The Dam chronicle. (Cascade Locks, Or.) 1934-1934, May 04, 1934, Image 7

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    T H F . ! »AM
J{ Few
D IS A P P E A R IN G
CO O D T R A D E L O S T
Mrg. B. la a fallhful poruser ad
"Swnp aila.“ IH-r atork In traile la
a romei. Wlieii olla « f thè ada end-
ad "or what" ahe baatened to ili«
pilone,
l)|ph>niath ally ahe auggi «ti-d i
*'lf thè |>artjr advartlalng haa a
yoiing eoli he uilght Ite lutrreated In
a rofiiet.“
l'roinplly thè videe al thè otheg
end uf thè wlre replled 1
"W all, l ui thè non, and I don'!
watt! tuy n otlier lo »tari ma taktng
leaaolta.“ Indioluipolla h'pwa.
Th in g
-ito JTolir »later la married!
|a aha
tappi r
" 'e r y ,
The ouljr thing that an
Boya her la her huatiand '- Toronto
Uh.hr
W aiting far Mara News
"Bo you have a baby brother
W'hat'a hie natnei"
"W e don't know. We ran't under
•land a word lia aaya
Keep Going
"Tlila the road to I ‘oolatigahoof"
"h eap on th» noy yer ‘aadln* and
If yer route to a ‘III with a rhurrb on
It, you'll know yew t■ - -k th# wrong
turn."
l — t R lllf •« •»••••»p
• —F r »«
11--J
« lid «« • • t t m f h» N«|fc
M a tU rg«««
14— A pfgpnraiUa af War tea a» • *«• -
latelaa
14—Kaaè ((te li )
14—A |»ttaallla»
1 te— I icklkfra alafa
•4— 4 • aal« Ite «tete «rate»«
11— ite araAaailr te»®*«*
14 1 wa fllteteatete aaa»*rala)
-CaHalalag «• alti aga
4 l»te mt frali (»laaftel)
•O Am teatefcteaagte aHMat^llanate« «telatesi
•V—4te lltellaate aafI«« mi «Ikte •Ia ««»«l4
tetetelaarr
•4— 1 •• Iaa4 palai laaaalrf
i l — Aliate
•4-llair-gaaMte «atetep.»
#4— tewftla tlraallag nate# atta« ptalteaaate
1 haver
bad
any­
44--- A aa I » I » r f* r (latte
I«
»!
M a «-
4 I . » a l i a t e )
aaaalral l»a(r»t»aai«
te— Ate • arltea»tifiate af tearprlfte
late—.4 rafal rralárara
I te— 4
Ite— 4
r a t e a » « It te li« » « a lt er lt e g «látete
a I r a tela r »Itela mi a » m a
Ita ? )
«a rite I
I f —4)a»« «alaaa trteteaitel«« » I m I m « ——
•teste*
14—Ta a«r 14 a «tete Iteteéte fa® a ri«#»
II — r r a r llt li
f
a i — Trátetela««*
l i —Ta «a»te»«
14— •«••tedi ìmrrnwwmmtlf
A «Mite •« II * |N*tete la ilr .l
lig a r
41— 4 telate» tal
tttefca« #r itetela
I t - A S+mtim4
ite
A » a « ! tea r*
ita— I . « ««ir te
• • • • « t e llr i« Iteti
41— lfr»«4 rramkte teollrd la «alili tiA
flaaarO
0 - 0 » M * 4 (atetete.)
44—4 raterte ftete tei»®
4ta—4«al»r4 ter latear
IM — 'Tte crai*"li la • amar#
I Al—
4
tei teliteli
aia a» te
ms— !fgfltete tei ai • • • «• a te r « • « • « •
A la»® I r » il i » « I r la» te»r •« «•• 4a«-
ite— A telate mi telltetetete iplarall
I.MM » ! • teteal
|T-Hafla
tete—te »•«••«•
Orlate atete ante«arte graia
tei— Otete «alite s « a • «ai tetar a* teartl
€T—lai «•«•• •
tete— 4 lavate«»
0 - 4 aateUte tetet |a «4— A tete®alt«te
»A teterwrteCl«» te»»te terra*
teta—4 rapllpral «tetebr.l
teT— larr «»te wllèterteA
••—A
••
rrnrnwmmm
O-Iggraprltelte
1 4 -4 «alar
• • « ! » » « * (»fctr.l
Al—Alte» tef • «rite» mi Blagiaa Itetela««
"3— A iter®« better « f *>«t»r
Solution
44— 4 terna |:«®lante •«•«•
«14— Unii tetera®«I« «
4%—Iteli lata mt m faarmar Praalteatet
-4 ara teal««««« Aalte MlaaoP ««te
«arte ara
fa «ratear Iaar»»l4lte
tei — I »<*«-(•*
-4 afwliul •« a«i te Ir ••• af r i f i l i
-A fa««I
O - A r a l f l (afteiteal)
«Ite
% » « t e i « tetetetetlaa® atepaarallata
• 7 — tetemaarl«a«H «• ? m t » « l|
•te— -4 ter«««lai® rnuaaa
TO— A « al Inaila* aar® aalaalloa <at>hr.)
TI—4 tenr » ! «•»» **»rl
f i — 4 ■ « « « p mt telaatelta r*«nlr«te lai
•tep«lns • rr ri ala k M *rtia
VmrtJcml.
*— A a «anillar« alala
1— 4 n a frrf apal In n ternari
4—Aa tetedlllnte 1« « lalfar
•—«»»• «alia la «»»«triarte «ala»sl
«4—Tra rfcr«a ante •«« all(*«v
f —rallntelaam (a fn la ll
-1 i.r v u i a i l QMi>ai>ku le M r .
Ws.hli. »•..«.
hr. und fritto
thing either,
I ■
ta—>4
M o n t o n i# «.
Hew Toy F Ith tt A rrie » From Otrmtny.
Jwsl A like
Tiret Tramp \fy wraith waa one«
coun ties*
Great Love Not
of Sudden Birth
Bond Never to Be Severed,
Bather a Matter of
Slow Growth.
G ratpiag Ike Chance
A country«toiiian arrlti-d at a Lon­
don oluliou, and imi * uf thè Itrat
tlunga alte aaw «a a a man aettlng off
plgeona In a rare.
I or »n o e mon elli a ahe atomi fasci-
nali-d aa llie man opei.o-d Ili» rrnted
and llherated tlie hlrd».
Buddenly ari Idra rama tn ber Hha
ruahrd up to thè inoli
"I a»/, mister," aha aa!d, “ you
ndglit gire me mie o f thrae tilrda fo f
my ¡Itila Johtiny trafora y«u tliruw
thrni all away."
CR O SSW O R D P U Z Z L E
H —Tkf
tal gataateteftef f
tea tete Ate
The Home Aquarium
I HICK
At n party a in-« Murr a «»«man w ot
Wonting Ha* rullili admired. Kite
look It ulT 1« aliiiwr II I art! r f a 11 < I It
waa passed from hand to hand. 1 A
tar. It waa not fartbruialni
"T h e joke tiaa Burn» far •nough,"
aalil Ilia Imat "I || put tlila all»«o
diali mi the I alila, turn out the elei'
trie light, roiint une honilreit, and
aspect to find the necklace on the
dl*h when I turn up the light a gain "
When he turned up the light the
diati alan had vanished!
Sack a L illie
< M k O N in . i ;
F
li. a - w v t !
t e c lic .
i.HH
ti|utrlumt
In
Am erlrto
h.'tneo. once Inhabited only by
goldltah. now are Mocked with
tinny creatures o f strange col-
ora and shat*«* from many part a of
thr world. Tha toy Deb merchant hot
enlarged Ida atock to Include flah from
far dialant waters. and aquariums are
about at common In American living
rooma today aa potted plant».
Who atartrd the fad o f aquarium
tlah la a hit o f a myatery. (tumor
nair.ee K gypt; but although the fremh
watera o f Egypt are replete with cu
rioua and beautiful dwarf ftabea and
the Egyptians developed tha art of
glaaa blowing during the Ptolemaic and
(toman periods, after » » ) (t. iX . tbera
la no evidence that veeecla o f glaea
were used for aquaria.
It it well known that the lure of
breeding Oehea tn captivity took poa
session o f the rh in o »« several hundred
year» ago, eprrading to Japan. and
thence over the weetern world, with
the guldlUh at Its original object of
Intere«t. (»tiring ibe paet 75 year»
rip er line nt at ion with the balanced
aquarium ha* passed through varloua
»all and frrah water phaiea until, with
tropical toy flshrs, tt ha» reached tha
peak o f enthuaiaam and aurreaa In Eu
rope and America.
Not that the goldfish baa autTered a
h>«e o f popularity. Many milllona »till
are reared annually In the United
State«, largely for martyrdom In the
quart gh.he, and there la little dlrnlnu
lion In the demand for bizarre and
coatly
rarletlea. Among cold-water
•peel-» It b»a no r iv a l»
Nevertheless, tropical B»hea have »u
peraeded goldd«he» In many o f the
»mailer hatrherlea. and ern e of the
larger goldt1»h farm* have built con-
eervatoriea for rearing them.
Many ahopa In the larger cltlet are
devoted exr I naively to their aale, and
a pet ahow without a dltplay o f the
colorful midget« would be noticeably
Incomplete, Hut It la true, aiao. that,
while moot American and European
home« have t»een ornamented at »ome
time bjr the pretence o f a few gold
ttaliev. the ma)orltv have not aa yet
oucrumbed to the alluremrnta o f the
toy tropical, thoiign fl*h "fana" atirlng
up dally like muahroom«, enticed by
the flush of color, the beauty o f tin
and form, the remarknbla breeding
lial.lt» undisturbed by captivity, and
the ease with which (he aquaria are
maintained.
From All Ovar World.
Many kind» Imported Into the United
Stntea are told and *hlp|HNl almost the
length and breadth of North America
[ —from Florida to t'anuda and front
Mn*»nchii«ctta to t'allfornln hut Inin
dreda equally beautiful and Interest­
ing »re at yet iinkuown to the fancier.
| The happy hunilng grouvda for toy
Itkhea, explored and nnexi
ed. range
In the weatern hemisphere from the
('arollnn» «outh through Florida, nnd
from Mexico through t ’entrnl America.
I’ nnnum nnd South Amerli-n to the
moat Houttierly point o f Argentina. In
the eastern hemisphere. Egypt niul
other pnrta of Africa, Auatrulla and
Asia Including the lalnnil groups of
j the Malay Archl|ielngo, India, China.
Slain and other countries— have been
1 drawn upon for the »upply of dwarf
ilshca appearing In the home aquaria
! of the Occident.
Their hnbltut la chletly the awaiup.
the ditch, the rain pool, the rlc« Held,
dear mountain ntrenma nnd atngnnnt
lowland waters, pond«, brook«, lakes,
rivers nnd aatunrlea; but some either
make mlgrntlona to the count* or live
perennially In brackish or wholly Halt
water. Oceanic species thus far kept
In American aquaria h a ve been prln
clpatly gobies.
Tropical loy Babes a rt of many
genera and species and even of mao*
varieties— soma natural, other» >#tl-
vMed. Their adult body length m e » »
urea from 1 Inch to 5 Incite«.
Tha anatomy o f tba tuy flab la not
1
unique. Swim bladder» and other or­
gana common to l-ry er fl»ht-a are com­
mon to them, and their flna are tha
earn»—caudal, or tail, flna for swim­
ming gud propelling, flna beneath,
called ventral and anal, and pectorals
(behind the gills) for helping main­
tain die equilibrium; also, dorsal flna
(on tha back), which Indicate mood»
and physical states— health and com
lentmeiit when erect. Illness and dw
presslou when lowered. The majority
have no sort o f protection against ene­
mies excefd tn »orh teeth aa they may
possess.
Borne are to peaceable that a num­
ber of specie« live amicably to oaa
tank; others to quarrelsome that two
Bis lea cannot occupy the same »quart-
urn. and a male may kill his male.
Home subsist largely on algae, but
most favor small water animals, such
as enlomottraeans ttbe minutest of
crustacean*), annelids, and Insect tar
vae.
Itaw heef. cereals, roe. and shellfish,
also dried shrimp and other desiccated
foods, aiqiear on their bill o f fare, and
many experiments hav# been mada
with concentrated foods such as cod-
liver meal and other glandular prod­
ucts to ascertain their response to vi­
tamin nutritives— experiments which
have confirmed their amenability to a
foreign diet and e«t>eclally to substi­
tutes for tha lime, minerals eniymea
and other catalytic agents present tn
live food, which aid digestion, purify
the blond, and keep the akin lustrous
Mouth of Fiah Incubator.
The majority lay egg« and leava
them to their fate, but some carry
their egg» In their mouths, taking no
food while Incubation la In progress
and subsequently caring for tha young,
which swim back Into the mouth at
the approach o f danger.
Borne build nests and vigilantly
guard the egg« and f r y ; others bring
forth their young alive.
Nearly always when the fry receiv
any cere It la given by the father,
In mouth breeding species It Is i- M
the mother who gntbera up the spawu.
and among (.Tchlld*. which Include th#
Hrnclllan half moon and Mcsonauts
both sexes guard the egga and fry.
In ve! nuother species, the Chanchl-
to, the eggs sre hatched In a nest
scooped In the sand by the male rt*h.
When able to »wlin, the young rise
nnd school, the mother leading the pro-
rcssloti. the father bringing up tha
rear.
Hazards of Tropicals
The only martyrdom to which tha
tropicals are subjected Is accidental.
Some expire from the cold. Occasion­
ally sn aqunrliim !s left uncovered and
the fishes many specie* of which leap
like salmon, clear the rim with one
jump nnd dry up ou the floor; or an
uquarlst concerned for their comfort
may transfer their tank to a radiator
and forget It until they are completely
rooked.
Exportations o f toy flshea from Ger­
many Into »he United States began
nearly :tt> years ago, numerous specie#
having been tlrst successfully bred tn
that country from parent stock cap­
tured In Its tropical haunts
The typical German traveling can la
of tin, with a capacity o f about four
gallons heavily Insulated with felt
wadding and paper and with an open­
ing In the cover to admit air.
Thou­
sands o f s|»H-itnens have traveled safe­
ly across the ocean and Into the Interior
o f the United States In these cans
most o f the shipping being done be
tween May and October. For convey- |
Ing by hand or shipping specimen« ;
shorter distances one-gallon thermo# j
Jugs are used.
"M arriage la a task for matura
men aial women. Love is the product
o f the correct solution o f this task."
(teflectlng on this statement, a
woman writer o f national promi­
nence ha« thla t » say :
“ That aeema to be putting tha
cart oefore the horae, doesn't It T
Hut It Is one o f the tr u e s t and wis­
est things that have ever been said
on a subject that has not lacked at­
tention— love and marriage.
"It Is a doctor, W. Herim Wolfe,
who had the courage to publish that
statement. The point be makes la
that more marriages would turn out
well If husbands and wives acted ‘as
If lo r* might be tha reward o f five
or ten years o f successful co-opera­
tion.'
" I t brings to the mind the old coo-
fusion between loving and being 'la
love.’ The sensation o f being In lo v»
Is what most pe<q>!a feed for each
other when they marry. They ara
attracted by various forces o f tha
other’» personal!»/. In which they
see their needs and their hopes and
heir
dreams
fulfilled. In other
words they are thrilled by tha pros­
pect o ' what they are going to r e ­
ceive.
“ l-oflng, on the other hand Is feel­
ing a bond between two human be­
luga that can never be severed, that
even after the separation o f death,
gnaws and pulls one to the other.
That bond cannot be forged In a
day. The storiee o f certain great
loves
notwithstanding.
It
rarely
atrlkea like a bolt o f lightning. It
must grow. And Its growth Is tha
product o f two people knowing each
other, living together and growing
together and perhapa working to­
gether and salTering together. It ts
the result o f people feeling for each
other and understanding each other.
In abort, knowing each other and lov­
ing each other anyway 1
That la why It It more rational to
expect love as the result o f a success­
ful marriage than the prelude to it.
the reward o f living together In
such a way that attraction Is en­
riched by friendship and understand­
ing to that two people truly belong
to each other, and through love, two
become aa one. And when that love
!« achieved It will be found that It (a
not Interested In what It Is to get.
but la preoccupied In giving."
e
Roll » r o s i e s t « — W N C Service
Tour local dealer carries Ferry*»
Pure Bred Vegetable Seeds. Now
only 5 cents a package. Adv.
A ll He W ts U
What the average schoolboy want»
la history that will repeat Itaslf.
ITCHING
Resinol
Wherever it occur* and whatever
the cause, relieve it at once with
tl 71 «te m u t i Dnoiptha fitter ai r»m t
Alee ssrsll— l fe r T n sp srsry D w I m m
H m 4 N sisee « s e t » « e » « s e p .»
e » « kr «eU s. FIs s e » r e t a K iew .
v
A. O. LEONARD. Ine
TO F*fib A r a . N ew Turk C i »
t i n ( e n e M s i r W.-nalrrhil IV,. l o r is , (na
lov. ft wtertel $2* to 1100 w«tek!y I*l«n II.
I t C T K R V R .« r.HVtCR
-
IXHIrur. OtUe.
OI.D AUK rKXHIOX INFO RM ATIO N
Stand «t a m p
I I IHiK 1> HM.\>
To
•
-
ll .mhsvl.lt. Kam.
STOP the pain
of
(HEMORRHOIDS)
N T STRAIN! n
i l
ins only s,»rs- te # ■ ■
the uioJnm n.
» « , psin sod «in-
H
H
■■
Bj
w H H H ^ F
p0TI?R0BlWfeLS OPEN — with GAR.
D TEA—a mild, plrsonr lu-mke Isms-
tire. M»k«< sliminsnoe
rsiirr. itrtioina uonrese-
■srr-
reitsres sssw
the
I l i ; s Also
Oliv •
R E E
• nnoria® N R I « o f full-
iMFLI
p m e s p e r i t o r e d hr
/HH to,
e d le re r» o f kem orrholds
IsM Tsa Os.
«tr e . « . V.
ro a r d ra t m ors,
G arfieldtea