Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The Ione independent. (Ione, Or.) 1916-19?? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 4, 1927)
GIRLHOOD TO MOTHERHOOD Iowa Woman Found Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com. , pound Always Helpful Vinton, Iowa "When I wm seven teen years old I had to stay it hnH. f -k I nwMiv i win auuuwi. I nuaiiy nsd to quit school, 1 wai to weak. I suffered for about two yean be fore I took Lydla ID. riukham'S Venn table Compound, lliea I picked up one ot your book and read It. I be Kan taking themedl nine. Now I am a bousekeoper with Is children, and I bar taken It before each one Wag born. I can not tell you nil tha I nod I have re ceived from It. When 1 am not at well ai can be I take It. 1 bave been doing thla for over thirteen year and It el wave belpt me. I read all of your llttit booke I can get and I tell everyone I know wbat the Vegetable Compound doe for me." Ma. Vhakk Bkujm, (10 7th Avenue, Vluton, Iowa. Many girls In (ho fourth generation are learning through their own per tonal experiences tlx beneficial effecta Of Lydla H. Plnkharn's Vegetable Com pound. Mothers who took It when they were young era glad to recommend It to their daughters. For over half century, women bare praised thla reliable medicine. Makes LlCc Gvcct For erven gnierattone the National Household Remedy of Holland for kid ney, liver and bowel trouble hae helped make life brighter for suffering men and women- Begin taking them today end notice how quickly your troubles will vanish. At all druuUu in I eUea. HAAftlgM OIL M BABIES LOVE M&VBwi0V7 SYRUP TU lalW mt ankm't g aililat Flasasnt ta s1 i'ast laha. Uuarwitaa ftuvvlr a atawa ami auaaluialy bimhH, It SuM-klp eramaaj-a eMML Slarrfcor. SatMtanry nj het kite Slaimlara. I'm euuiaka foranla umh ea evaty total. AIAU Doschec's Syrup has beea relieving coughs due to sold for slily-on yaara. Soothes the Throat looaans the phlasm, promnte etpeeto ration, (Ives a (nog night' real fra from coughing, loo and SO bottle, liuv It t your drug slur. O. O. Urea. Ine Woodbury, N. J. WHAT CAUSES BOILS. IVale sad rtarlaa era tha taavlt af on- rtxar im m Intartun o Ua akin. II la har4 to eatorram lha auet faaa but CAKItolU Will (tva quick raUaf. NaaacaMtvaaparatmi I an hi ai r a an aeplMMm W CAkliUIL, omUy atn la pmtm sad Dntlnit4 Vac daawa aal the aor. mI gawaruaa etta bo Ira Sew druarM. Mia if aaak g al nail a. SPURLOCK-MSAL CO.. NlSMVlLt. TlMK. For Pipe Sores,RstnIa,PoD EvO Hanfordi Btbaffl of Myrrh Maaafaa, (at SaM hMUa H at aaMat, AS Snlii. a Tl Mr HI I.HS. fo.r earh afta varlaT lla ti; II Itla, thrr rarh of B arllla, til (k....I'V W. I-. KIMIHI U 1(1 KM antf lair Stmt. llihTI.ANIi, liliKOnN Wise Bluejay 1 Mrs, Kate Hidden of Memphis tells Nature alngaxlue she waa punlrd b) the antics of a blucjny flying tuadl) among the branches of a wide-spread log elm, Wis discovered the wis bird was taking sdvsntnge of a heavy dew the night before and busily knocking the mosture off the lea re and onto Its wings, thus taking Its morning bath. Farmer' $ Tint Saved Statisticians estimate thnta bushel of wheat can now be raised with the expenditure of bul ten nil nut pa of the farmer's lime, as compared with three hours and three minute In I8.V). Don't blame the feed or the con dition of your stock if market men grade you low and custom erg complain on account of the color of your butter. You can keep your butter alwaya that golden June color which brings top prices by using Dandelion Butter Color. It'a purely vege table and meeta all State and National Pure Food Laws-used by all large creameries lor years. Its harmless, tasteless and doesn't color buttermilk. Large bottles, 35c at all drug and gro cery stores. Write for FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE WAftUkNsU,ks atcrMffMeV VffWMl SCHOOL FOR MEN TraMf la ausiMSS,TMDM MOnwrONI Jtnroll anr tlmo. Hand forlttarntur. eateoN instituts or TgcriNOLoat I.U.U. A. Itldg. FwUMMliOnaw i . , . , . . J I In Jl Few r Little jires EASIER TO CHOOSE Rhop-OIrl A pal r of silk stockings, sir? Ccrtulnly. V buve them In every fiishloniible shade. Do you pre fer brine, pule fawn, chnrnpiiune, pearl, blush, atmosphere, froth, gruln suwdiixt, nu'loii, struw, oystor, bloached mauve, gunmotul, mootill.'lit, or slmd owt Young Mun I I never tliouiilit of that l'orlinps I'd better buy her s bracelet Instead. Had Him Thtrt A mnn submitted to an editor a poem that clearly hud been plagiar ised. "Did you write all this yourselfr the editor asked, "lea,'' was the answer, "I wrote every line It," "Then I am elnd lo nteot vou. Itrd Tennyson,' replied the editor, "but I was under the Impression that you had died years ago." DOESN'T PLAY WITH FIRE 'lNuret, cant you see my heart's on flrer "Well, d I look like a Ore es tlnguUlierT Cue it Towit$ That suaal la alwaya walcom wh Hr Inatlnct ream lo know Whlrh of our tuwali ara meant for Baa And which ir meant for a how. Vifai "I'm all In the dark about bow these bills are In be pnltl," said Mr. Ilnrdiip to his wife. "Well. Henry." she stild. as she pulled out s green one end tuld II on the top of the pile, "you will be If you don't pay thitl one. for It's the gas bill.- STRATEGY "A burglur broke In my house Ihe other night whin I ns all alone." "Well, how did you hnmlle hlinT "Yuh see), I was in the next room and I said real loud 'Now fellows we'll sll be on hand next Monday fur foolball practice.' so he beat It" Swat tht Rooster I've always been a blllhteom bird, A leader and a booater, I think thla movement I abaurd To swat th poor old rooeler. The Breaking Point The doctor had tiiken the tempera ture of the stockbroker who lay seri ously III. "It has gone np to 104," he an nounced In solemn voice. "Oone up to lull" shouted the stockbroker. 'Then sell out, man, sell out!" Cheerful Soul ."Old Dill Smith hiisn't a enro In the world." "What doee he dot" "He's a caretaker." Dance Celebritiet tie (discussing a mutual acquaint snce) Hud the dimhed Impudence to led me I didn't know Ihe difference between Ileum and Teum. Bhe Ilenhlyl How provoking for you lei's see, where are they dune Ing now J j Kitty! Kittyt Hetty Jack sntd I'm beautiful charming. June Now, Hetty, you be careful f those fellows who deceive you. I Ax Ruins of the Temple ef Tsnlt (Prpar4 by th National fl agraphia Saclalr. Waahnwlon. I). C.I FEW sites of sntlqulty hava s more Illustrious history than the peninsula on which He the ac cumulated ruins of the dead cities of Carthage, I'hoenlclana, Ber bers, Numldluns, tlomana. Vandals. Ilyanntlne crusaders, and, lastly, the Arabs have all left their traces, anil today In the etrsts of thirty centuries lie the mute evidences of long racial warfare and the dethronement of past Splendors. Here, where peace oow rclRns over the merble dust, J s natural beauty snd grandeur equal lo any of the fa mous scenes along the Mediterranean shore, and the putiorama viewed from Cepe Carthage explains Queen Dlilo's selection of the site. In the Ninth cen tury It C, fo- the first I'unlc city of Carthage. From Ihe summit of the ancient hill railed Ityma (meaning "hide," end reminiscent of the IHilo story of the bull skin). Is unfolded the lundxcnpe which wss once the scene of the great tragedy of the Mediterranean. To the east Ilea the magnificent Culf of Tunis, of eture blue shading off Into emerald green near the shores. On the opposite bank arise the ma jestic twin summits of the sacred mounlalu of the Carthaginians, the Itou Korneln. There stood the temple dedicated to Itiml, but only a few stones mark the spot where the flumes of votive offerings once paid homage to the Insatiable Phoenician god. To the south. In an smphlthenter surrounded by purple mountains, It hundred minarets reflected In the Tunis lagoon, lies "Ihe White Mantle of the Prophet." as Ihe Arabs Call the city of Tunis today. The picturesque village of Sldl bou tald crowns the northern promontory of Cape Carthage. Itlooks somewhat like a white dove, the sacred symbol of the Carthaginians, for Its roofs and domes spread out like wings above Ihe blood red precipices that stand like sentinels above the entrance to the Culf of Tunis. This Is the scene so often gazed Uon by Mdo, I'yrrhus, Ilasdrubul, Hanlclar, Hannibal, Kclpln, Caesar. Cyprian, Augustine, Cenwrlc, and tt. I-ouls, and Its history Is made stilt more eloquent by Ihe resurrection of Its burled ruins. Under Earth and Water. The excavation of Carthage Is diffi cult been use of Ihe great topographi cal changes that have taken place since Punic diiys. For these changes Hie Medjerda river Is responsible to a considerable degree, as Its alluvial de posits have encroached upon a (urge part of the peninsula, completely cov ering a portion of land which In all probability waa once occupied by the city. Today the Arabs still cull these marshes Iluhiir el Axrag, meaning "the Dine Sen." From motion picture films taken by slrplane It la quite evident that there are vast submarine walls at Cape Kamnrt, to the northwest of the peninsula. Excavations at this point. It Is believed, will throw some light on the old burning mystery as to the site of the I'unlc pons, where the mighty merchant fleets . of the Ca nannltes plied to and fro. (As mny he remembered, the Phoenician, whose lloman name was "Punlciis," was native of Canaan, In the lowlnnds of Palesilue, prior to the Invasion of the ?ws.) According to the descriptions of Applun and other Itomun historians, we know the ports to have been cir cular at one time, with the admiral's military palace In the center, and at another period quadrilateral. It "Is said that as many as 220 galleys could be anchored at one time In the hur hor. Actunlly a aeries of harbors, they were of Imposing architecture and were marked off by gigantic col umns, between which the ships were moored. Carthsgs a Orsat City. The sen has risen three snd one half yards since Roman days, and there are many ruins under wnter In the gulf and at l.a Marsa, north of the rebuilt city, - Tbe question of when tht Egyp IE tians may have occupied this terrt tory can be sc!vd only by the most laborious and prolonged research, since Cainlie, the dty of the Bldon lons, was founded by them six cen turies before Dido (really Ellssar, daughter of hmg Mathan of Tyre) settled there vllb her fugitive Phoeni cians, prior to 800 B. C Cambe was merely a ruin at this time, and his tory affords nothing beyoid the fact of Its existence and origin. Hldon had been the principal Phoenician seaport; so the catihaglnlan people held tlu-lr section of what Is now Tunis as fur back ss their African history tins been revealed. I'nder Ihe Parens fnmlly (Ilasdru but, Humllcar, Hannibal, etc.) Car thuge w as a grent center of wealtL i.nd commerce, with a population which ha been est I muled variously be tween "00,000 and 1,000,000. The bulldlugs of Carthuge prior to Its destruction by the Itomans, In 140 It. C were In some cases seven stories high. From the sccounts of Cirto the KIder, the Implacable foe of the city, whose "Pelenda est Carthago" Is un forgettable, the construction of the city must have been of admirable soundness In fact, such that the con flagration of sixteen duys can scarce ly have demolished entirely the gi gantic edifice and strong founda tions. It I expected that part ol these will be found Intact at a great excavated denlh. The utter devastation and ohlltera Hon of Carthage which for centurlei following the I'unlc wars were thought to have taken place have been recently contradicted by explora tion. Over the ruins long untouched dirt snd sand had drifted, hut mercl fully preserving Innumerable Objects of art which escaped destruction. Twenty, forty, and sixty feet below the surface have been unearthed the vestiges of the ISyrsntlne, Honutn snd Phoenician occupations. In this work have been engaged the explorers Caurkler, Merlin and Tolnssot, of the Service dea Antlqultes, but Ihe most notable efforts lisve been those ot Pere Pellattre, wUu, with exceedingly meager resources, haa labored over Ihe ruins for fifty years. He has dis covered four of the earliest Christian basilicas, Itoman snd Punle necropo lises, sn amphitheater, and many priceless relics, but during this long period of arduous search he has ac tually explored only one-tenth of llo man and Christ lu n Carthage. Lately, under Count de Prorok, remains pre viously located by Pere Pelnttre have been completely excavated. Temple ef Tsnlt Uncovered. The most sensational discovery lately was the Temple of Tsnlt by (he amateur archetdoglst. M. Irart, where human sacrifices were offered by the Carthaginians to the goddess of that name and to Baal Ammon. Literally hundreds of urns were found containing the bones of chll dren from four to twelve years of age who had been burned alive. The clew which led to this Impor tant discovery was supplied by an Arab, who was seep digging for stone Inscriptions near the location of the Punic ports for the purpose of selling them to tourists. Operations were un dertaken near by and Inscriptions were found to the deities mentioned and S large field of stiles bearing the pagan symbol of fertility, a crescent reversed over s disk or triangle. Ilelow this site were the nrns. which were shout twelve Inches high, of red or white terra cot I a, with han dles and wide mouths sealed with yel low clay. Resides the hones of ihll dren were those of In nibs snd bin! here and there. The name of the rhtld sacrificed appeared on the stile Immediately shove. The sltnrs unearthed st the lowest level were undoubtedly of Egyptian origin. Rectangular silver tablets en graved with squatting sphinxes, and amulets of bluish stone representing the eye of Osiris snd covered with Egyptian hieroglyphics conclusively demonstrated the one-time - Influence nnd probable presence of that race. There Is ground for the belief that Ileal Amnion was orlglnnlly th Ammon Rs of the Egyptians Pertinent Remark on People ot Prominence Rome of Lady Oxford's (humbnnll sketches of prominent Englishmen are quite clever. Abbreviating the al ready brief, we quote from her char acterization of Lord fllrkenhead: "He listens to himself, but his brains which are of the most remarkable sometimes go to his head and he bears confused noises." Of Lord Resiling: "Though be has a warm corner for himself, he has no cold corners for other people." Lloyd George "loves s crowd more than himself or his friend. He gnesses without pause what the person be Is talking to Is thinking; bul while they sre stationary, he Is s movie. In spite of sn Intelligence smeuntlng to gen ius, be waylays himself." The Cecil family, she says, have "minds and morals of distinction, but have subconsciously massaged sway some of the more sctive muscles of their conscience." Boston Transcript Demand tor Rat Shin$ May Check the Pett Europe has discovered s scheme for holding In check the prolific rat Ve nous Industries have created a de mand In London alone for rat eklns thst smounts to very nearly 1200,000 s year, and there Is every Indication that the consumption of this material will Increase. Book binding, photo graph frames, purses snd thumbs for ladles' gloves sre among tbe uses to whlrh the skins sre put After tbe passing of the rat set In Denmark some time sgo. the great body of unemployed laborers took Ira mediate sdvsntage of the bill, snd the Individual rat-catcher's earnings aver aged between $1.75 snd $1.90 a day. It Is estimated that the damage by rats In England stone smounts annual ly to many millions of dollars, so thst sny Inducement to promote their cap ture should be encouraged ss far ss possible. Maybe This Contain a Hint for You! toe Angeles, Calif. "It was my good fortune to get one ot Dr. Pierce's books several years sgo snd It has been a wonderful help to me while bringing sp my family. Tbe plain advice given la Invaluable to mothers. "The use ot Dr. T1M-'a FavAritA . Jjf PrcrlpOon during LVVli expectancy and af WTiu terward was to me T 'the greatest help. It gave me strength, spirit snd serve. I have also used the 'Golden Medics Discovery for a bad cough and bill ousn, sad It haa entirely rid mi ef thee trouble." Mrs. Noemh Reynler. ISO N. Dttman Bt Dealers Write Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. T. tor free medical advice. A Real Bot This generation baa seen s number of child monorchs. King Alfonso of Sputo was born sfter the death of his father snd became king st birth. He seems to hsve taken himself seriously ss s king from babyhood and to have rebelled lustily against his mother's regency whenever It took the form of reproof or punishment Many stories bsve come out of Spain of the way he kinged It around the palace tn-lnfcncy. In the nursery he was corrected for putting a knife In his mouth. "Gentlemen never eat like that" he was told. He retorted, "I'm not s gentleman, I'm s king." Many a man who believes that the earth revolves on Its sxls also believes thst be Is the sxls. (M tuQlr u uSU U SAY "BAYER ASPIRIN"- etudne Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets, you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin prescribed by physi.' dans and proved safe by millions over 25 years for Colds. Pain Headache Neuralgia DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART 6 -va - ... ' 1 HK8 Saplrla Is the trso suit t Bay Massfertsn) ef MoaoaaaUeaaUaataf J SaMtrlltMlS The BABY , i'j' Why do so many, many babies of to day escape all the little fretful spells and lnfuntlie ailments that used to worry mothers through the day, snd keep them up half tire night? If you don't know the answer, yoo) haven't discovered pure, harmless Cas torla. It Is sweet to the taste, and sweet In the little stomach. And Its gentle Influence seems felt all through the tiny system. Not even s distaste ful dose of castor oil does so much good. Fletcher's Csstorla Is purely vege table, so you may give It freely, st first sign of colic; or constipation; or diarrhea. Or those many times when yog Just don't know what it the mat ter. For real sickness, call tbe doc tor, always. At other times, a few drops of Fletcher's Csstorla. The doctor often tells you to do Just that; and always says Fletcher's. Other preparations may be Just as pure. Just as free from dangerous drugs, but why experiment? Besides, the book on care and feeding of babies that comes with Fletcher's Csstorla Is worth Its weight in gold ! Children Cry for j..,jtl1i)nil1i)iVi1111ttlVTl'viK Bar Wm4 rmrtsfi Ritt la t L4. Me-rta, ttufTrrictit for ri Comfort Clii, SaniltTtrT Color4 Wool II 24 4fi.rr4 pare. -pact. Wtwl Comfort Htt Co., Bi 131. br lottsj, N. C. "Manutacturtrt Over 21 Tewr. MITCHELL EYg SALVE hesls Inflamed eyes, granulated lids, stres,te. Bur. Safe. Spaed. ISeat all druggiat. Hll a Ruckal. N.T.C DR. STAFFORD'S IMTAR fi-MiN fat- ( ROl 'P Mkrj marks. k-i ivs) msfssjtMM, hastrt kVM, sjTrvra? laea int ftsilr fT kiUmoeJ nwfrsBsBS) f liWMat aVTM brustchMai hUsssK UU BTTCZIL. Nrw Year ro.xhitis W. N. U, PORTLAND, NO. 44-1927. Kitty! Kittyt Jane That lace Is thirty-Ore years old. ftose rretty. Did you make It your self? Neuritis Toothache Lumbago Rheumatism Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proven directions. Handy Bayr" box ef It tablet. Alu knltlaa of tA mm IAA n. 1... IS A .U 3