summoned.
In all our Inmentatlons and regrets
pleasures bsvt been mixed up with
pains,
a'.aaa tM&OJif.GCWaimMiStMl.'&t '
Atr Poor fa tvtryfmf tin 75w '
MIS I I I VaiaIU
II L
'" II I
aaT'ba J afMn. tWIf. A
SaatBF A
Hoai'tsoai Z
fiB-aV" PwtmA-e.f
1toaf y4a
BARBARA,
"THE ALMOSr
GIRL -
By j. k. McCarthy
(a), Veabladar, Paat a Ca.)
TKKUAPS ths fact tl.at she was
J almost bora rich bad something
A. to ao wun 11, ner laiber iiavtng
lost all bis money about three
weeks before Uarbara lloltua came
Into this world. Or perhaps It Started
when the eager watchers discovered
her bslr to be slinost red snd ber eyes
te be almost grsy. As she grew elder
ber engaging little nose came nearer
and nearer to ths angle called Irish,
snd the points a here ber suites fo
cused In her cheeks came nearer and.
nearer to being out-and-out dimples.
And Barbara In due time was almost
short, and almost plump. Bo, no mat
ter how the thing stsrted, It was nat
ural enough that ber best friends
shoule come to csll her "Almost Bar
bara','' and that people to whom she
barely nodded on the street should
come to know ber ss "the Almost
Girl."
The name csme to ber so early snd
nnuly tbst It may actually have ex
erted an Influence ever her character.
There was ths time she came within
sn ace of pulling the teacher's hair.
The provocation, s shaking, was
peat, and Ilartiara had lifted eager
bands to within sn Inch of the tar
nished blood locks when suddenly,
perhaps without knowing exactly why,
ahe let her bsnda fall. I'eople who
witnessed this incident marked It
down as quite characteristic of "ths
Almost Girl."
liut the duy ah nearly kissed Jim
Brown, the tall young man ber broth
er brought home from school for a
holiday that was ths beginning of a
new life for Ilarbara. It wss that
dsy, or rather that atarry evening,
that her nlrkname, "Almost," began
te tske on a new snd vital meaning.
It waa Just Barbsrs's personal ren
dition of the old story, the stuff of old
songs. Intermission st the dance, sat
in slippers on velvet lawn, a maple
shielding from faint but InqnlslUve
stsrllght. Tli strong snn wss around
ber waist and seemed for an instsnt
quite properly there. It turned her
half round and drew her close. Sb
was seventeen no wonder ber lips
quivered ss her face llfttd np toward
bis Jim Brown's I Time bsd nothing
te do with It, anr dlstsnre. The kiss
wss within s mere shadow of a
thought of bsppenlng. The moment
couMn't hsve continued so much as a
flssh without becoming, wbat It did
not become, a kiss. For Barbara
turned her face, pulled desperately
snd wss free. The kiss hsd only al
most happened.
Barbara was s little flushed and Jim
Brown a trifle fluttered when the pair
returned to the dancing floor. A sharp
observer could note easily that some
thing wss amiss. And there were
Sharp observers enough smoeg ths
dancers.
It wss ten minutes later thst tw
of the fellows got JUn Brown cor
nered oa the porch.
"Hsd a wslk with Barbara Holtoo,
didn't your
"Ye.-
"She almost kissed yoo, didn't shr
111 IT, bsngl Jim's long arms shot
eut. Biff, bang, bump I One of the
fellows wss down, calling "Enough."
The other was making a record across
the perch. Jim Brown himself wore a
curious expression, a mixture of rage
and mystification.
A half hour later, evidently with
leas rage and more curiosity, Jim
sought out the two fellows where they
sst smoking on a bench. They looked
np at him uncertainly, but hi first
words stilled sny fear they might
have bad ss to his Intention.
"Excuse me, fellows. Msybe I wss
a bit hasty. Tou sounded disrespect
ful, snd there's not going to be sny
disrespect shown Miss Ilolton while
I'm on my feet. But msybe you didn't
mesa It like It sounded. WhsC did
you mean"
So they told him about the nick
name, and the reputation. And with
in an hour everyone tn the crowd
knew the whole story. It wss a great
Joke, everybody thought, and a nat
ural climax to Barbara's seventeen
yesrs of living up to ber reputation.
Barbara blushed when she found
the story wss out. Anybody could
see ahe was sngry. "As Ions as I
live," she announced, "I'll never speak
to anybody who calls me thst awful
name."
As for Jim Brown, shs refused even
te look at him, no matter bow many
people, Including her own brother, ex
plained to her that Jim hadn't said a
word. Indeed they told her that he
had punched the two fellows who
started the whole thing. These fel
lows themselves, contrite, came np to
show their marks, snd to explsln that
ths truth was Jumped art, and came
out without being told at all. But
nothing mattered to Barbara except
ths obvious facta. She hadn't told
evidently Jim Brown had I
There wss an end to It, and Jftn
Brown, whom everybody had. grown to
like, left town the next morning, look
ing as though h were stepping off the
edge of the earth. And people ssy he
gsve Barbara's brother a fine talking
to for not telling him more about his
wonderful sister snd warning him
about ber nickname.
I Of course Barbara, having been
known all her life as, the "Almost
Girl," couldn't get rid of thst name
by a mere rash assertion. People
were careful to rail ber Barbara for
a week er two. Then, one by one all
her friends went back te she eld
nlcknsue, and Bsrbars, In spite of
ber declaration, went right en speak
ing te them.
But during the year that followed
there waa a noticeable change la the
"Almost Girl." She grew up, mind
snd all. And Barbara, grown up, was
quite a delightful person. Two or
thres of the young business men found
her so, and must bsv told her so, be
cius they paid ber a let of attention.
When on of them, aa earnest, pless
snt chap, went sround grinning for
sbout a week snd then suddenly be
ams ss glum ss a door post, It wss
obvious that Barbsra wss up to ber
tricks sgsln. She bsd almost prom
ised to uisrry III in.
Nobody knew bow the psrtlsl rec
onciliation csme sbout, but a year
sfter the niglit of the "slmost kiss"
Jus Brown arrived la town. He wss
with Barbara's brother sgsln, snd now
snd then during the week thst fol
lowed Barbara sod be were seen to
gether. Jim smiled his heartiest, and
on might have thought he waa alttlng
on the top of the earth, I'eople no
ticed that Barbara, too, grew more
cheerful as the dsjs panted. Alt this
wss mighty Interesting to sn onlooker,
bees us It began te seem thst Barbara
would live down ber nickname after
all. snd do something more than mere
ly liiM.i. 1.1.. 1 r ilir hnndioTie ,T!m,
'i'berw ttun a si'vul iie.il "f rnti.iee.
ture, even a little betting. The night
of the big dance everyone wss excited.
Jim snd Barbara came late. People
who saw them oa the stslrs said Bar
bsra wss white, snd barely nodded te
them. Then Jim csme ento the dsno
Ing floor alone. He was solemn
hardly noticed anybody. The folks
were sorry for him, of course, but it
wss fate. Wssu't thst "Almost Esr-
bsra's" wsyT
Everybody wss quiet for a minute,
snd then a bolder soul spoke out:
"Well, Jim, she slmost msrrted you.
didn't slier
Jim didn't spesk st once, fie wslked
scross the floor snd stood within a
font of the questioner. When Jim
rslsed bis liead threateningly there
was sn audible gup from h dozen
girls' throats. But Jim didn't strike.
He Just spoke, snd emphs sized his
words with his hand.
"No, friend. be said. "Barbara
didn't almost marry me. Bat I guess
you msy still rail her the 'Almost Girt
for ahe almost dldnt msrry 'me.
By thai time Barbara, blushes, ring,
roses snd sit, sppeared la the arch
way. Well, the Joke was ea the crowd,
and what else could be done bnt pick
them up and carry them bodily te
tbetr train T And like enough the
Almost Girl" Is going to stick to Urn.
Bsrbsra Brown through life, for the
station wss a good mils awsy from the
dance ball, and sbe snd Jim slmost
missed tli trsln.
Wren Idea That Birit
Poiton Captivt Young
A belief, that seems as persistent
today as when Hood wrote "The Plea
of the Midsummer rabies," Is that
parent birds will deliberately poison
their rsptlv young. A correspondent
In a London paper practically begs the
question by Inquiring whst poison la
used for the purpose. Ha goes ea te
st:
1 bsve known several case. ' Re
cently a man took asms young gold
finches ent of a chestnut tree here and
cared them. The old bird came and
fed them. Me put tbeia In bla cottage
at night and put thm eut at S a. m.
Thia went on for over a week. Then
one morning sfter tbe old ones bsd
fed them they sU died."
The reply given Is to ths effect thst,
though there bsve been msny state
menu made with regard to bird poi
soning their young In slmilsr clrcum
stsncea, there does not appear to be a
morsel of scientific evidence tn rapport
of the theory. "It 1 difficult," the
writer remarks, "to Imagine how clr
cumstsnces would srls In nstur that
would lead te a development of such
sn Instinct, and those birds wblcb
killed their young would hive no de
scendants to perpetuate their habit
If the owner of fledglings, dying In
suspicious clrcumstsnces, would sub
ject the victims to a post-mortem, light
might be shed upon the subject It la
difficult to conjecture wbat poison
could be used for such a purpose, as
young birds are fed mainly on Insects,
and the older ones delight In the so
called "poisonous" berries. This being
the esse, we, ourselves, should be In
clined to acquit the parents and bring
In a verdict "Death due to natural
causea"
Snake At Unwutly
A snsks that found Its way Into a
boUow tree en the farm of Loa Atkin
son nesr UaytL Mo and then fed on
birds and other prey grew so fst It
could not worm Itself eut of the bole
through which It entsred several year
ago. It bad Just been killed after an
accidental discovery by the small son
et Atkinson, ssys a dlspstcb to the
New Iork World.
Tbe tree wss blown serosa tb top
of a barn during a storm and the boy
discovered the snske. Atkinson bsd
to chop off the side of tbe log to ret
tb body out after be killed tb
snake. It wss six feet lone and at
big around as a stovepipe.
. A Sly Dig
Awe el I" ssld the ballHs te the as
sessor when a youth was brought be
fort him for sotns trifling offense, "ye
kea we tnaunna .be ower hard on ths
puir fellow. YVt'were laddies since
oriels, and I soppoee I was at big a
fool as any o' 'em wbn I wis young."
"And ye're no an auld man yet,
balllls," ssld the assessor blsndly.
Boston Transcript, x I
600D1
ROADS!!
BIG VALUE) OF GOOD
ROADS IN ARKANSAS
The vslue of good roads bss beea
clearly demonstrated to the residents
of Phillips county, Arkansas, by the
recent completion there of 01 miles of
concrete pavement. The county l
largely dependent for ll prvre
untin the cotton and iwh pviau
crops. There are two sessons when
cotton needs extr labor, formerly
It wss the practice to hire negro fam
ilies temporarily, housing them os tbe
plantation. Nowartsjs It Is hsrd to
And families for this temporary work.
Last year the cotton crop waa saved
by hauling bus and truck losds of
women snd children from Helens te
the cotton fields each morning and
taking them bsck thst night Labor
ers would work thst wsy who would
not live upon the plsntstlon. With
out tli concrete rosds this transporta-
tlen would have been Impossible.
l f.iiniT rnrs sweet potatoes wer
tal.nu 10 uiun.it as soon ss they were
dag, because If ttiey wer stored to
wslt for higher prices tbe roads would
get so rough the potatoes would be
bruised and spoiled In transport Now
plsnters bsve big storage rooms and
sell potatoes when the price Is best,
gpttlng double whst they list re
ceived during the summer montha
Traveling over the concrete pave
ment a truck will haul 100 crates of
sweet potstoes to town, making four
trips of 25 miles each s day. Before
the pavement was built It would bsvs
required four mule teams to do th
same work now done by the one truck.
Phillips county, ssts Sebsstlan
8traub of Ilelena, Ark, In describing
the benefits of the new road system In
th Concrete Highway Magazine, lies
tn the crotch formed by the conflu
ence of the Mississippi snd White
rivers.
"Th soil," be explslns. "Is sn sl
luvlal deposit vsrylng from a sandy
loam to gumbo. The lower end of the
Country la subject to overflow by bsck
water from the Mississippi. Original
ly tli land was entirely covered by a
dens growth of timber. Lumbering
first removed the valuable trees, then
some firms were cleared snd plsnted
to cotton or corn. This Istter devel
opment hss occurred within the lest
ten yesrs, and there still sre great
trsrts of unclesred land which. If de
veloped, could be made Into some of
the richest cotton plsntations In ths
state.
"On drawback haa been the diffi
culty of getting t the more remote
corners of the county. The eartn
roads, rslsed but little above th lur
roundlng low land, ar often Impassa
ble to loaded vehlctea for eight months
In the year. During that time people
go te nd from town on the train or
horseback. Even in good weather all
mule wer required to pull a two or
three-ton load ever an earth road te
the nearest railway aiding and a
12-mlle trjp to town required th
whole day. On that account tnuch of
the good farm land lay as the lumber
man hsd left It covered with small
trees nd underbrush."
Hi new 61 -mile concrete highway
which connects Helena with the out
lying ectlnns is 14 feet wide, but ea
rnrrrs It It 19 feet in width, to con
form with standards ef the United
Rut bureu of roada Th pavement
la six Inches thick.
In the pt nearly all cotton was.
hsuled to the nearest railway aiaing
and shipped directly to Helens. Now,
however, fsrmer csn hsul forty or
fifty miles to Helens, losd their cotton
on t bost bound for New Orleans and
ssve 20 per cent of the rail freight
charges, or sbout $3,050 .W to
10,000 ton cargo.
Influence of Hard Roads
inftiionro of naved hlshways Is
reflected In better farmtlig condltiona
Those farmers fortunate enough to be
fiM a newlv nsved road ran turn
from the ataple farm products snd de
velop those types of fsrming wnicn
bring better and quicker returns. On
the unimproved roads truck gardening
Is ususlly limited to t rsdlus of 2 or
8 miles from the cljy msrket. But
with the comlnc of paved roada and
the use of trucka thia radius Is extend
ed to 10, 13 snd In some esses 20 miles
from the market. Naturally the value
of the land In this rsdlus Is consider-
ably Increased.
" Last Toll Bridge
Ph. h rid us scross the Mississippi
river from Fulton, III., to Clluton,
Iowa, Is the only toll brldgs in tn
r in.nin htirhwnv avstem between New
York snd San Francisco. The bridg
was erected sbout forty yeara ago ana
It cannot meet the present needs of
iraltle. Efforts are helna made te re-
place It with a new $t ynooo bridge.
toll of cents s ieriiij 1 exsctea.
Milk Richer in Butterfat
A gentleman from th Minnesota
College of Agriculture write that th
cow that freshens In th fall or winter
wUl giv milk richer In butterfat dur
ing th early part .of her lactation
than th cow thut freshens In spring
and summer. He also remarks that a
targe share of the greatest seven-day
batter records are made by cows fresh
ening In the cool montha This must
be bitter newt for the msn who be
lieve In pasture, timothy hay and nub-
Mna of corn. Dairy Farmer,
aaasSBBSBBBkaaSSSaaa.w. . ,
II. B. Dick
1 .
j w'y
Lowered Vitality, Try Thi$:
Tortland, Orep;. "I don't believe
I would be alive today were it
not for Dr. Pierce's Golden Medi
cal Discovery. Two years ago I .
disposed of my ranch snd came
htre to be near our children, for
I had been sick for over a year, not
able to do anything, and never had
a moment's freedom from pain.
I had headaches, sharp ajid shoot
in pains all thru my body. I
felt miierable and low-spirited for
I could get nothing to help me. A
friend said, 'Why don't you try
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis
covery it may help you.' I tried
It, snd now feel greatly indebted to
my friend for recommending it to
rne. Three bottles of this wonder
ful medicine drove all the aches
and pains out of my body snd, so
far, they have not returned." II.
B. Dick, 649 Umatilla Ave.
Obtain Dr. Pierce's Discover
now in tablets or liquid. You wiil
quickly feel the beneficial effect.
Write Dr. Pierce, President Inva
lids' Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y, for free
medical advice. Send 10c if yon
wish a trial pkg. of the Tablets.
Nin Day Without Sleep.
The longest period of complete and
continuous Insomnia authentically re
corded terminated on the ninth day
with the death of the victim, after
horrible suffering.
Mount Kilimanjaro;
Mount Kilimanjaro, In Tanganyika
territory, Africa, is 19.SO0 feet high,
the highest mountain oa that contin
ent It Is near the equator and ia
covered a third way dowa with per
petual now.
Out ef Sight
"Some men," said Uncle Eben, "has
such deep thought dat dey is 'scus
able it dey doesn't always 'pear to
know 'sackly whut dey's talkln' 'bout
deirselves." Washington Evening
Star.
Individuality First
Young man, get Individuality; but
in order to do that first get courage.
It requires much not to be A rubber
stamp.
Always th Wsy.
Curious facts about leisure la that
on forgets all about the grudge he
couldn't gratify when he was so busy
he didn't have time.
ThaTe Olffsrent
It Is, of course, presumptuous to
seek to run other people's business,
but wbat it they ruthlessly run their
business over your affairs?
Strength of Humsn Bones.
The bonei of a human being will
bear three tlmea as great a pressure
aa oak and nearly aa much as wrought
Iron, without being crushed.
Where Credit Belongs.
An enthusiast thinks he should have
all the credit for a successful Idea,
though the practical plodder may be
responsible for Its success.
Oldest Piece of Furniture.
Tbe throne of the Egyptian Queen
Hetshepsu, which is in the British
museum, Is the oldest piece of furni
ture In the world. Many pieces of fur
niture extant date back 3,000 years. '
Only Walled U. S. City.
Tucson, Arizona, has the distinction
of being the only walled city In tbe
United States. This wall, which at
one time encircled the entire city, has
long since fallen into decay.
Works Elthsr Wsy.
If a predatory nature has clever
brains it swindles the public; If It
hasn't It holds the public up with a
pistol on dark streets.
Buffslo Bones Found.
Buffalo bonet have recently been
found In a cave In Malheur county.
Ore., 100 miles further west than any
authoritative evidence of the occur
rence of buffalo heretofore.
Sometimes.
Remember, young folks, when you
buy household furniture, that It Is
probably going to be with you for a
lifetime.
You Want a Good Position
Vary w.ll T.k. Iha Aeenantanry and Botlna
lifaii.rmnt. Private ftocralarial. Calculator
Comwantor, Btaaoaraplila, Paumaiuiup, af
Commarclal Taackara' Count at
Behnke-Walker
Tkt foremoat Batistas Oottes tf th, Nortbwatt
which kat woo mora Aaauraor Awarda and (tala
Medal, than any oibar taboo! la America. Band
Sir our tiufo.ua Catah(. Fonrtk Htraal aaat
Monrlaos, Portland, Or. Itaao kt. Walkat, Prat.
P. N. U.
No. 47, 1D24