Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The Ione independent. (Ione, Or.) 1916-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 2, 1931)
Two-Story Home !n London Just a Bluff Would you believe Hint In l.nndm (horn I it two dory house coiiiplotit villi front iliMir, windows, mid hub 'iinlii, hut only llvi feet llilck from front to Illicit iiml iohminnIiii no key hole, dour hell, Idler box, or Inhiihl- tlllllK? Well. tlll'IO It, Mill If Jdll vii nt to see It you tin vn only lo nsk u tnxldrlvor In tului you lo No, 2.'l Li-luster giirilons, Ilo will probably think you urn pulling his leg, fur luod of ilicm know nil nboiit It, Hero U t In Kiory of this queer house tlmt Ihii'I n house nt nil, Mnhy yours ii)jo the Underground riillwiiy built it lino through I.cIumI -r gar dens, otin of l.oinliin'ii most dignified residential quarters. The Inhiihlluulg of tlin gardens protested violently HKHllINt till) hllll'OUStleS of mi open culvert nt tint mouth of tint tunnel beneath them. Ho the, railway poo ilu covered It up hy building n dum my Iioiiho. From thi railway track It I (Imply n lil ii nk wnll; from the KKrdoim It look II Ue n Well built limine, coiiiplctu In every del nil. Tho Iioiihh Iiiin lieeil tlitl (cello of tunny prin tlciil Jokes. Not long ago hundred of Invitations were (cut out hy Mime Jester to a purl y there. Meantime It U nlivnyg providing pur. r.lc fur trade raiiviidors and others Who link pollceuieii where to find tho tetter IhiX mid the dour hell thill do not exist, -Fxchnngu. Educator Refuses to Sre Limit on Learning Instanced of elderly people who linve necoinplldied prodigies of learn hi it nre frequently ndduced mi Vn-rniiriiiti-iiieut to the nveriu'M permni of mature yenn. If ao mul ho. the fu lliotid tuusli'hin, cmild learn Hebrew t eighty, Hun John .Siuiilt need nut despair of mattering uny subject he limy fiincy, even tlenn;h hl years of youthful vl.ur in n-! ulnlt lm mny he lone li.-l liid liliu. Thus the argument has run. probably without quite con vIio'Iiik Juhn Smith. For he lim fi-lt. in mini uf nil feel, nit liicreiifdim illlllculiy of cunccnlnillun and retcii t Ion n hlii m liiiul it m cuilitt years tut v receded Into the punt. I r. llerhert Sorentun uf the 1'nl verslly of ,Mlniicutn Ihh heeii milk ing experiment1! nnd he mi) Hint the only truiihle with Juhn Smlth'g mind nt fifty In Hint he hutn'l kept it cifrclned. Wiiterluiry Itepuhllcnn. Hard to Figure Reason for Ilia Staying Away "Women eel away with murder," remarked Jin k I o)le. fight promoter, "heciiti It li uelienilly lliulersto.i.l thut they don't menu what they say. Thin Mill II) d Kit e thelil n loophole H hell IhlltiCd p 11 ri', Funny purl of It In thut tho wm etl tholimelvcd ilo i,.I Hcelll til think their remarks Mhoiild he taken literal ly. I.Ike (Suentiy. "'What's the troiihle between you and Freddie?' n friend u-ked her. "'I'm sure I don't know," mild Gwcnny. 'He hnsu't he n to mc me for n week, Jiint bemuse told him I neier winded to me him again.'" Fxchunge. mm HANFORD'S fuolsam of Myrrh POSTAGE STAMPS llara tnonuR. ir.,r l., luuij, ar valuHhlc iay h ll' In-al i.llturt. 1 UK. IIIT I IIHIMTtMH (,'T fnr your l"v r mil la my h..t ul in rara alaiiiia Trlra Oe, mul una tinrr iirlnl vnlua 611", IIII K.. loo aiiraint'ly rata i.l.i i. M, ami rniamn fur I'M ..r ill mi In It aarti. I ullwl li.ar iiivlili hilxllm lua,! and aiijiiyajilii iii.uviiu-mI, JOsIimink Nlir.ltMAN ii I Bin pi yliioo inuii. lim 711 .... Hut Kerlnca, Ark. Oregon &CaIifomiaDirectory Hotel Roosevelt Ontaf POHIXASO'S Nwr .(. All romia h aim wi-r nr luU, H.i up. MM MOOI. Ill W. I'aiM Hi. t;ulTi- Kin. p. iiitrair iHUt. Start Now? earn ma money Hi ho ear rul uuul whll lrijtitf. I'oalllon arm ri-d. l.-tiira rlr St I'lillryaa. Wrll fur PnlnloK. MHIFR avariM or collioi muLtn 711hlrt . Portland, Or. MHi'lal wlnlxr rata lir ilnr, wack er nuiiitb IORTLANI, OHTUON Ahmtmltly f irrprao Ouriirlhml llnyl Hi., Nr 1'nloii Niittlnn. Hotel Hoyt IORTLANI. C Abtvluttty rir; Ouriirlhml llnyl Hia .N HOTEL ROOSEVELT ftAN ritANCISCO'ft NIW tHt MOTTL Krv ro.ni M ti tri.lli or mu.w r tt 4 Ui. juumn nt K'W), iinrHtt lint UtMif. t f v v v -v -v rv -v v 'v -v k OUT THERE C3 3 Dy FANNIE HUR3T AuuvtvUvuvuv lU eft, vv u.v. 1V30, lo lui Nwiiar Hymlli al l r . . a -I n 8 " -MrrfiPC. - r WW aa ' i" f K C B Or V ' ay. A'iv. tau . Lt. I, p. rr Tim"?" rrn , yft'io I IN' 1 1 1 1 1 n I ,- u w m - v n?aaaay OPERATION NOT NECESSARY K KCT Al. anal Coins allmcsli nitldi nukaly and (araaaurolly wtdar Hi In CI ltrm acaa-ajr. cal lawf iml of Imtr-irnt, whi. h Muarachully. Hil V. 10O. fiilM Kuitialcd boohdracrllM anrihfKl find ainlalna our K k I t'lTN ASsrMANcEuK IIIKH MIMISA1H OH U K KFJ LNl-rii, 6d lur nrt kil !. U UA Ml aW 'aarraCTaaaaaaaTMa RECTALWtOlOM CLINIC 'J f K Ti-" V ATT t rm VaM itidtli joit B, ,mtaa f ttn4 W. N. Portland, No. 51-1930. Garfield Tea Wns Your GrandmolherS ttrincdy For every mom nch iiml ItileMliixl III. Thin Km"! old fufthloned herb huiui! remedy for e o li I I p h t Ion. ioin:nh IIU und other diTurifrf menu uf the nya- teui mi pruiHlent thci dil In In neli greiiter filtor H a fmiilly tne, Iclne lliiin In )mir Krnn, limit !,er' rtiiy. Dank Catli Paradoi The pnrndut of u run on u hunk lit ell t'lprfNtcd hy tho cue of tho liillllMho Impilred of hi hunk W hetll er It hud cu-!i iivullulile fur piiylnu thn iimuuiit of IiU deposit, (iiiIiik: "If you run pny me, I don't wmit my money; hut If you en n't, I do." All tlepoHitors mint to lie mire their money "In there." Yet It never Is there nil nt one time. Thart'i Alway tha Weathar "Fverjhoily miikea mlHtiikeit or there'd he no need of ruhheri to lend peiicll," retniirkei the hrumlillc idilloHopher. "No, nnd thn newnpiirT wouldn't havti niiytlilin to print." rorllnnd Ki promt. Unitad Slatrt Bank t'p to June, I'.i.-.l, there were Oil minimi ki vni."( luiiikH In the l ulled Sttiteit nnd "17 Ktut k mivinct luiuki III the I'lilted Stilted. Ill the New F.iinlnnd (tided there were 3s I mu tual Hit vines hiiukN, In tho eiiHlern (tit teg there were '.'I dock citlncit hunk. In gout hern utalcK there were elKht (lock, III the Middle Wed there were GTU dock nd 1!) unit mil. In the western (In I en there Were l.'l dock Mivlimg hit iik n, mul In the I'uclMc (tnted there were -I Hock nnd U Uiutunl gnvliik'S hunks, Write a hitter letter hut don't (end It. If you must. Why doeg troiihle (It Hcldly on nmn with a freckled face? K : m aiV f.A At il ' I xmrn f, .aUf r alrm V 'ul r. 1.. V . vk....4(MilUl MUS. CLARA RILEY 2100 rmon & 4th Avt., Sloui City, lwa ,(I began to take Lydia E rinkham's Vcgctalile Cora pound nt Change of Life. Now I take it every spring and fall and it keeps me In good health. I nm able to take care of an eight-room house and garden at the age of 71 years. I will praise the Vegetable Com pound wherever I go for it is a wonderful medicine for women. They should give it a good trial hy taking about five bottles." Mrs. Clara Riley, MRS. miRTIIA STTPHEN9 21 E. Huai !x., Lancaaitr, l'cnntylvanta 'I was very nervous and rundown and weighed less than one hundred pounds I felt tired and weak and I often had to lie down I took Lydia Ei Tinkham's Vegetable Com pound because I read the ad vertisement in the paper. Now I eat well, sleep well, and have good color. In fact, I couldn't feel any better and I weigh one hundred fifty-five pounds lam glad to answer letters from any woman who wants to know more about the VcgctablcConv pound." Mrs. Bertha Stephens tnf-m Jwfftrwi'ffm'r "Sm-WnJ),., tNWiiHaili ai' it 4 V AMKS n. MortltHM. wng n urndti- nte of two Amerlciiit uni vithII U- did Frencli one. lie hud I'.iirhelor of Artg deirree, Mno ter of Artg degree, nnd a Imctor of Lung diKreo. Ilu (poke four Inn Kiiuueg fluently, nnd knew the plimu, violin, and oriui, till three of which he pin) eil with hrllllHiicy, to miy nolh lti of (urh h n-er limtrumeiitg an the It ul tn p and huii Jo. When he wag twenty-five, hid pntrl miuiy rondxted (olely of hid tii;i ifli lfl rent t'duciitloii am) whnt tmturul till intd were (O geiierounly IiU. The (enhir Morrell, dig futher nnd die gurvlvInK relullve, hud died a week After he hud lout hid cnormoug hohlllik'g In a Wall Street CniHti. The Incredlldo neipiel to tlmt pro cedure Iny In the fact tlmt youiiK Mor rell, IliMtend of ficllliK the cru.-h of Hidden poverty, reull.ed within him lelf (eiinn of flnthin and relense, that nt flrnt wed liiroinpreheiiHllde to Mm. Whnt hnd hMppcned wim thut viiKnliorid, who hnd nil hlg life heen Impil'ioiied hy clrcuiiuituncp, felt him- elf (inldeiily freed. For the fird time In hid rnrcfully dedlgned life, the yuime Morrell dured to admit to htmnelf tlmt he deHpNed the profed un of In w that hud heen iimpped out fur him nn the n of IiU wenithy futher; tlmt he depUed the Hoclul routine In which he hnd heen burn nnd hred ; that he wnd n free Innee nt heart nnd tlmt nt liiht he wild t llherty to ho hlniHclf. Tlmt la hew, durliiit the next five J en m In the I'.uhi'iulun qMHi ti-rd In pruHlenlly every lurite city nnd (ea purt the llfiire (f Jiimeg Morrell win to heeome a f.iuillliir one. The tull (lender young felluw, cultured, nun ilinlHiit, hut a vncuhotid In dre.dd nnd ninnner of llvln?, hecnnie a wanderer In the varlotid l'.ohemliig of the world. A .mull ukulele, hid only hit of lutf Rni;e, he tinkled for a living. Jameg Morrell wandered from capi tal city to capltiil city, from (eaport to geaport. from Shdiichnl to Seattle; from Seattle to Roaton; from Itoston to Triente; from Trlente to (Nindantl iinjile; from Coiiitdtitlnople to Itome; from Itoino to I'nrla ; from I'nrlg to MurM-llle; and (o on and on, tinkling away on hlg ukulele fur which. In re turn, he received hli almple hoard and lodging- For the flrot time la Ida carefully militated, rxtremely gophlgtlcated young lifetime, Jbiihh Morrell waa Imppy. A vaguuomL A Dilnatrel. New (cenci, tiew peopleg, new pn.itlmc. No etriifrgle for eilntenre becaude ex-, latuuce could bo 10 almple. The world waa what you made It. Young Morrell hnd tnade hl a playground, a rnrclcg garden In which to gun him self. Hie hudlneag, hlg detlny, hlg respoiialhlllty pnsded hi in by. There wud never anything hut hmee change In h!a pockfta, a noe Jingle In hlg (lugertlpg nnd a tionchnlnnce In hln lieHrt. Jamea Morrell, Jr., who had been reared aa the only child of a million aire, turned gratefully to I'-olieiula. It waa In the I'.ohemla that Id New York's, gome five and a half years aft er the death of his father. Hint young Morrell walked Into a situation that whs to deter hlg footdtepg from their wllly-nllly wanderlnca. Tinkling away his evenings In a Greenwich Villnge enfe, where ho re ceived In return a cot In an attic and Ida three meals a day, young Morrell met and fell In love with a girl named Itnehel Tnylor, eighteen, blmrrely beautiful, and an art student In the quarter. She wns the daughter of a conl mer chant In Plttdburgh and her foray Into I'.ohemla waa the equivalent of a year abroad after a finishing school. The spirit of Bohemia was no more the spirit of Rachel Taylor, than the spirit of Madagascar. Young Morrell was not to know thnt until after he had married her. He fell In love with her la the physical environment of Rohemla; he first be held her In the cnmlle llt ahndowg of giirret studios and cellar cafes. To him (he wns drenched with this spirit of vsKnliondnge, nnd It must be an Id for Itachel Taylor tlmt ahe believed hemdf to be filled with thnt gypsy ItiNtlnct. They were married on the cnpltnl of two dollars and forty cents between them, and the young troulmdour felt himself on the pinnacles of romance. For the first yenr they lived In a gar ret, wlille Itachel painted futurlstlo Indies on satin cushion tops, and tried to sell them at women's exchanges, nnd James tinkled his ukulele for their evening men! nnd tho slant roof over their hendn. At the end of tho second yenr, with their romance lying In ruins about them, Jnnies, no longer able to with stand the Importuning of a wlfo who wns with child, accepted a position of apprentice In a Pittsburgh law olllce, which hnd been ohtnlned for him by his coal merchant father-in-law. That la the beginning. If ever a mnn wns predestined for commercial success thnt mnn wns Jnnies Morrell, As his father-ln-lnw, who hnd In the beginning secretly despised him, put It, everything; thnt Morrtdl touched turned to gold, nnd the curious part of It wns thnt It did not seem to be due to any genius that the fellow brought to Ids work. There wns something of a chained wild heiiNt about Morrell. Ho en dured hlg micccKg In much the same way lui endured his environment, hid wife, ur.J even hlg c! lid. He nuw It piling up nboiit him i I he let It pile. He (tood In the cour;room dedalmlng In behalf of the great corporation ho represented, und It aometlmeg accmcd to him that souio one on tho outdldo of him was doing the (peaking, while he, the shell of mi Individual, stood there caring not ut all. It could almost ho said of James Morrell thnt he did not turn a hand, coiiNldering the magnitude of hlg so called achievements. He hnd nn eye for the law, and a tongue that could, on the proper occasion, grow eloquent, but so hnd other men of less success. When she wns thirty, Itachel Tay lor, who loved the life of creature things, creature comforts, and cre. ture magnificence, saw herself slowly climbing townrd the very pinnacle of such sttnlnnients. Jumeg Morrell wns easily the fore mod lawyer of the state to sny noth ing of the prospects of political power and (tosltioii which Iny ahead. They used to say laughingly of Itachel Tnylor Morrell that she hnd more than once referred to her hus band as the future President of the United Stnteg. I'.e that ns It may, there -wns no doubt that the beautiful reddish eyes of JtHchel were directed toward tho (eat of the mlchty which she expect ed Morrell one day to occupy. One as-M-ct of realization came to her In a vicarious way while James was (till In his highly successful role of corpo ration lawyer. The lovely daughter of the Jumeg Morrells, Annlce, aed eighteen, eloped one day In a hydro plane with the only child of one ot tho great oil magnates of the world. In Ilnchel's opinion, that wns tha fronted plume In the cap of the Mor rells that had yet been planted there. Ten years later, the two grandchil dren of the James Morrells had been presented with a trust fund of five million each by thilr paternal grand parents, mid Jameg Morrell had fas tened on his wife a lifetime income thnt amounted to over one million a year. Two months subsequent to this le gnl act, the cltlts of Pittsburgh and New York awakened one day te head lines nnnounclng the mysterious dis nppenrnnce of James Morrell. Secret st'iirchlngs had been going on for over a period of weeks before the general alarm was finnlly given out to a dis quieted world. After months of publicity, search Ini,' ar.d expeditions of secret service men to various parts of the world, the publicity was suddenly hushed up. Mrs. Morrell resumed her haughty Impressive life aa social lender. News papers, for one rongon or another, left oft" their playing up of this meaty story of disappearance of James Morrell. It wag whispered about among those "In the know- that It had cost Mrg. Jameg Morrell a king's ransom to thug gtamp out the 'conspicuous hap pening of her husband's disappear ance. The trath of It, of course, was thnt Jameg Morrell had finnlly been fer retted out, playing his ukulele In a fantastic hnrbor cafe at Marseilles. After one conference with her hus band, Rachel Tsylor Morrell, who hnd a good hend on her, realized the fu tility of attempting to bait or lure or threaten her husband back Into his proper setting. As she talked to him In bis slit of a room In Marseilles, she realized that here was a man twenty five years younger than the one who had left her a few months before; here was a man who had grasped back hut hnppinegg after It had ail slipped from him; here was a beloved vagabond In his proper setting. James Morrell Is pretty well forgot ten .now, even by Rachel who divorced ' li 1 111 and Is married agnln. He may be found tinkling his way through the different Bohemias of the world. Ills ukulele Is always with him and his worldly possessions are the few pennies that jingle In his pockets. V. W If til ; ' '4 ... ; ilium iig.j...j,. -rr--;rrms)i..i j'i 1, w i,u an. -J - S irnuu . 4m i I: lis '&&&.l '''l-'iij',, r -n-i A Japanese Newsboy, Just Customg Iaeident She wag watching the passengers of an ocean liner as they opened their bngg for Inspection. "What have you to declare?" the cus toms officer asked of the timid Uttls woman, "I have only a silver tray I bought," she replied as she delved Into her bug. "You see, I had to bring something to my daughter, and I didn't have much money ... I didn't buy anything else, It cost such a lot." Sin presented the tray to the mnn with a little spirit of pride. "Pretty, Isn't It?" The nAn looked at It nnd looked at the woman. "Hut, madam, It Is so ev idently not silver . . . er, that Is, yea, I supposo It cost quite a lot. There's no duty; you see, you are al lowed to bring In a hundretl dollars' worth." New York Sun. Forest Wait Alarming Roth tho supply of timber nnd the expected growth full fur short of the needs of the nation, writes E. P. Melnecke In the Journal of Forestry. Devastation of productive forest land through forest Arcs and destructive logging, promoted by waste In the woods, In manufacture, and In use, Is progressing at an alarming rate. The main difficulty In dealing with the decline of American forests lies in the chaotic condition of the lumber Industry which controls four-fifths of the forest lands of the country. This condition Is due partly to oppressive stnte taxation but mainly to Internal disorders of nn economic nnture aris ing from land speculation and Ill-advised flnnnclng In the past (Pr(aral br tha Nml'inal Cianfrapbla Society. Washington. D. C.) ' THE recent burning In Tokyo of the plant of the Japan Adver tiser, best known American dally newspaper In the Orient, arouses Interest In Its Japanese com- petltors and the way In which west ! era newspaper methods have been i adapted to conditions In the Land of the Rising Sun. That Japan should, in the very few years since her mod ern metamorphosis, have so speedily j cuught up with the van of periodical publication Is less wonderful when ! one remembers that the Orient Is the birthplace of the "art preservative," ; and that China possesses the oldest 1 newspaper In the world, j There have been similar newspa pers from remote antiquity In Japan; I small sheets roughly struck off from ! wooden blocks detailing some great political fact, or describing some crime j or some generally interesting event The first attempt at a modern Jour nal In Japan was In 1SC4. when the 1 Kualgal Shlmbun was undertaken by j Jogeph Hess, a picturesque character, ; who tn ISTiO was cast away In the j wrecking of a Junk, rescued and car 1 rled to America. Here he lived for a I number of years, acquired a sraatter j Ing of western Ideas and methods, and, when Japan was opened after the I visit of Commodore Perry, returned I to his native land as an Interpreter, j The first modern newspaper month , ly worthy of the name waa founded j by John niack, an Englishman, one j of the first foreign residents of Yoko j hama. This was In 1872. Since then j Japanese Journalism has grown with wonderful rapidity, both In volume and In character. There are now some eight hundred newspapers and mag azine published in the empire, of which more than two hundred are In Tokyo. Of tho newspapers there are the Kuampo, which la the official gazette, containing tha government announce ments, such as laws, regulations, and appointments; the Kokumln, much quoted In press dispatches from Tokyo, as giving the government opinion of things International during the pre miership of Prince Katsura, and the Nlchl NIchI, aa expressing popular sentiment of the better sort Of magazines there are scores of every sort and kind literary, artistic, legal, medical, scientific technical along all lines of modem accomplish ment and endeavor. JiJI-Shlmpo la "Tha Times." The Jljl-Shlmpo corresponds In a measure to our words "The Times." "JIJl" means "timely evcuts" or "dully svents." "Shlmpo" Is the word for Journal or merely "paper." The Jljl-Shlmpo Is a monument, In a way, h the memory of Its founder; ; not more a monument than a constnut j reincarnation of his spirit and Influ I ence. It was founded 48 years ago by ' tVlk 1 It f A It'll lr 11rf tl'fl Vllb I mrttsk him m v v guts a uw uvu n t a UBivui liV n 0,9 often called the Japanese Gladstone. No account of Japan, however brief, and particularly no reference to its Intellectual and literary development, would be complete without reference to the life and Influence of this re markable man. The policy of the paper Is Inde pendent. It Is partisan only In that It Is liberal, devotod to progress, and opposed to any retrograde policy In Japanese civilization. When It takes occasion to differ with the govern ment, It does so with dignified and logical criticism, and not with the hysterical effusions that appear tn the "yellow" Journals that have developed In Japan as elsewhere. Because of this scholarly and dig nified character, Jljl-Shlmpo wields a great influence and Its voice is potent In shaping and controlling public opin ion. The paper emphasizes Its commer cial department and a staff of trained men looks after this part of the news. A foreign department of three edi tors cares for the cable and telegraph dispatches and keeps In close and In telligent touch with International af fairs. Domestic news Is gathered by corre spondents In every city and Important town of the empire, sifted, and ar ranged by two editors. Twenty men compose the city staS and. In close harmony with the re portorlal methods of our Occidental papers, cover the local news of Tokyo, a city of more than two million. In common with all Oriental lan guages, Japanese Is written and print ed from right to left, and the title, therefore, is in the upper right hand corner of what would be for us the eighth page. The lines of print are vertical and read from top to bottom and from right to left Each article la In a small square surrounded by a border. How tha Type Is Set Typesetting In Japanese Is a tedious and laborious piece of business from an Occidental viewpoint though the many hnnds employed make it rapid enough In an Oriental sense. Japanese Is printed In two sets of characters the borrowed Chinese, which are Ideo graphic, each representing a word or a group of words; and side by side with these characters. In their vertical line, runs the translation or explana tion In the Indigenous grass charac ters, a sort of phonetic or stenographic script easily read and understood by the common and uneducated people. When an article or editorial Is ready In manuscript It Is sent first to the Ideographic composing room, where It Is divided Into "takes" and given to Chinese compositors. The room Is filled with closely set racks, containing the thousands of varieties of Ideographic type. Each compositor goes from rack to rack looking for the character re quired. That he may not forget what he Is looking for, he sings It over and over audibly, In a cracked, nasal sort of aing-song. A composing room la anything but a quiet place, resembling the chorus of a Chinese theater. When the article Is finished, It la placed In a sort of galley, tied to gether and sent to the real composi tors, who untie It and proceed with a pair of tweezers to place the small grass type beside the Ideograph char acters. This work demands scholar ship of a high order, for It requires not only an accurate and exact knowl edge of orthography and language, but general Information In regard to the subjects discussed, thnt the multi meaning characters may be Inter preted. The type thus completed Is proved, the proof carefully rend and corrected and taken then to the Imposing stones, where it goes into the make-up of the paper. All typesetting Is of necessity hand work, as the peculiar character of the language precludes the use of a lino type. Stereotyping and press work are along the ordinary lines required for an American perfecting machine, from which the paper comes, folded and counted as In one of our own estab lishments. The day's work Is similar to our own although the hours differ slight ly. The editorial department begins activities about eleven In the morning and Its work Is completed by five In the afternoon. The typesetters are at work by eight The business offices are open from ten to ten. The first edition is on the press by eight, in order thnt It may catch tha night trains for provincial circulation. The city edition goes to press at 1:00 a. m.