The Ione independent. (Ione, Or.) 1916-19??, October 26, 1928, Image 5

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    ,1
I Organ of Sight
' A liiyfr of liiliirlncvd mill mulled
nerve on the liiMltla eurfiice of the
liiick part of tliu eyohull dons the aco
1n, Thll If cnlldl llio rutins, which
inciina network. The rent of tho eye
U ciimeni wllh a lens In front, Ilka
nn orillimry lnitriililc Minora It
iniikca a ili'tiir on tho retina Ilka tlio
fili-t tiro on llin hack of the camera,
1TI10 ret I mi ronimunlcuti's this (ilcture
to tin limit).
1 Norway Given Wand
Hillr.livrin una flint hilli'Vcd to
Ijb n rt of (Irowilninl, nnd win nub
miiii'iilly rliilini'l hy liciiiiiiirk, Then
It win fomiit o he nil luili-iii-nili-nt le
liinil, mil wns formally iiniicxi'i) b'
Kiiuliinil In tOM. Of Into years Nor
way, riwvdvii iiihI llimslii have contonil
vil fur II ownership, Norwny flnully
ri'd'lvcil It hy u Irenty ttlgiii'd tit I'urli
In 10'JO.
Juif Wait
Archie's ut kllli'ti win the prlilo of
IiIh life mill ho Hull very modi (11
t in bed when skeptical iii'lulihor ex
pressed iluiiht thut Fluffy win
rull-bloodcd I'vmluii hecutiao hla lull
wiiKii't Iiii'ku oinMiiih. "Why, Mix
Hinlth," protested Archli, "ymi Jut
wnlt till I'll i fTy see a dog and lilt lull
will look plenty Ms!"
Smell Snake
lliimei are uhla tu cenl eiiiike nnd
often unirt and plimito when they
wind a rattler. Biimetline the rut
tloxiinkfl cxinlc an strung an odor Hint
II mil ho delected hy a hilinull. Bkllled
Vioiiilsiiiell (iiinetliiii-i amelt a ti;iki he
fore they henr III rattle. The odor
lie a ilckeiilng effect on tnimiiiia.
Bird Hain't "Mad Good"
The Eiiitllah sparrow win clulnicd to
le an excellent dug destroyer In hla
nntlve Iniiil. It wna tlmuglil he would
lie Till untile lo our farmers, hut ho
changed licit he got here, I Id pre
ferred lo live In the city, tie doe
Utile or no good.
What'$ a Dynamo?
In England Hie generutor la re
feree) in aa a "dynamo. 'Mm wind
shield la termed the "windscreen." A
aedim iniHlel In a "million." Iliinollne
la known ii "petrol." "Antl bounce
clip" take the Mutinena out of llrlt
ih hlghwiiya.
Maimed by Exploiive
Hudson II m I in narrowly em-aped
sleuth mull v I linen, and hi left liiinil
win blown off during hla riperlmcttl
wllh nmilmlle. In .-pile of Ida hi-nt
townnl Invention of war niuterliila
Hudson J.'axliu wna nn advocute of
arbitration.
Plenty of Then
There I a young man In thla neigh
Imrhood who doesn't worry a purtlcle
About a little th'ng like a knock In
the motor or a Hut lire an long a the
inn filer rut-out la working all rlghu
Ohio 8tute Journnl.
No General Law
There la no federul law on the auh
Ject of vaccination. ('onurc in Icgla
luting for the Idstrlct of Columbia hue
enacted Inn a relating to vncrlnntlon,
but these are apdlcuhla only to the
IXatrlrk
Bach to Earth
t'lty Dweller (twenty yenra hence)
Tea, we've given up our tower apart
inent and Dinted down to the ground
floor. We liked It up there, but the
nolne of (It air Iruinc waa aluiply
terrific.
Wood Uied in Carving
The ancient Kgyptluna ii-ihI the
sycamore and cedur for carving. The
tirccka and Itomana mod cednr. The
llliidua used the rnndul, the Japaneae,
I'liony; the fiwlae, autlnwiNid.
Errort Made by Partnt$
Over-rigid discipline and loo much
coddling, denlnivlnu chlld'a self con
fldence, or causing him to feel fenr are
all rnulia which paivuta must avoid
according to one expert
Another Viewpoint
"A nmn la known by de company he
kcope," auld Uncle Lhen. "WliHt nuiy
tie more lniHirtnnl la de company lie
tnmiiuea to looae." Waahlngton Hlar
Richee and Reitraint
Anybody can aciiulre a good vocahu
lary. Hut only the wine run keep the
tiling from working too hurd. lleleun
(Mulit.) Itrcord Herald.
Flattery
"Klntfery la diingeroua," anld 111 Ho,
the auge of Chinatown, "aluce money
la Judged by Ilia bralne that manage
SUFFERING ELIMINATED
15-yeara success In treatlnii Recial ami
Colon troublra hy Ilia Dr. C. J. Dean
NIHVHIIKUICAI. mrlhnd m.
sMr u. lo glv, WNITIK.N AH.
HUHANLK at I'll. KM KI.IMb
NA IKU or CKR KKHINOI.I).
Hcml l,.,l lm HIIKK IIHHuM
, twtikilfKrlbliuiMUHtamlnrom
lr IrMlmtnl ul tush llminti.
IectaLW colon clinic
The Red
tA Romance of
Draddocks Defeat
5y
Hugh Pendexter
Illustrations by y
Irwin Myt Jft.
v;
w i n Ui feRvice
CHAPTER VII Continued
19
from hla bell the wlr.nrd next pulled
a long arrow and apparently thru! It
down hla tliront up to the fen I her. I
bad accepted the knlfe-awnllowlng na
being genuine, for I bad aeon a white
man do It; but the burbrd arrow I
could nol accept Ueaujou whUpered
to me:
"Little Wolf la a cunning rogue.
Tlia reed ahaft la made of abort ec
tlona which are driven together when
be bolda the barb between hi teeth
and preaaoa down. Uut applaud him
generality. Should he iniike the
Voice In the lodge tell the Indiana
not to fight aciilnnt llraddock, we
would And ouraclvea without a red
force,"
We clapped our bund and preaaed
them to our Hp, and Utile Wolf waa
much pleaaed. Ticking up the how
and red tipped arrow, he anng a ng
In which were repented eoverul tlmei.
"Bcarlet la Ha bead."
I became keenly Inlereated when,
after a alight pnua be fiercely ahoul
d: "It flnda Ita way Into a Wclf."
II held the arrow ao thoae atnrlng
In at the window might look on It,
and among the apertutora wna the
circle-covered rlange of Itoimd Vni.
The wluird bad uttered a thrent three
t tinea during the InM hour, and a
"woir waa alwaya the victim. The
dead benr bad born accepted aa a
aymbol for Mraddnrk'e army.
I did not believe the am hem meant
the Kngllah when be promlwd demh
lo a wolf. Hut I waa convinced thut
the fellow for eome renaon Intended
harm In the Onondaga. There niuxl
be a loglrnl caune for thla omfeMed
enmity, and naturally I believed my
friend bad Incurred mmplclon. I
dared not attempt a algnnl although I
did glare Into the Oiinndnga'a eyea.
I.lttle Wolf gathered up hi belong
Inga to retire, hut lleaujeu detnlned
blm by tncpilrlng:
"Why flora not the great wlrard
abont the medlclne-arrow Into the
wolf nowt"
The Onondaga allowed two brave
to crowd In from earh aide ao only hi
bead partly ahowed between their.
"A ghoM In the medlclne-lodge will
eboot It It will tlnd Ha way to the
Wolf."
Thou al the window were very
quiet, their eyea glowing aa they be
gnn In aenae a dramntle cltmnl.
"Oimntlo'a anna wlh to the ar
row when It flnda Ita murk," lnlslrd
lleaujeu. lie too had detected eome
elgnlllranre In the b-llnw'a myaterlou
talk.
Onontlo'a aona cannot are the
(hoit Only medlclne-eye can aee
that Their eyea can aee I lie arrow
when It goea through the Wolfe neck.
Their eyea can aee that without their
moving from their placea."
We crowded doner together ao that
all might have a fair view of the
lodge, and the aavagea at the window
drew aalde. A Bra waa lighted on each
aide of the lodge ao aa to Illuminate
brilliantly the front of the atrurture.
Deaojeo whlapered:
"I.lttle Wolf la now Inatde. Put
name of the devil 1 What did he mean
about hla arrow finding a wolft One
can Dover tell how the red mind I
working."
"He may have an enemy be whihea
to kill and credit the killing to a
ghot" I aiiRgeatcd.
Mnybe. I hope not If their mind
atart running away wltb them they'll
outrun olf pnek In getting back to
their northern village, However, It
can't be aerloua. Pontine inuat know
what ba meant and npprnvea: and
routine la one lender I will count on."
The drum thudded monotonously foi
two or three mlnutea, gradually In
creaalng In volume, then abruptly
ceaalng. A wenk voice, talking In the
language of the Delaware, ended mil !
"Whnt do my children want? Why
do my children call me back to thla
lodget I am the 11 rat of your grand
fut here. lou bavt called me over a
long puth."
There followed the ahrlll voice of
woman, but lo a tongue I did not
nnderatand. Next the wlinrd'a voice,
hunk j and labored, entered the dia
logue, and In Delaware be aaked:
"O Grandfather of all the red peo
ple, tell ua of the Ingellehmnn. la he
atrnngt Will he right airongT Will
your children ba at ruck In the head?'
"The answer to thut enn enally apoll
all my plana I" gritted lleuujcu.
The medlclne-lodge rocked ami
a waved aa If buffeted hy a mighty
wind. Dlacorilnnt nolaea arose evil
forcea atrlvlng to prevent the Voice
from answering. There aounilvd the
barking of dog and the avreiim of the
pnnther and the piping null of
child. A fearful vlauge allowed for
' an Instunt at the mull opening and
waa aucceetled by another. Then with
elngte booming note from the medl
vine-drum alienee returned to the
lodge. After few uumiruta the wruk
voice of the first of all grandfather
spoke, anylng t
"Little Wolf la a mighty wizard. Ho
drives away the black eplrlt that
wunta to atop my mouth. I aio the
Hrrt of your granilfuthera. I tell you
thla the floor of the foreat will be
red with the blood of the IiikcIIhIi.
The Mnnlto la angry to aee hla red
children losing their vlllngea and
I and. Let the arrow Hud the fnlae
Wolf and then go Into battle without
fear."
Silence aguln, and Beaujeo wiped
the tweat from hla brow and mut
tered: Norn de Dleul What deviltry la
he up tot It's eome of I'ontluc'a work.
He should have told me tint Getting
a fliiht out of the Indiana la com) I
tlnnnl on their killing the 'fairs wolf
llonalenr llelnnd, I fear you are right
Little Wolf baa a rival. If ao he inuat
kill him. or else the flag of France
mul le lowered."
lie became alien! a from the lodge
came the voice oi tittle wott it
mm
I hi -f Til lI r til' nr
mm,m
wmm
"The Englltr. Spy."
sounded very weak end we bad to
atralo our eata to catch hla word.
Tantlng for breatb be called out:
"The Voice la very far away. I inn
hear It, my brothers cannot It real a
but will mine very soon Walt The
llille white dog It bnrklng. He la lead
ing the voice back."
Another pauae and then we heard
the yelping aud kl jllng of a puppy.
Then came the voice, thla time sound
ing much louder. It cotumauded:
"Have the warrlora who danced
about the war post pan around the
lodge four 1 1 int a, and let each ask
bliuselt If be la a true man."
Ah I Now inlevelopa. Soon there
will be a killing," biased 8t Theresa.
There followed tnnre shaking and
swaying of the lodge, I'ontluc'a voK-e
rang out calling on the dancers to
fall la line and begin circling the
lodge end for men with straight
toiiguea to fenr ootlilng. fainted face
In profile begun passing the window.
Kurh lavage kept his face averted
from tlie lodge and each seemed lo
step In greater basts when abreast of
the mull opening. I sought the Ouon
duga In the long line, but fulled to
behold hi in, I took note ol the Ural
man to pnsa the window, and when
he appeared for the second time there
aounded a gurgling cry from the In
terlor of the lodge, after which the
tidre (tupped aud fluttered violently
and the long-drawn-out howl of a wolf
took the place of ttje puppy's yapping.
The auvngea quickened their pace un
til they were moving almost on a
run. The bnrklng of the little white
dog cunie back, followed by deep
voire chuntlng:
"Hn-hum-web I"
I held my breuth and waited for the
Laments Passing of
Timer have changed and people
hove grown so serious that the old de
light In holidays bus vanished, la the
complaint voiced by the writer of an
editorial In Liberty Magazine.
"April Koola' day wna one of the
bright spots of the yeiir," polnta out'
the editorial. "There was a brick uu
der Ihe but; the stuffed pnckelhook
with the string (led to It. Breakfast
mulllns tilled wltb cotton were s rare
Jest, mill ro waa candy shot through
with cayenne pepper. It wus a loiu
time niitlclpnted and long remembered,
as were St. Valentine's day, Christ
mas eve, Halloween, and the nlghl be
fore the Fourth of July, On Thanks
giving we went to grandmother's house
nnd ute gorgeously. There aren't sucb
" II 'Vl' --li 4VJ1 TJ-i.
mm
climax, whatever II might be. - Dcau
Jeu whispered:
i "1 think It la oor friend, who atanda
at the door tulklng with the young
Icngllshmuo wltb the French heart
The young nun Is timid. He will not
come In unless strongly urged Ah I
(excellent It Is our Mend, ths good
lleauvals. Ho preie the young man
to enter. When this damnable march
lug and yowling stops I will call out
for the stranger to Join us and be
come better acquainted." -
I turned my bead alowly, my heart
thumping like ao Indian drum. Beait
vals stood with bis back to us. He
was ipeuklng very earnestly to the
Dlnwold girl, one hand resting on ber
Hllm shoulder, lie was trying to In
duce her to enter and she was striving
lo detain him. I luther-d my feet un
der me and mudo ready to leap over
the table and to trust to luck In plung
ing through the window and Into the
-red mob. lleauvals straightened and
removed his band from the girl's
shoulder and started to turn about
und enter the room. The girt seized
hla arm and frantically essayed lo
hold hlin back. He wu motionless
for a moment, aa If amazed at ber
action; then shook oft her grarp and
atepped backward through the door,
The Onondaga's terrible war-whoop
Jeikcd my guze to the window. The
front of the lodge bulged far out, and
tlie Frenchmen, as well as I, exclaimed
In astonishment aa a fluttering mass of
something that looked to be neither
beast nor human, emerged from the
structure and dashed through the Bro
ught and cams flying through the
window.
A startled cry at the door closed
my bead to awing In that direction,
lleauvals, now glaring at the table,
was pointing a finger and yelling:
"Seize the Englishman I Braddock's
iyt"
Several things were happening
simultaneously which I can narrate
only aa separate Incident. My coro
palona aat atupefled aa lieauvals called
out for even aa he waa sounding the
alarm the muffled figure from the
lodge ruhed toward blm and wltb a
awing of a btunket extinguished ths
candles on that side of the room.
"The English spyl hoarsely called
Iteauvals, and then went down wltb a
crush aa the mulfled figure bowled
blm over and with a quick turn raked
the candles from the wull behind me,
leaving the lllumlnutlon of the room
confined to the light from the Ores
outside.
Iteuujeu's bruin resumed working.
"Treachery I" be acreamed.
I heard bis cbalr tip over aa be
rirang to his feet But none at the
table knew wherein lay the treachery
aa waa proved by the fullure of the
company to lay hands on me. Or pos
elbly all were so dumfounded they
could not for the moment take Intel
ligent action. Something crashed
agulnat my chair, and over went the
tuble. I felt a muscular arm slip
around my walat. A blanket fell over
my heal ' The nexf moment we were
tumbling through the window and idle
the midst of ihe pandemonium now
reigning outside. I freed my fuce
enough to ee the Indians scattering
and fulling back from tba lodge, rou
tine's voles was thundering:
"Surround ths lodge I" But there
was nons among bta followers wbo
dared to draw close to Die sacred
atrurture.
My conductor pressed heavily on my
shoulder and we went to our kneea
and crawled under a flap of the lodge.
and the light from the Area In front
briefly revealed the distorted face of
Little WolL Hla red medlclne-arrow
waa through his throat the bead and
several Inches ol toe shaft showing
under bla left ear.
-Ua hum wen i- cnantea my res
cuer.
The red arrow had been discharged
In Ihe medlclne-lodge even aa Little
Wolf bad prophesied, and It bad found
Ita way Into a wolf, but not Into the
man of tbe Wolf clao as I bad feared.
Ws had no time to linger. From ths
uproar outside, I assumed that tbs
Indiana were still bewildered and be
lieving that the startling appearance
of tbe muflli-d figure outside the lodge
and ita nigiu ttuwuga ins window wna
but ths worklnga of tbs wizard's,
mnnlto.
Even now, wltb tbs Frenchmen
stumbling about In the commandant's
houre and culling for lights, wltb
lleauvals madly ehoutlng that there
waa an English py Inalde ths stock
ade, and wltb I'ontluc darting among
the terrified red men and fiercely ex
hurting them to catch my friend the
Ouonduga, we yet bud time to take
ailvantuge of the confusion and muks
off Into the darkness that encroached
up to ths rear of ths lodge. Round
Pa tmltuil 111 hturilfuf ava. m hua.t
viid drew his own covering closer, sod
seizing my arm raised the rear wall
and pushed me before him.
(TO OS CONTINUED.
the "Good Old Times"
grandmothers any more, or sucb cran
berries.
"thristmna now means bills to
meet," continue the disillusioned
writer. "Independence day baa been
made a Sane Fourth. We no longer
get any fun out of April Fools' day
Those unottlvlul childish holidays were
a kind of possession peculiar to ths
punt They are not Hie same now. We
nre grown up and aerloua, and times
huve changed.
For Your Scrap Book
There are two kinds of writing,
both great and rare; one that of go
nlua, or the inspired, the other that
of intellect and taste, in the Intervale
of lusplraltou. TborMu.
10 minutes
raqo vJ
ttV It'll
How many people you know end their colds with Bayer Aspirin I
And how often you've heard of its prompt relief of sore throat or
tonsilitis. No wonder millions take it for colds, neuralgia,
rheumatism ; and the aches and pains that go with them. The won
der is that anyone still worries. through a winter without these
tablets I They relieve quickly, yet have no effect whatever on the
heart. Friends have told you Bayer Aspirin is marvelous ; doctors
have declared it harmless. Every druggist has it, with proven direc
tions. Why not put it to the test?
Little Profit to Him
in Breaking Record
Edward A. Neylun, exulted ruler of
the New York Elks, said at a dinner:
"I am afraid our airmen and our
automobile racer are trying for Im
possible records Impossible and dead
ly records. They rewind me of a
story.
"A tramp was complaining that he
bad eaten nothing for three days,
when another tramp called blm down.
"'Aw, quit jer complulnln'. A pal
o' mine, old Itedfare Leary, went for
62 days once without food or drink.'
"'Gosh I Why, that busted the
world record. How did It hnppenT
auld the Orat trump, forgetting bla
own hard luck.
."'Itedfare got locked up bard and
fust In a box cur what wus left In a
lonely place ten miles from nowhere.'
"'(joyhl 1 guess most guys, before
they could go 52 days without food or
water, would have laid down and died.'
"'Sure,' said the other tramp.
That'a what old Itedfuce did. He
croaked free weeks before they found
blm.'"
Old-Fathioned Father
Judge Ben B, Ltndsey, the champion
of modern youth, auld at a dinner in
Denver:
"But of course youtb Isnt alwaya In
the right An old-fashioned father
complained to hla daughter that he
didn't like the daring way she drtssed.
"'Oh, don't youf said the girl, and
she blew a choking cloud o' rlgnrette
smoke Into the old man's face. 'Well,
dad, let ne tell you this I dress to
please myself.'
" 'But It takes,' be protested, con sh
in g and waving the smoke away 'but
It takes ao darn little to please you.' "
Shouldn't
"now do the rolos run In yonr new
line of hosiery r asked the lady cus
tomer. "They don't," replied the loyal aalea
mnn. DON'T
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