TME LOIRD HS ft ; x Ilnrt E K f i t f m. -j. 1 i Sk f,V .ill ,f iv r sir nil? r . ' l i j - i " ' A V 1 r-. ; .iiV. :- :i.v 1 .vvN S"v i. ;i t - ;, V f: V ? t r if i L.'" I VvV .h yJs-lvm -.: ', .1: fH -;Ai --yf.f fill Divine Message in the ' Bursting Buds of Spring Tbt pring miracle, of which Easter U at once a aymbol, and a culmina tion, la rill, probably always will be. a puule to which natural science of fers no solution. What la the force that makes life to pulsate where for months all has been deadness? What and where Is the heart thut sets all vegetable life a -going 7 In defiance of ordinary law. water runs uphill In millions of tree trunks and flower stems; some hidden unex plalnable mystery of life awnls herb age up from myriads of graves, renew leg plant Urea In their own order, wintry death has flven place to reaur rectlon life. How? Why? Shall we ever know enough about thla mystery to be able to explain In terms of purely physical life! a writer in the Montreal Family Herald aska. To any that roots, bulba, tubers have a germ of life In them which the spring seam calls Into vigor tells me nothing. How des It hap pen? Who gives the signal for It! What la this germ, this mystery of llfef Cun science mnke one? Where la the pump that sends billions of wa tery matter climbing up trees, and plants on top of the highest points In the landscape? Gravity cun hare nothing to do with It Where is the great throbbing, pumping heart of nature? What controls it to stop at one time of the year and start acaln t another time? All that we can any about It Is that a miracle happens each spring. Insurrection from the dead, worked by a Power outside of nd beyond all our human mechanic!? Symbol In Spring AwakenlnQ. Aa I wrote some year! ago, it Is my belief thut spring is earth's Hauler lime. Its rising a pa In to renewed life; the vegetable kingdom printing Upon the world's surface the all Important news for irMtnklnd: "Uecanae 1 live, ye shall live also!" For the spring awakening la purely tjJcal of 1 lie re turn of the life principle to the dead body of t lie second Adam or Mend of our nice at the "Spring of sonld," when He too came forth from the ground with the promise of another summer and I bloated harvest lime for r 'n kind. It is that sure and splendid hope that makes Kaster a fentlval time. It Is founded on the angel's message to the women "Clirift Is risen from the dead!" It carries the loglm! corollary, continued by the Mvlne Muster's own words. "Hecause I live, ye shall live also!" Every lilllf pale green shoot In thP woods and llrlds, every crocua. Iicpuilcu or spring beau ty, and gleaming bloodroot blossom tings out if we would heed it. flince I am hre, douht not H rot And kep with m ills Easter day. Life After Winter's Deadness. Easter comes most appropriately at the earth'! resurrection lime from lla winters deadness. Life from death Is the message of spring and of Kaster iaj. Oeuth is no longer to be consid wwyCT.inii niiiiii mnnn)munm'u"W.M'i,jyw jmwwmwy smil of mlnn. tills rlnv of tl.ivs. tv -- v The Lord is risen. Toward the surprising set thy (aco. The Lord is risen. Behold He givcth strength and grace; For darkness, light; for mourning, praise; For sin, His Holiness; for conflict, peace. Arise, O soul, this Easter day! Forget the tomb of yesterday, For thou from bondage art set free; Thou sharest In His victory And life eternal is for thee, Because the Lord is risen. ered in ending, but only an Interval between this life and another life since that first of all Easter da dawned upon this world of humanlt.v. Death Is such an appalling fact, you know. Human nature Instinctive! v dreads and rebels against it. It I . something Imported into humanity, which after all these ceuturles since man was first made still comes as a shock to It. We were not Intended, aoi designed to meet that shock t None can escape It, Death comes to every one as a stop to all worldly activities. That One had actually overcome death, and proved that It was for the future to be a gate to another, larger, com penantlng life, and no longer prison gate. wlnglng open only one way. In wards, because of sin, was amntlng news to the world. Only the Creator of mnn and the Manager of all things, could have accomplished change like t nut I Just as we cannot but see that only He could set s -going that principle which works the spring miracle of lift renewed out of wintry deadnesa. Brought Hope to World. It was something new to men. this application of the spring miracle to poor humanity. It meant that our sin no longer brought the Inevitable, on avoidable penalty of eternal banish ment from the light of heaven. Like the blessed spring II brought hope to the world. Just as every spring sent good faithful men out on to the land to sow their grain In hope of a harvi time, so might men stand by grave sides of their dead loved ones In sure Mil rp? anl fcifii V II I M maVs lid d"taT. I . vo'jt Witt to jfla) 1 I MmW f J i I tm wjiWg you I y IRISES 0 All if ;i ill I rj ill . I Mil ; . and certain hope of a harvest-time res urrectlon from the dead. There la no joy like that of Easter tide, and I think it Is a tine thing tc give expression to our joy. It wai that Impulse that taught men and women to wenr something new at this season. The Easter hat has a slgnlfl canee of Ita own. It means that thf lovely, ornamental part of humanity la rejoicing and very happy In the Joy of Easter. It shows a responding to the angel message "He Is Ulsen," and says with Him we have risen also to new hope, new life, A few years ago a good bishop said a good deal In denunciation of "$A actually, JTi puld for a new hat," and that by his faithful wife! I am not sure, but I Imagine that since then a good ninny twenty-fives have gone the same way. And I cannot see anything blameworthy In the expenditure, If It has not taken money that should have been spent In other good works. For the best, therefore the most rep resentative part of humanity, thereby sets forth the joy of mankind In the Resurrection, and the happiness that has come to It from the defeat of sin and death by the Man, Christ Jeauc It It one way of letting our "Joy he known unto all men." as an Inspired wrt'.ar sdvlw4. Mandrake and taster Connected in Iceland In Iceland there Is a quaint Kaster superstition about that weird root, the mandrake. If one wishes to become suddenly rich and who doc not he must porscs a mandrake root and steal a coin from a poor widow at early mass on Easter Sundny. When the stolen coin Is placed beside the mandruke It will, mysteriously and Im mediately, draw all coins of like de nominations to Itself from every indi vidual's purse In the church. Hut the root can only exercise this magic when It Is dug from the ground on flood Friday before sunrise by a man with a shnrp sword and an undesirable Mack dog. Superstitions any that the terrible shrieks of the uprooted herb will Immediately kill the black dog and therefore save the mnn and bring him luck and fortune. John of Arc I supposed to have carried at all time a female mnndrnke posseslng great magical powers. EASTER OMENS IN ENGLAND and France it is considered a good omen to see a lamb on Easter morning when one first looks out of the bedroom win dow. If the lamb's head is turned . toward the house any wish that is made will come true. It is commonly thought that the devil can take the form of any creature in the world except the lamb and the dove. Colored Editer Eggs ' When eggs ttrsl ln-eiiine Identified with the ('hilstl.'in fi-silvnl they were dyed red to coimneinonile I lie blood of ('hrlst. shed on Olivary. Hut lids practice did not remain universal, fof it Is recorded that Kdward I, In IIWi, ordeied 'M"iO dor.en eg to he stained in boiling and some to be covered with golf leaf" for distribution In the royal household. WORLD WAR YARNS by Lieut. Frank E, Hagan "The Record! of the Sixth" When the old soldiers of the army were good ones, you couldn't tlnd their equal In wartime valuo, auywhor. One of the best of the good one! wa Sergeant Major Ullrich of the Sixth Infantry, an outfit attached to General Pershing himself during part of It! career. There was llitlc of tho military In I'llrleh's appearance. He was a "paper" man almost solely, the ser geant major being, in effect, the gen eral manager of a regiment. No recruit was so Insignificant thai I'llrlch didn't know all about him be fore he'd had a single pay day In the Sixth; no detail escaped his wise old eyes. And most of what he learned he kept on tile simply by entrusting It to memory. Shortly after war wns declared, the army did an afeaost unpreiedeiiied thing. I'llrlch, the enlisted man. was commissioned a major and ordered to report to the adjutant general's de partment at Washington. The old timer was to round out his thirty years' service as an oltlcer. Wearing his majors unlftrm, old I'llrlch bade good by to two of Ida closest friends. "They've spoiled a d (I good sergeant major to mnke an awfully poor major," he confessed ly Col. Matthias Crowley or the Fifty fourth Infantry. Then, tears stream ing down his face, be shook hands In farewell with another colonel, IMrt Noble of the Sixth Infantry. I'llrlch ! own regiment, and stumbled down the road. Noble stood on the porch of his quarters, eyes following I'llrlch until the erstwhile sergeant major had al most disappeared. Then, with a shrug of the shoulders toward the departing soldier, he said sadly to bis adjutant: "Captain, there go the records of the Sixlh Infantry I" "The Fait Mountain Mail" I'ersotia as distinguished as the Inle Mrs. Totter Palmer of Chicago rode in the cab of Philip fioldsteln before the war. They should have Seen hlrn later, in the Vosgea. as he piloted "Goldstein'! Fast Mountain Mall." Goldstein emerged from the war aa a aergennt with a tterling record of service. Not the least of his accom plishments was delivering the mall on time to his regimental headquarter! during one of Its early visits on the line. Goldstein was i corporal and mall orderly, l.i the mountains. He made a single, jdlng passage with heavy mall s:icks to an advanced p. c. Then he decided his duties must be lightened. On his second delivery, the mall bags were strapped on the backs of two burros. They were tiny animals but one of them could have handled all the sacks. It became the custom for cooks along the steep mountain trull to tempt the little norms as they straggled past, with kitchen delicacies from the army stores. "Hey I You're delaying the Gold stein Mountain Mall," Corporal Gold stein would shout Indignantly to the cooks. And he'd urge one burro, then the other, Into action up the narrow trail. -I gotta use two of "em," he ex plained confidentially to the regi mental adjutant one day. "So'i I can leave apota on 'em to reach with a spur." Saying which he swung the limb of a tree against the nearest burro with a resounding whack I And the "Fast Mounlnln Mall of Goldstein" was on Us way again. The Pawing of a Sea Power Exactly ten dayi after the Armis tice, the Germany navy surrendered. Rnllors aboard the New York, Texas," Wyoming. Arkansas and Florida (the Sixth P.attle squadron) on November 21, 101S. participated In the surrender. The five American battleships were In what was known as the red line of two groups which maneuvered Into position so that a highway of victory was formed down which the German vessels steamed to lower their colora at sunaet. Directly ahead of the American ships that day waa the British Fifth squadron. The British destroyer Cardiff went ahead to tdek up Ihe German vessels. This It did and Ihe long black forms of the enemy boats were first sighted by the allied fleet short ly after nine o'clock. It was an ImpreKslve sight as tho Germnn fleet, led by the Scldlltz, Moltke and Illn denburg, passed by. the Allied ves sels were In complete silence. Every man was at bis post. Every gun waa manned. The lines closed In behind the fleet which had passed In surrender. A band aboard Admiral P.eatty'a flagship, the Queen Elizabeth, played "The Star Spungted Banner." A second band, on Admiral Rodman's flagship, played 'Hall to the Chief." German sea power was no more. lit). 130. Wentoni Newi)pr Unlon. On Cutting Characters But life cannot be made to "fit" anybody, and the novelist who mnkea the attempt will find himself culling something that gets smaller and small er, finer and finer until he must begin cutting his character! next to fit the thing he has made. "Novels and Novelists," by Kutherlne Munsfleld. Age of Soldiers According to statistics complied by tho Veterans' bureau, out of WKMHW United States olllceu and enlisted men serving In the World war, the average ngo waa "1.05 years. Indian Caitas It Is not known definitely Just when castes originated In India. Hecords are not available until tho Vedlc Aryn period, about 1-H B. C Castes were then In existence. Synthetic Widely Used Ninety per cent of all Ihe Hp items, Imitation woods, beads and gayly colored automatic pencils are mnde of a synthesis of formaldehyde and carbolic acid. No matter how severe, you can always have immediate reliefs flavor Ap!Hn stops rm qtilrUy. It cWt it without ant ill effects. Ilnrmlru to the heart; harmlces to anybody. But It always bring relinl. Why suffer? THE LAXATIVE WITH HIGHEST ENDORSEMENT When yon get op headachy, slug gish, weak, half sick, here's bow to feel yourself again In a jiffy. Take a little Phillips' Milk of Mag nesia In a glasi of water or lem onade. Taken In lemonade, Phillips' Milk of Magnesia acta like citrate of iiiagneala. As a mild, lafe, pleasant laxative, rhllllpa' Milk of Magnesia has the highest medical endorsement At an anti-acid to correct sour atomach. ffas. Indigestion, biliousness, It hai been standard with doctor! for KOveara. Quick relief In digestive and llmlnatlva troubles of men, women. children and babies. California Style Haa Appeal for President While President Hoover Isu't noted aa a humorist, he sometimes docs tell a good story, especially during his brief fishing trips down In Virginia. It was on one of these occasions that he remarked, after argument on pros perity, or rather tho lack of it: "I don't want to appear biased be cause I myself am a Californian, but I really do believe the nation as i whole would be better off If It fed lowed the California style a little. "You know, California simply won't be outdone. It must be first In everything. Why, not more than a month ago, after triplets had been born In Florida, a hospital In Los Angeles annouueed quadruplets and I understand that preparations for the 1010 census have already begun In earnest." In Angelee Timet, Dr. Tierce's P11rts are lwt for liver. bowels and atomarh. One little Pallet for laxative three for a cathartic Adv. Budgeting Mice She breezed Into a hardware store. met the affable clerk and chirped; "How much are mouse traps?" "Three for a dime, lady." "How much for two?" "Why not take three?" "Because I've only seen two mlcel" Cot to Earn That "Married life Isn't so bad." "Oh, It's all right after you get to te a trusty." Exchange. For TEETHING troubl es FUSSY, fretful .... of course babies are uncomfortable at teeth ing timel And mothers are worried because of the little upsets which come so suddenly then. Dut there's one sure way to comfort a restless, teething child. Castoria mado esttccially for babies and children! Its perfectly harmless, as the formula on tho wrapper tells you. It's mild in tante and action. Yet it rights little upsets with a never failing effectiveness, That'a the beauty of this special children's remcdyl It may be given to tiny infanta as r'tcn as there is need. In cases of o .c and similar disturbances, it la invaluable. Hut it has every-day uses all mothers should understand. A coated tongue IS IT YOUR LIVER? Seattle, Wasli. "When I lint heard of Dr. Pierce's (iolden Medical Dini'ov rry 1 had brrn sick for several weeks. Tho doc tor cniM to sea me every d.iy, tuld it wsi my liver. A friend lilting me told" of Dr. llerce'i Gold en Medical Discovery, Before I hail futiihrd the ireond bottle I wai shla to lie on my feet. I took In all twelve bottlei of tho 'Dincovery,' but the rest from pain and the new freih life that It brought was worth It slL"- Mrs. M. R Watson, 7(4 N. 74th St. Hold or tablets. All ilrnleri. Write Ir. Vtt? I'lInU In nnSdiw N. Y., nalnf U rnielmn lilank fuuti4 with Ihe nwdMne sad rM4e tree iiwdl eat ailvlnk Garfield Tea Was Your Grandmother's Remedy For every atom ach and Intestinal 111. This good old fashioned herl) homo remedy for c oustlpatlon, stnunch Ills ami other ilcrnngw inetits of tho sys tem so prevalent these days Is In even greater favor as a family med icine than in your grandmother day. KM ITTITrrfrTrr-mn-rrn T B7 " vwmm. Accimrn Tnr ATM-tut rwwvilia.l I Heart I llla.ll WrtU hxU hf FKKR book iWrlMn! the t. C. J. Dttn laawu aH-igll m(h.lo treat ing I'lkt and eUwt KacUl and fedi ailment, kb ate M eKkiilnly. Alto elrvt Aft kilt at out WKIITrN AHSDHANC K TO KI.IMIN A IK I I U S. aa milttr how , OR DEA RECTAL COLON CLINIC FOR SALE Income rrorlr Monmouth, Ore. 8 hool Town, f Itonm Dwelling. Mi4. ernl Berne Furniture. I 1-ltoom Cot Intra furnlnhtd nmliie, in4rn. In come t1 pr month. Itrnicd all time. Hlrkneaa .'ompvla lo all. rrlce S.1.MM). ll.Too Hill Handle. All I II I II III tun 411 B. Menaioat. Ate, Vteaaaealb. Ore. CHICKS A muting- new l" prt VVurMs' lteeir(l W. U anil all avy lrele. 100 live di-llvery gtiaranurd. 10 yrara' fpulsil"" roiir aaf.uarl. Agent wanted. qi rin nATinriiY...4ar T4 H20 First Avenue teaUte, Wah. A CRIMINAL OFFENSE To ! rr k1f rR . . Ui vBt rn r..natl it:..n . . . u km S Inf ImIi ...ut htt diMV Mii-.atloh. Tit-- rn tlta rull IB rtirwhieftlliurtita en.. futf it.u-oi ( imfl. Sd el in-. I'tBgon ! will -t a- a 6wa4 UmiIa t-4 rlnt- roitr at.fm before t -iir iinriiig h.m- emu w m f..r It ilir aiareor fFnrf..n. b' Hf.tr II 01 A.14reae MUl.IlM H UUt I oil I-A Ml lloalla - - - NealiTllla. Tean. W. N. U, Portland, No. 1J--1931. Tree Had Sealed Pip When A. It. Sullivan, of Tacoma, picked up a pit-Co of wood to throw Into his stove, clos examination dis closed that an old plte had been sealed In the bet rt of a tree, and (hat 80 rings bad ground around It William Ilonney, curator of the Washington State ll.storical six-let y, declared that the pipe had probably been placed In a hole In a fir tree nearly 1)0 years ago by some trap per or hunter. Keeping It Going "I wnnt lo see ihe boss." "What do you want to see hlin about?" "About a Job." "I'm sorry, but yon can't see Mm; he's In an unemployment confer ence." Judge. Sid; mssmtH OTTaiiasi fUlUMJa. ejr-- ' 'u AVhaeljfcH Nawa' 9MMlg.SjMeevastt fctMsae4 aWt fear AIhW.IIm CoMtlgnwilWnj" "V!ETZ7.e calk for a few drops' to ward off constipation ', eo does any suggcftlori of bud breath. Whenever older children don't eat well, don't rest well, or have any little upset, a more liberal dose of this pure vegetable preparation la usually all that's needed. Genuine Caatorialiaa Gins. I i. Fletcher's signature on the wrapper. Doctors prescribe it, ' r jr- , J,- .' '; w CASIDRU,,,, . V I M r'.Mii II I IM 1 1 - -----a