Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The Ione independent. (Ione, Or.) 1916-19?? | View Entire Issue (May 29, 1931)
that sluggish feeling rut yourself rltfht with nature by chewing Fecn-a-mlnt. Work mildly but effectively In small doses. Modern iafe idcntlllc. Fur (ho family. Feenamint aim sow. fM OHIOINAt Feenaniinti 7it Chtwinq bum LAXATIVE No laiti Hut tht Mint Cheuit like Uum rOR CONSTIPATION hixpliatliy finds In hi s halt ip'aaalon In Ihlt ulalitly I()IUI J h o I I . I mt fof lit tutl- lul Dio In Hoiitn nil I -off aa Shop W10M i m iTnrrnrr MULTNOMAH H0TE1 4lk aaS riaa Portlaae. Or. 4 atl r rai aralra-J Fireproof Itouiii-batk 12.00 up Fvfv farm hmiaa newlart Wntalor informal ma tAll PIPI ft TANK CORPORATION Portland Or ion Old I ...Id MunlKlW. I.ur Old OMd. "II. VtT l'l. m.l.-. Jrwhr l'linoli.1 V.l. hr. Itlnat tiuM Twtli. t'fowna. Ilrlilai- (ithMta ritturncd Ml our riMia If ffr r-fn-"l. HI inl'x'H I f'olullil.Ua I IrrU liapl II, NT. Tributa "Your partner linltutoa a dm most realistically over the radio," "So naturally tlmt people are tend ing lilm dog biscuits." To Vcp rb-an anil haalthr take Or, I'lrrra'a I'lraaaat rellrla. ' hT regulate livrr, bowel and atomich. -Adv. Tim rtiltnjr pen must lie mightier tluiil (lie sword. aA Kill Rats Without Poison A fVeay Exterminator f hat HWl KiH 1veaiocfc, Poultry, Doge, Cafe, or mm Daby Chlckm K R Oran ht uatd a boat tha horn. barn or poul Irr Tard with ahaolula aalMr II contain! a audi, aattaa. K K O la mada of Squill, aa rrrom mr ndrd or U 8 Drpl. el Agrlcultura.ormdrlral undrr Hit Connahlt procraa whkh Inturrt mat mum tirtnalh. Utd or County Ac nu In moat rtl-kllllna campaign. Moan-Saca Caarantaa, Intltt apon K-R-O. tht original aVqulll tatrr anlnator All druigltta, poultry aupply and ed houtra, 7Sc. II 2). 12 iw Dlrrrt l( dratrr cannot tuj.pl r iXHO Co, Sprlngfttld, Ohio. KILLS RATS-ONLY Eaiy to Spank One of iintiiro rurlosltlca U ttie prcut dUTcroiice In tlie al.o of the knnj;iiroo nnd It) yming a niotlii-r liclnil tinriiuilly nhuiit four fi'i't lilnh U ml I'OU iimiikIs In weight, IiIIk Imt one to tlimt linlilcn when Imrn nre only (mil Inch In length niul weluh IcNg thiin n iiioiihp. (?olllor'a Weekly. There la In man a higher than love of lniiiltii'K; he ran do wlllioiit lm i ilniM, nnd liiMend thereof find lileHKi'ilnexM. 'nrlylu. Stomach Troubles Headache and Dizziness If your Rtomuch Is sick, you are alrk all over. If you can't diijest your food, you loseatrenRth, get nervoun and feel as tired when you git up as when you went to bed. For 10 yenra Tanlnc has restored to health and activity many thou aunds who autTcrcd just as you do. Mr. Daniel Vinclguerra, of 6200 Stilea St., Philadelphia, l'a., Buys: "I have not had a dizzy apell or r head acho linoo tiiklng Tanlnc. My nerves are in better ahnpa and I cun enjoy a good night's Bleep." Let Tanlaa help you too. It cor rects tho most olmtinule digestive troubles relieves gas, pnins In tho Btomach and bowels, restorea appe tite, vigor and sound sleep. Tanlue is mado of rooti, bnrks and herbs. Costs less than 2 cents a dose, (let a bottle from your druggiht today. Your money back If it doesn't help you. W. N.V, Fortland, No. 20-1931. HBSfi 'Hi' mm 'llfo: HI W m IT afJ IC Cm fi!r 1 h$i is, si m The Plains of Abraham , By James Oliver Curwood by Doubtodnjr bnrnn Co., Ino. WNU Barvlee. CHAPTER XI Continued 21 Tim fires buriied down until they were eyes In tlm night. Hours piiNNed, nml (hi) Keiieeiis IIhIimiimI In (he Mill lieM ns If iiiirenNed by feur. At Inst they heard the chiintltig of a voice coiiilnu iienrer ns fiint as a canoe could travel. It was tlm death soni with which Tlaogii had crleved for his daughter, and the savage were moved by It as leaves are moved by a wind. The siiKpeiiMi! was broken, for In the song of grief was also a note of tri umph which brought the n-ftiig that Tliioga had 'biM-ii auceeshful In bis pursuit. Fresh fuel was piled on the Urea, and the tlainen leapt bl;'h. When Tlaoga and bis companions came from the river, they brought no prisoner with them. Yet a fierce light shone In their countenances as they entered the Illumination, and beginning his death song again Tlaoga imntclied a burning brand and flung It Into the mlilt of the pitchy material about the torture stake. In a moment a winding aheet of flame licked Its way up the pole, and around this Tlaoga dam-i-d, llnlaliliig bis song to the crackling of the pitch. He riVncrlbed h-iw they bad overtaken the fleeing imiii at the edge nf the (treat rocks beyond which the water thundered In a maelstrom. The blind man had fought with a hatchet he had stolen from Ah I Hull's tepee until another blade was sunk In bis brain to quiet him. He was a devil In his bllndneHS, and Tlaogn pointed to Shlndas, who held back his buck skin shirt to show a lonH' and bleed ing guali. The white man was dead, and his body, weighted by the dark neas of his soul, was gone forever la the deep waters beyond the rocks. Hut the unclean one who bad tricked them, the girl whoae evil spirit bad come to bring dishonor upu them and to desecrate the soul of Sol Yan Muk wun, they bad taken alive. Tlaoga'a face grew livid. His so til bad gone so black when they caught her that he could see only death, for be heard his daughter's voice crying to hi in for vengeance. So be had killed the treacherous one. He had killed her at the command of Silver Heels, whoe spirit was singing to him. He bad killed the white girl Vlth his own hands and had flung her body to dis appear with that of the blind man. Suddenly Tlaoga drew from Its bid ing place next his breaat a thing which brought a gimp to the lips of thoso about him. All recognized It as Tolnette's beautiful braid of hair streaming from the bleeding scalp the savage held above hU bend. Tlaoga became more than ever a flend In the flch ns be danced about the stake. Flecks of blood from the Tlaoga Btcame More Than Ever a Fiend In the Flesh aa Hs Danced About the Stake. red sculp struck his face. At the height of his niadncH he (lung it Into the heart of the pltchwood fire. tool Yan Makwun was avenged and tht demand of his people answered. CHAPTER XII At noon of the second day of hts Joflrney Jeems came to the village of Kanestlo, whose chief was Mator.ee, or Yellow Tear. He hnd traveled the seventy miles In thirty hours, nnd wns determined to return ns quickly, for ht wns troubled deeply by the thought that Tolnetto was alone nt a time when the sentiment of the Indians was turning against them. Why he and not a tribal runner had been sent to Yellow Hear pu..lcd him, and the fact thnt be bore a message of small Importance increased his uneasiness. lit hnd scarcely reached Kanestlo when his weapons, a knlfo nnd hatchet, were taken from him and he was brought to Matoiee. This Individual, A M who wns killed at Lake (leorgt tho following year nnd who was a boy In appenrnnco though tht French held him among the bravest fighters of the Hlz Nations, Informed Jeems that be was a prUoner. He said Tlaoga had defaulted In a payment of corn that was due, nnd Jeems was to cover part of the obligation. Matozce tersely ex plained the agreement between the chiefs. If Jeems attempted to escape and was caught by his warriors, bo would be killed; If by any chance he succeeded In getting back to Chenuf sto, then be would answer to Tlnoga., with his life. A dead line was drawn encircling the tepee In which be wns to live, and he found himself under a surveillance little less strict than that accorded to a prisoner whose fnte was to be torture or death. The fourth afternoon lie perceived an excited gathering of women and children some dUtnnce from him but paid no attention to It. I represser by fears which bail become iinbenri.ble, he was determined to gain bis free dom before another dawn. Increasing cloiidliifM during the afternoon and n promise of storm with the beginning of evening added to his hopes for sue ceAH, Thunder and ruin came with darkness, and he feigned sleep at an early hour. It was almost midnight when be sat up and lUtened to the downpour. He was about to rise to bis feet, certain that no Seneciia would he lying In the deluge, when be heard the soilden rustle of the skin flap to the tepee as It was drawn back and some one entered. In a moment a small voice whis pered bis name. Cold hands found him as he held out bis arms. He felt a child's drenched form. Then came choking words half mothered In the bent nf the storrn: "I am Wood I'lgeon. 1 ran away from Oicnufsln three days ago. I have come to tell you Silver Heels Is dead." Lightning flashes which accom panied the storm that night revealed a solitary figure hurrying through the wilderness toward Chenufslo, a figure which sped until it was wlndel and then continued at a slower par with a persistence no bent of rain or blast of wind could bait. The traveler was Jeems. Wood I'lgeon had repeated the message Tolnette entrusted to her a few min utes preceding her flight with Hepsl bah Adams, and no blackness was so thick that It hid from him the tor tured faces of bis wife and bis blind uncle as they beckoned him to ven geance. Fven vengeance seemed futile and Inadequate. Hope did not rise In his breast. He had hoped when he knew his mother was dead, he hnd hoped as he sought for life among the ruins of Tonteur manor, he hnd never quite given up hope that his uncle was alive. Itut now It was Impossible for him to And that saving grace within his mental reach. As he went on, he was slowly dispossessed of the power to hste, though every sinew In his body was bent with Implamhle resolu tion In Its mission of death. He wouM kill Tlaoga. He would kill SI. Indus. There would be only Justice nnd r.o gratification of the flesh or the spirit In his act. A greater and more en compassing thing than the Impulse which had sent him from Matozee's village began to choke him with a force that was sh'keiiln'g. It was his iilonencss. The vnstness of the world. The sudden going of the one who had remained to make It habitable for him. Without Tolnette there was no rea son for Its existence, no reason why It should continue to give him the warmth of life. Tolnette was dead. It was a fate predestined from the beginning, something be bad ahviiv feed vaguely. Nothing counted now; to kill Tlaoga nnd Shludns would not cause a rift In the hopelessness which lay ahead of him. Ho advanced with a speed which would have exhausted him nt any other time. As the hours pussed. nil explanation for this haste gathered In his consciousness. He was going home. Thnt In all of Its significance was the cabin In which Tolnette and he hnd lived. Their home. A thing that had not gone with her body nnd yet was a part of her which he would find ns be bad left It when he came to the end of the trail, unless Tluogit hnd destroyed that, too. He reached Chenufslo. The place gleamed with pools of water. Sus picious dogs appeared to Identify him, hut the people were asleep. lie found bis cabin with the door closed ns It would have been If Tolnette were asleep Inside. He could feel her pres ence when be entered. Hut she was not there. He made it light cautiously nnd screened It so that eyes outside could not see. The floor, the walls, tho room-were' Illumined faintly. He began to put hi bands on tilings, to gather them here and there, making a bundle of his treasures on the table tier things. When he hnd prepared the the bundle he armed himself with a Bus Passengers Out of The poorer class of Spain believes that If you cannot catch the man who deserves punishment, the best thing to do Is to punish some one e)se, even If vengeance Is exacted upon those who knew nothing about what had happened. i In a little village in the province of Valencia a small boy was knocked down nnd slightly Injured by a pass ing automobile. The driver did not stop, but the villagers decided that some one ought to be punished. So they lined up In the main street, tin- er command of the magistrate, to kmiiiel the first automoblllst who came through. Unluckily, the first enr was a btj knife and a hatchet Riid hi bow, then extinguished tht light and went out, closing the door behind him. Ho sought Hhlndas, for his plan was to kill him first Then he would kill Tlaoga. Khlndas was not In his tepee. The place was empty and his weapons were gone, evidence that he was awny on a jour ney. For a few momenta after this discovery, Jeems tlood In the shadow of an oak looking at Tlnogn's dwelling place. The urge to destroy was not strong In him. The gentle whispering among the trees and the drip of water from their foliage combined In a melody of peace which struggled to turn hi in from the thought of death. It might have won If a tall figure m mm. ml- i Ht Htsrd tht Arrow Strike. had not come out of the tepee he wns watching. Jeems knew It was Tlaoga. The chieftain advanced toward him as If an Invisible fute were leading him to bis execution. Then he paused. The moon was bright. It lit up his features thirty yards away as ht gazed Into a mystery of distance which bis eyes could not penetrate. What hnd brought him, what he was think ing, what the night held for him, Jeems did not ask himself. He strung his bow nnd fitted an arrow. Then he called Tlaoga'a name In a low voice to let him know that retribution had come. The bow twanged and a slen der shaft sped through the moonlight with the winged sound of a humming bird. He heard the arrow strike. Tlaoga did not cry out His hands clutched at his breast as he sank to the earth and lay there a motion fess blot Jeems went down the river. For many days he hid along Its shores seeking for Tolnette's body. He saw Senecaa pass and repass, but as he traveled almost entirely In the water he was successful In evading them. When he reached Lake Ontario, he turned eastward, still carving his bun dle. At night he slept with It close to his face, breathing the precious In cense of Tolnette's things. Some times he held to bis Hps the piece of red cloth she bad worn around her hair. No spring of action encouraged Mm to return to Forbidden virlley or the Itlchclleu, Hnd It was chance and not a definite purpose which brought him to the place on Lake Champlnln called Tlconderoga by the Indians. This wan late In the summer of ":& The French had occupied a point of land nnd were building Fort Vaudreull an1 Fort Carillon. Jeems selred upon these activities with the avidity of one who at last had found somethlii'; to assuage a killing hunger. He Joined Montcalm's forces nnd was given a musket nnd n spnde In place of his bow nnd arrows. lie entered now an apprenticeship of digging and building in the enrth where the forts were going up. The work nnd Its environment, the excite ment of war, and the ever-lncreaslm; news of French victories were a relief to his broken spirits, but they did not thrill him. He fought against this apathy. He tried to hate once more. He repented to himself many times thnt the English and their Indians were responsible for the tragedies which had befallen his loved ones. Hut he could not rise to the passion for vengeance. He wanted to fight, he wanted to see the English nnd their allies overwhelmed, but his emotions were ns dull as they were implacable. They burned with a fntullstlc evenness which neither triumph nor defeat could -raise to great heights or lower to the depths they had plumbed. IieutU could never stir him again ns It had alreudy stirred him, no .humbles could sicken him nnd no victory bring to him the remotest gladness of the song he had chanted in the firelight at Chenufslo. (TO UK CONTINUED.) Luck in Spanish Town litis. It wns halted and the driver an nil the passengers were pulled out nnd given a thorough beating. Nona of them knew what It was all about but the punishment was so real tlmt IS bad to be treated by doctors when the bus reached the nearest city antf three had to go to a hospital. Resourceful Officer When two men who had stolen an automobile were surprised by a Mary leboue (England) policeman recently, they jumped from the machine and fled In another car, but the ofllcer mounted the abaudouud machine and overtook them. ft esJs boTT ITM gong; anyway I HE modern Miss needs no 'time out" for the time of month. If you've ever taken Bayer Aspirin for a headache, you know how soon the pain subsides. It is just as effective In the relief of those pains peculiar to women t Don't dedicate certain days of every month to suffering. It's old fashioncd. It's unnecessary. Aspirin vill always enablo you to carry on in comfort Take enough to assure your complete comfort If it is genuine aspirin it cannot possibly iiurt you. Iiaycr Aspirin Joes not depress the heart It does not up set the stomach. It does nothing but stop the pain. Headaches come at inconvenient times. So do colds. But a little liayer Aspirin will always save the day. A throat so sore you can hard ly swallow is made comfortable vilh one Rood gargle made from these tablets. Neuralgia. Neuritis. Itheumatism. Pains that once kept March of Civilization Over "Dark Continent" Although the current crop of mov Ing pictures of animal and native life In Africa valiantly seeks to preserve all our Illusions of the Inaccessibility of the Interior of the Dark continent and of the danger of travel among wild tribes and fierce animals, the evidence Is piling up that Africa Is becoming pretty well civilized. This Is not to say that Its tribes have all adopted the ways of the outside world or that the animals have been herded Into sous. We merely mean that transportation facilities have been so greatly developed that rail roads or at least one railroad cut straight across the continent, while there are few forests so nearly lu penetrable that the Intrepid explorer is not likely to run Into trucks and automobiles calmly speeding along on good motor roads. Even though the famed pigmies are still pictured as shy and retiring when they are thrown upon (he screen, it is evident from their very appearance in the movies thnt It Is not very hard to find them or to seek out their haunts. It Is related by one Soothes restless, wake CHILD THERE are times when a baby is too fretful or feverish to be sung to sleep. There are some pains a mother cannot pat away. But there's no time when any baby can't have the quick comfort of Castoria' A few drops, and your little one is soon at ease back to sleep almost before you can slip away. Remember this harmless, pure vegetable preparation when chil dren are ailing. Don't stop its use when Baby has been brought safely through the age of colic, diarrhea, and other infantile ills. Give good oki Castoria until your children are in their teens'. Whenever coated tongues tell of constipation; when there's any sign of sluggishness, HUtorie Watch In the private collection of an In diana man Is a watch that may be the Identical timepiece which Wash ington presented to Lafayette as a token of his appreciation of the serv ices rendered by the famous French man. That a watch was given Is a mutter of record, and II Is also a fact that the present was stolen from Lafayette's quarters. The collector's watch tits the de acrlptlon of the historic timepiece, ex- v Established f V ' Wi li . yff) ay ) WJJll WW Protects Your Skin! Cutlcnrn Soap sot only cleanses the ikio, but it is antiseptic and healing as well. It has medicinal properties which are most beneficial to the skin its fragrance is delightful. Try it today, and note its invigoration I Soap tc OiaUMBt tSa. aad SOa. Talcoa ZSo. Shariat Craaai SSa. tTowmarai I'atuw una at t-neaueai t,orporauom niaiiiao, Try th aww Catieara boarlng Craaob r ' ?r -.tt. '"4 fJ' . " people home are forgotten half an hour after taking a few of these remarkable tablets. So are the littlis nagging aches that bring fatigue and "nerves" by day, or a sleepless night. Genuine Bayer Aspirin tablets cost so very little after all, that it doesn't pay to cxpehmeat with imitations! American resident In Africa, whose contact with the pigmies developei from his often taking them into a local trading post In his car, eight or nine easily fitting Into t small auto, that nothing Is easier to find than a new pigmy village, because the little people move every few weeks. New York Evening Tost. Not Guilty The children In the circle, at Sun day school were not very well be haved. Cordon went home to revort to his mother. "The little boys and girls were not good. They potted their feet on the floor and made a noise," be said. "I hope my little boy did not pat his feet on the floor," said mother. "No, mother. My chair was too high." Indianapolis News. That Spoils It All Madge So you're disappointed la your new suitor! Mae Yes. father thinks he's Just dundy. Life. Time flies, but money can beat It for any distance. fu! A RarTjara . . toasorSuf Just give them a more liberal dose. Castoria is so pleasant-tasting; all children love to take it. Look for Chas. H. FlctcWi signature and this name-plate: pens say. It has four dials and five hands. One of the dials records the days of the month and another the days of the week. A miniature por trait bust of Washington upears In the upper side of the face. It Is In colors and Is considered a master piece ot craftsmanship. Detroit News. There Is n certain hoble pride through which merits snlne brighter than through modesty. Hlchter. Over 50 Years E 7 - . l A', ''is ": ' 1 -y " . ; . t - 1 '- ' , 'A VP 1 lit "JlcfL i 1 I liV