Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The Ione independent. (Ione, Or.) 1916-19?? | View Entire Issue (Sept. 7, 1928)
OUR COMIC SECTION THE FEATHERHEADS Still Missing X . X jLm X pipu'f TAKE" yCL .. flQEAT SONS.'- mix-lvT looked W Jxka7?T D&nt BE So ailtui? raJi Ea CaG MV UaNtTV AJtoI rvJ COOLD TAKE A VJDMAMS I up c- T CAM SEC W A TWO-1 LOXN 1 S?C?a7 WAN.TV AWAY ?SS fl SU-VHW A , MgW.) ycNwa the eoWujM !-) Xj c II and HECt'S Mr" COULEES CCE lO-ORtVER I IF SCO CAM FulO THP I V AWO MV SOSSoCiS - y AND THAT BOOK. PATIENCE SOU LOST I OC DiCECTiOWS ywtw rtX UQST MlSttO XCAPtO NTtoSE Erewfc FINNEY OF THE FORCE y .v. .u(, VJ I ns and hy piatoom wtee moppw' up near boouion- AMWJPoCB "V Wti IM mZ Vl i VILLE - NO -THAT DOESNT MEAN SOPWI IIP VIN ROUGE IN & ciaw 2rHlS A 0F 1 ) I) SOUP ClTV - WE- WERE CLE ANI OUT WE KPAUTS NAT Hun TkliAUCOuCT'-J V.WCiOrrAlS.BUT- J THEFIRST WAVE MISSFO-WHEN W POLLS A TRAlM ITT A MC1WIP HOSPITAL TOAlM.FUlLV KQAUT NURSES ANO JEBSV MEDICS M05T OF GOT LOST. CAUSE THEY'RE BEHIND OUR LINES NOW.SEE ? WEIL, WE CAPTURED WE CAB0OO1E m fie Im 0 Le EQUIPPED WITH AM' LATFD IT WAS AN' SET EM TO WCCV Mew A Little Previous TuEM VFDU Jf BQUC viHfl PATCHED MI UP.'- HOW OlD I SiT HUKT?- OH, I WANTED A GER MAN OfUCfcR; BELT BUT TUf HE1NI6 FOOLED Mfr HE HADN'T GONE WEST VET- - Iff- . 11 I limilltTB.lMCi Th Gr. Will (rrtar4 br tht National Owanuhl 6ocltr. hlnilun. l. C.I ALTHOUGH IVklng hna fioon rcimnifj t'o4ng. and Nun king ti to ii'rseJ) It n ciiHul of Clilna, tlio old town, with It structure! nntl tradi tion that hare played their part In history, cannot but continue ai an Im portant center of Chlneiw Ufa. Ther Is much thnt the tourist to Peking find thnt I unexpected, and every visitor to the old capital has pretty dcflnlte lleas of what he Is to find. For one thing he exacts to find the town corrupt and contented ; nor I he disappointed. la the palaces, the government oltlces and the multitude of barracks which surround the dty, some self-seeking gangs of grafters who have plundered the Chinese people since the overthrow of the monarchy are still to be fonnd. Hut the age long Chinese tradition which would have centers of government also cen ters of learning has. In spite of re actionary rulers, filled the capital with thousands of eager students for whom Peking Is not only a city of splendid memories, but s city of hoes. There Is the Peking unlvernlty, a first-clans American mission Institu tion; the University of Peking, an equally high-grade government school ; the new Chin Hwa college and Score of lesser schools. It was among the students and teachers of Peking, particularly among those of the universities, that the lll eral movement of recent years In China started, and continued In the face of wholesale nrn-sts and suppression by corrupt ofilclnls. Py the Peking students the movement was spread throughout the land. To find Peking the source and cen ter of this forward looking movement for reform Is not the least of the surprises which await the vUltor. Buddha and Confucius, In the great Lnma temple In the northwest corner of the city, with It seven sun lit courtyards and lis hun dred deities, one may see on any fore noon three-score yellnw-couicd novices droning the morning lesson, cross leg ged, before the mnny-hnnded Cod of Slercy, or half a doren monks In pur ple pallium celebrating a I.anilst nuiss with rice out of a sliver howl and wine from a gold-mounted chnllce fashioned from a human skull. Just across the street from these Idolatrous lamas, who represent the debased Huddhlsm of Tibet and who minister chiefly to the Mongol of the North, Is the quiet, shady close of the temple of Con fuel us, wherein are neither monks nor Idol. Here the mnster Is represented by a simple wooden tuhlet bearing the letter of bis name. It Is but little more ex alted than the tablet of the four notulite philosophers nnd the twelve particular disciples who share the ball with him, and the two and sev enty famous scholars whose name are recorded In .the long, low build Ing on the side of the conrt The Initial reaction of the visitor to much that be sees In Peking Is apt to be one of rilsuppolnlmcnt, followed by surprise, then by delight and ad. miration. Exploring th WttUrn Hill. When be leave the city gules and goo to the western bills, there I surprise and delight, but no Initial disappointment Perliups that I be cause he ha heard so much of the city and so little of the hills that he goes expecting nothing; perliups It Is because the hills, In spite of their barrenness, are altogether love' ly. However thnt may be, half the charm of Peking Is not In Peking at all, but In Its surroundings. Shrine upon Yellow Gold in Favor Once More With Pari One of the outgrowth of the new fashion Interest In Jewelry Is the do telopmeiit of new color arrangement. The vogue for beige ha undoubtedly bad It Influence In bringing back yellow gold Into favor. Dull sliver I frequently the accompaniment of cer tain new tones of gray thnt are dl Ill cult for most Jewelry, Topuis com bined with cloudy crystal Is the per fect complement for tlio dull while North of Peking. ' shrine, palace UHn palnco, lie with out the city wall. They dot the surrounding plain ; they nest on near by wooded knolls; they lodge In crev ices of tlio wide circling, treeless hill those quiet hills, slow curving, like billons after storm; verdant and vel vety In summer; lu winter bare and red brown, deepening Into twilight purple. To understand Peking nnd to love It, one must feel Its glory In ths setting of the hills, not see It through the critical dust of the si reeled plain. One of (he most pleasant way In which to explore the bill I by rick- thaws, r.lankctt and quilt uiust be taken, for every provident traveler In China carries hi bed with him. Away one goes three and a half mile, at a dog trot, to the western gate, thence (even more over the w lltow-tliaded highway to th Mountain of Ten Thou sand Ancient, t plcutuut wooded hil lock. lie fore It lie a broad luk and on It tlojie stands the fur-fniued Hunt- luer Pulace. Though several centuries more recent than Kuhlnl Khun, this) Is Indeed the stalely pleasure dome of the poet's Imagining. Kublal might well have decreed It, Willi Its graceful, splry, triple-roofed pavilion set upon a massive four-sijuiire buse of stone, lowering above porticos snd pallous, khmk and summer houses, grotto and labyrinthine passage. Is lands and Illy ponds, bridge of mar ble, and grotesque dragon rait In bronze. Another Jog of (even mile take one pit H the Jade Fountain pagoda, pat leisurely camel trains, beyond the high road and the dust of tourist auto, umh-r the shadow of somUei, square, beacon tower, marching In Ingle file, at hnlf-mlle Intervals, out owr the hill crests. Pushing on deeper Into the hill one comes at PI Vun Smi, to th temple of the Crcen Jade Clouds, the loveliest temple In the north. Trip to the Gnat Wall. One of the most fascinating trips to be made from Peking Is to Hie Great Wall. It Is wonder enough for one Journey to walk atop the wall and niok out over the dusty brown plains of the north where Tatar horse men once swarmed toward tlio pusse. and to see trains of pack-mule strug gling throuuh the great stone gate way ohlhloii of the tralllc on th nearby rails, their back laden with merchandise ai were the back of puck-uiulu two thousand )eurs ago. I.Ike so much In or dear Peking, the Great Wall I at first disappoint ing. It I disappointingly small. It Is, In places, only twenty feet high and as many broad, while the city wall of Peking Is twice as high and, at the base, thrice ns broad. When one Hand close under the Peking city wall It loom above Willi the massive grandeur of tin abrupt high cliff; but when the traveler get olT the train at the Nankow pass and lees the bit of wall (crumbling up the hillside before him, he wondere why It Is called "great,- That, however, Is only at first II has only to climb up out of the pass and follow the wall for half nn hour and be begins to understand. Away It goes before him, nnd be hind, up, up ths topmost ridges of the hlllobcndlng, swinging, climbing, leaping like tlio supple, nglle dnigoti of the pnluce-gardeu screen. It .un dulates. It sways, It marches before, It takes the curve of the bills Ilk a swift auto on a mountain road, on and on and on, across the furthest gully, beyond tlio furthest peak. Where the mountain blend Into the clouds, there It Is; where tlio lust horizon vanishes, It Is there. thnt Is being worn along the Lido this season, Iilue Jade and light turquoise for sports costume In the new green are oilier Innovations. Summer Sleeve Half-length sleeve are established for summer, but usuully they - are lengthened over the elbow, Madame Jenny adds a 'ahupod cuff, nlckuqmod the stovepipe Joint, on a frock. Hhe trims the- collar and sleeves Willi chartreuse green crepe do chine uud bvlt with glistening silver balls. DONT suffer headache, or any ot tlioie pulni that lluycr Aipirin can end in hurry I Physician prescribe it, and approve its free uie, for it doe not alloct the heart Every drug gilt has it, but don't faJI to ask the druggist for Baytr. And don't take any but the bos that lay Uayer, with the word gtnumt printed in red; Anlrin t IS (rail nark at Karar Manaraalsre, tt MoBgatttlcMlilMtsr tf Itllcillsaall Special Duty Placed on Last Homecomer , Governor Core of West Virginia waa talking at a Charleston luncheon about oil trouble. "Strong measure are needed," h said, "to save our oil reserves. Yes, w must cut to the root of the evil not Just resort to expedients, like th paterfamilias. "A paterfamilias with a large fam ily of dungbters said to a friend on day: "'With all these daughter of mine coming In at all hour my night' rest I naturally niurh broken up, and for 0111 time 'the consequence wa that I'd , oversleep myself every morning and le lute for work at the office. Had business.' "The paterfamilias looked gloomy, then h brightened tip, " 'Put I've bit on a splendid expedi ent now,' be snlL 'I've made It hard and -fust rule that the list girt In cull me on her way to bed.' " Wn Wish Tliere I no such thing a can't" remarked th Thoughtful Guy. "I wish, there was no turn thing as can," growled the hub ot th can opener wife. Cincinnati Time Star. Propriety "I h a consistent pianT "1 should any so; he dresses up every Kundny U-fore he tunes In the cburcll service." . An Impoiiibility flio "I urn very sorry but you must forget me."-, lie "IiiUHisslhlel Ton see I'm a memory exert" Simple and Effective . "Howj di -he 'tfti4 his wife r along together now J" "Hy being to gether as little as possible." Popularity often wins new acquaint ances and losi1 old friends. It isn't Ms friends -that point out the man's faults; It's 'his kin. Life Is the only lottery In which man Is compelled to take chances. GREAT RESULTS FROM COf.jPOUND Read How Thii Medicine -Helped This Woman . Pralnerd, Minn. "I - red about Lyclla K. rinkliam' Vetnhl Com- found In a newt jisper snd I have got great results front It ton la soli'O at the Change of Life. Ilofure I took It I wis nervon and at timet I ws too weak to do . my home work, I w thi way shout a year. Hut now I do all my housework and do chores outside also, I must say that Lyilia IS. Pink hum's Vegotshle Compound hi dnn Wonder for me and no woman should be without It I sure can sneak a 5 od word for It." Mn. JiU BM1TU, t. It 7, Uroinerd, Mliuinuta. POISON IVY Hanford'i Balsam of Myrrh Sm) kai far Aral haltla if not au.ud. All taslan. WntvWftil end anr MukM vottr ah hi l.i'Biiiiful.alwii'iiri'aitviirinji. I'rWll M. KrispikoitiTiiirttrrmtitMfrtM'lL llarsd wt tt9 vanra. II . fl ti. llaulV sat - 1 )vlA mi