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About The Bonneville Dam chronicle. (Bonneville, Or.) 1934-1939 | View Entire Issue (May 29, 1936)
SIX AMBITIOUS MEN Am bitious men. If they be checked In th eir desires, become strictly dis contented nnd look upon men nnd mutters w ith an e v il eye.— Bacon. HEROES OF AMERICAN HISTORY H H É IM I B F r B o m I A p lo H w í b e o M y \ T o PRESIDENT/ I U lysses s - ¡¡¡J C o rrea p o m U n g ^ ment* 32. 3i. :uy L, Hl 131) require« i \ Va ^ material. Mend fift.*,.n „ * * pattern. Hend ) our unter to Th. C ircle l attern D.-pt j gotnery A t e . s«n ITanH«« W e e k ’ . S u p p ly 0 f p AT39-ATANNÜK CliöC-ATAlLURi AT 4 O - A MA J0R-GINEOAL y AT 41 -PRESIDEN*! Of THE U. S■ ( CALLOUSES) Don't ex p erim en t!T h isU th e way to 1 rut ant relief from pain and quick, aafe, easy removal o f your callouses. Sold everywhere. D-r S choll's Zino-pads When in the Northwest HEATHMAN Gran! was a plow boy on his fath er * farm. Against his will, he was sent to West Point In 1854. his drinking habits forced him to resign from the army. He tried farming and real estate, failed at both and went back to his father s tanning shop. When the Civil War broke out in ¡881. he could not even get back into the army. Finally, he received a commission and his sensational ».clones rapidly promot ed him to the position of Command er- in-Chief of the Armies. B E S T IN TH E W EST C .. .are the unquestioned choice of experienced travelers. 530 ROOMS from *2P up Davi/ M v ea /ri Log Book of the Skipper Who Sailed 1,296,810 Miles. M. S. CH1CH1BU M A III.’ . PAC IFIC OCEAN. JAPAN BOUND U T of San Francisco, head ed for the Orient, weather of the best, I proceed, in con formity with my invariable cus tom, to wangle a human inter est chapter from the captain of this ship. O THE NEW HEATHM AN MOMwar « MuwN THE HEATHM AN MAS AT UlMON HAPPY E HEATHMAN m a n a g e r N ot so ea sy ! Penetrating to the forw ard cabin was simple enough, but tapping the well-springs o f bis O REG O N memory was something else again. “ One stirring story from your life before the mast or on the bridge ¡VNU— 13 22— 30 w ill satisfy,” 1 said, liftin g my eg g shell teacup in salute. His smile collapsed. “ Nothing has occurred,” he said, “ nothing that is worth retelling. You shall see. A t twenty I became a cadet on “ Morning sickness” — is caused by an the government ship Taisei Maru, acid condition. To avoid it, acid must be ran the gauntlet o f ofiiclal promo offset by alkalis — such as magnesia. tion, became captain o f the Mat Why Physicians Recommend suyama Maru, Nippon Ylinen Kai- sha line, April 28, 1918, and have Milnesia Wafers sailed under the N. Y. K. ever These mint-flavored, candy-like wafers are since, with one year o f W orld war pure milk o f magnesia in solid form— the most pleasant way to take it. Each service.” wafer is approximately equal to a full adult One Torpedo Adventure. dose o f liquid milk o f magnesia. Chewed Commander S. Oya glanced Into thoroughly, then swallowed, they correct the depths o f his teacup. acidity in the mouth and throughout the “ N o adventures ul sea, no wrecks, digestive system and insure quick, com no mutinies, no typhoons, no ro plete elimination of the waste matters that cause gas, headaches, bloated feelings and mance, nothing out o f your rec ollections to otTer m e?" I asked. a dozen other discomforts. “ Nothing so far, but there is yet Milnesia Wafers come in bottles o f 20 and 43, at 35c and 60c respectively, and in time. The future may have some convenient tins for your handbag contain thing to o ffe r; who can say?” ing 12 at 20c. Each wafer is approximately "Possibly ther*.* is a detail or two one adult dose o f milk o f magnesia. All that you have forgotten.” good drug stores sell and recommend them. 11 is eyeballs seemed suddenly to S ta rt using th ese delicious, e ffe c tiv e invert themselves, as though striv anti-acid, gently laxative w afers today ing to look backward. The expres Professional samples sent free to registered sion o f Inscrutability deepened. physicians or dentists i f request is made "N o, there Is nothing—yes, there on professional letterhead Select Product*, was un incident tiiat now comes Inc.. 4 4 0 2 23rd St., Long bland City, N. Y. jack to me. Just a moment, I will look at the log o f my life arid give 35c & 60c you the date.” The seadog reached bottles into a drawer o f his desk and brought forth a small leather-cov 20c tins ered book. Thought I, this begins to look more like the real thing. “ Here It is,” lie continued; “ June 15, 1907, 5:30 p. m., off Plymouth during the w a r; heavy seas running. From the main «leek, astern, scanning the water. I saw a dark outline sliu T h e Original Milk of M a g a — fa W a i f No Need to Suffer Morning Sickness” ' l l e * . ,1. *J I*. l i h . J h i g ..„t If« la tu * After the terrible Battle of the Wilderness, he said: "1 propose to tight k out on this Une if a takes all summer I " Oroeeet A U u a tip .— WNU Service. Portland’s newest and finest ho tels. . located the hub of the shopping and recreational district B r.t Part of Lif, Grant was a splendid horseman—the beet at West Point During the Mexican War. in 1848. he fought side by side with Robert L Lee. who Urter opposed him as Com mander of the Confederate forces. HO TELS the hub o# Portland Orwion’s shopping and the«stncel center... these two splendid hostelries of fer you every comfort and luxury at extremely moderate cost Company U. another r* ihe> « u i „,.,„1 n fujj I l»ly Of health giving anyone wh.. writ.-* f„ r Stir.up**, j ping toward the starboard quarter. I»erhnps a humlred yards distant . . . seventy five years, fifty yards, twenty five yards, moving like a shadow. I leaned over Ihe rail, cer tain that the time had come. The ship lifted In the tide, fell a w a y; rose again from the trough, while the torpedo— and such It was— lie«. Bated for a brief instant and then lunged onward. The way o f a ship at sea Is Imleed a mystery. Gath ering herself like some living thing, she plowed ahea«l. Just as the tor- |**do, fired from an Invisible sub marine at cb»««* quarters, slipped by ten feet astern and dtsapiieared." Th« Cbtarxx U • m - I R f ì U BIM U«U«| litte«!V m . 1 R W I AD tott b* 4» U lea« ■ •te a N iu iMui Ut y Urn a w b * l— . U i m Ira* , Ma* eastexa* v »•«« im h m » « ^ ! C O L I S * « L A W * A B « «TOvt ft I« * at ti* ■ i«, rb ^ i VMS Plenty o f room is Included fo r ac tive arms ami leg* In this exceed in g ly smart and youthful bench pajam as. ì «*ke, sleeves, ami front panel •ire nil one piece cleverly combined to m inim ize your sew ing tim e and elim inate rom plirntibg trh k * Commanded 27 Snips. Earge unusual buttons down the “ There must be something else 1 ’enter front panel, a deiunre f v t e r in the crisp leaves of this volume," Can c o lla r plus a w ide self fabric I said, wondering why It contained '»♦-It and the blouse is com plete. Th e column after column o f Arabic fig waist Is gathered to the yoke in ures, Interspersed with nutations front and hack, givin g a flattering In Jupanese. fullm-s* an«l smooth ap|s-arancc. “ Recording the number of mile* Make this lovely tailored model In sailed, names of the ships under ♦Ilk crejie. \«*lle. or |s-rrat«* for lottng- my command and a few statisti ng and gingham, pique, or linen for cal notes," he volunteered. the beach. “ How many miles and bow many Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1791 B Is ships. Commander?" available in sizes I I , 111, IS, 2*); -40 ” L'p to January 1, 1‘J3d, the grand total reached 1,281»,810 nautical miles on twenty seven vessels, none o f which was lost while under my command. The first million miles were completed 11:40 p. m. March 2, 1031, off Sokotla island on a voy Bitter Truth age to Suez via Colombo. Approx “ 3 es," said ttie «m a ll I»oy regret* imately 3.000 officers -nd men fully, “ money talks, but it never served on ships that I have had the gives itself aw ay 1” honor to captain. During all of that period o f time not a single man Properly Placed had to be put in irons. The fur W ife — Who Is that? thest point north reache« during Husbaiu] — Er — hardly anybody, my travels is Hamburg. Germany, dear. and the furthest south Is Adelulde, Australia." Have you. throughout your voy aging ever observed a phenomenon at sea that could not he scientifi cally accounted for? Are there any insoluble mysteries hlntetl at in the log book? Have you developed any superstitions?" “ None. There Is a reason for everything that may arise In hu man affairs. I f there are sea ser pents In the deep It has not been my privilege to behold them. Sti- perstitions? . . With an ex pansive gesture, he tossed the whole theory Into spare. “ Married, o f course?” Again this realist, this methodi cal man who has logged his sen life with such meticulous enre. turned the pages o f the reconl. Present- ly his almtind eyes sparkling, the mask of inscrutability swept from his face to make way for actual mirth, he placed an Index finger on a single line. “ Yes, married . . . Kobe. Japan, May 28. 1914, One child, a daugh! ter, also married. 1935. No grand children— as yet.” . ru L— » e x Ç mêl as In PORTLAND c ¿■to • t „ e n jo y the ho«t»i<ks co*ef©»* of the M wllnom oh, o* i « '* i no h ig h *» ition you «rovld poy • l * * » H « r s AM i o : » : ►o**c»'- »•do • * po»u** t u e s o l loof Ot popular p*>C4t in the coMt* • hop.or beeu»-M dming roow. • • H O T E L • • MULTNOMAH A » k U » A n o tb « r Teach er — What tense li, I **| beautiful?” fla s s tin unison) I'a*t 1 * * Just Like H*re Soup A Scientist says that «c llif ■ meat w ill cure timidity. Tto plete recipe probably levin*, F.!* catch your lion." W A N T S ACTION “ W ouldn't you like to th* nnd thn lamb lying down "M o fo r thn l»ear and f ■1 ^ INEXPENSIVE - SATISFYING Copyright.— WNU Service. 4