VERNONIA EAGLE Thursday, July 7, 1927 THE KIDS WERE WILLING at <© by D. J. W«Hh. ILDRED FRASIER walked four blocks after leaving the car, through the strange, still heat that foretokened a Storm. A few drops of rain were fall­ ing to a rolling accompaniment of lightning ax she monnted tho steps to the door of the small brown house which still bore her husband’s name, Dr. Ezra C. Frasier. Doctor Frasier had been dead eight years and his widow was now a saleswoman In the dress department at Coleman’s big department store. It had been a hard day for Mil- dred, for she had sold but one dress, although ■he had tried, as never he- fore to please her customers. She had a feeling that unless her sales mounted up she was not going to be retiifned much longer, and she trem­ bled with apprehension. Her last resort would be to sell the house, the dear home Ezra had given her. The chil­ dren would not like that, for there was a bit of garden that Trlvllla loved. But, of course, they could not staj’ there unless she could keep on at the store. In fact, she hud not gone to work until she had been forced to. As the children grew older they needed moro and more money, and they were now practically using for themselves every cent of the small Income Ezra had left her. Thus she had been forced to provide for her­ self and almost entirely for the house out of her small earnings. As Mildred entered her living room, after having hung up her coat and hat, her daughter sprang up from the sagging davenport. Trlvllla was fifteen, tall, slim, flat-figured, yet with a look of grace and pliancy that convinced one of an Immense store of vitality. She was like an American Beauty rose—Just that ra­ diance and perfection. Flowing hair, brilliant skin, eyes like hand-pollsh­ ed agate and a mouth which dared the whole world to kiss her. Mil­ dred had never been like that, and ■he paused now to gaze at her daugh­ ter; wondering where Trlvilla's beauty had come from. "Mother 1” Trlvllla said excitedly. "Leon and I have asked Mr. Boyd to dinner." Mildred turned pale. “But, dearest—” she began helpless­ ly- “I know. There wasn’t a thing In the house to eat this morning after we cleaned up the breakfast table and built our lunches. But there Is now. Leon got a whopping big steak and I stopped lit the delicatessen’s for pie and potato salad. And If you could Just make a cup of good cof­ fee—’’ “I can, of course,” Mildred replied, She wont on to the kitchen, A moment she stood with Imr eyes shut trying to pull herself together. Then she reached for the »ofTee per­ colator. John Boyd had been a friend of her husband's. He hud gone west soon after Ezra’s death and had re­ turned within the year. The first time lie had called after his return lie had seemed to be greatly Im- pressed wftli both cblldren, Leon par- tlcularly, and had made a real friend of him, and the bov hud Improved wonderfully under the man's fine training. But Ills feeling for Trlvllla seemed altogether different, Mildred suspected that some day, when the girl whs old enough to know her own inlnd, John Boyd was going to p ro­ pose to her. Until then he was tt In- nltig her by every means In Ills power. it would be n splendid thing for Trlvllla to have this handsome, rich. Intellectual man’s love, and Mildred whs glad for her daughter's sake. But there was something In her own heart that terrified her. She herself loved John Boyd. Trivilla crone Into the kitchen presently. “Mother, Mr. Boyd Is here. Aren't you going to tlx up or anything?” Mildred smiled. “No. Won't I do?” “oh. you «III do.” But Trlvllla was frankly disparaging. "Only I hate that sloppy old dyed blue thing and your hair Is rough. Let me smooth It." She attempted to pat smooth the rich braids of dull brown hair which cov- ered her mother’s bend. Mildred went In to greet her dill- (trial's guest. She found Leon slt- ting on the nrtn of John’s chair wltb hi- arm frankly about John's shoul­ ders. Leon was thirteen. “We pretty near had to kidnap him; mother,” l.eon proclaimed, as John arose to shake bands with her. At the table Trlvllla was captlvnt- Slie loved good food and a Ing. gttest anti she and Leon talked gav- ly while Mildred sat In apparent serenity with no outward display of uneiisines is or heartache. .As d<*sspit dessert was served the storm broke In fury and the lights went out. Trlvllla brought her pink cati- tlles and Leon produced a flashlight. They laughed as they groped ambng the dishes. If Trlvllla had been lovely under the chandelier she was ten time* more lovely by candlelight, a glow- Ing. Imperious thing with hafr like n helmet of burnished copper. En­ der cover of the dimness Mildred watched the man opposite her ns Ills eyes rested upon her daughter. In three years lie eonld have Trlvllla. She herself had been married nt that M "Too bad It Is storming," John said. “1 bad planned to take you Poet Lost in Wonder kids for a ride up Choconut creek. at Friend’s Capacity It Is lovely there now, with every Absent mindedness was one of Ten­ branch aud bough burgeoning." nyson’s faults when deep In conversa­ "Can't we go tomorrow?” asked tion on bis favorite topic—his poetry. Trlvllla eagerly. After dinner one evening he turned to John said " We’ll see,” and smiled a friend who hail been his sole guest In Mildred's direction. It was the ami began a long dissertation on the last thing she remembered for a time. production of one of Ills plays, while Faintly at last Into her conscious­ the butler, having tilled the guest's ness came voices, the sound of some­ glass, placed the decanter of port be­ body crying and the feeling of hands. fore bls master. As Tennyson talked, Thoughts gathered. What was the mat­ he drank, and not noticing his guest's ter? Hud she fainted She opened her empty glass, kept refilling his own eyes and saw that the lights had until the decanter was empty. Then come back on aud that three persons, he said, “That was a very good bottle John, of course, and the children of port, don’t you think? Shall we were about her as she lay on the have another?" The guest assenting, floor, Indeed, she lay in John's arms the butler brought in a second de­ and his face was white as it bent canter which went through the same above her. experience as the first, Tennyson's She felt herself being lifted and friend having one g!"ss from the but­ borne to the living-room davenport. I ler. and the poet, entirely engrossed In She could see now and her head felt talk as before, consuming all the rest. right, but there was a queer faintness Early the next morning bls guest at the pit of her stomach. awoke to find Tennyson rtandlhg by “Mother," Trlvllla sobbed, “We Ids bed, regarding him with evident thought you were dead.” solicitude. “Dead 1” she spoke painfully, “How are you this morning?” was only fainted—” the host’s query. "No, no." Leon said, "You were “All right, thanks.’ struck. A bolt came down the chlm- < “Sure you are all ney. We all felt It, but you were "Quite sure.” sitting with your back—” “Ah. but pray, do you always drink Suddenly Mildred realized the whole two bottles of port after dinner?”— unhappy thing. A little more and she Kansas City Star. would have been gone beyond recall. Would it not have been better? Dust as a Shield “What a pity," she suid. The British royal commission on "Thank God it was no worse," John mines has made some interesting ex- breathed. pertinents on explosions of mixtures Mildred tried to smile. "I feel as If I had gone to sleep all of coni dust and air. It has demon­ strated that such mixtures are emi­ over," she said. “You can't go back to work tomor­ nently explosive, and also that the ex­ plosions can be mitigated, or confined row," Trivilla Insisted. “Oh, of course I shall. I shall be in area, by means of stone dust, which Is not explosive. all right by thin.” A coal dust area was placed be­ "No!" John said sternly. “You won’t go back to work tomorrow, or next tween a dustless region and one day, or next week. This thing hns got spread with stone dust, after which to end. I’m going to take care of you an explosion was produced in the coal dust by firing a cannon. The results after this, Mildred." “(th, mother I” begged Trlvllla. •nt appeared to demonstrate that the ef­ fects of an explosion may be transmit­ he wants to, let him.” ted to a considerable distance over a "Please, mother," added Leon. dustless zone by the coal dust driven Mildred drew herself up. “But I am quite capable of taking before the air blast, but that the stone dust has a restraining effect care of myself,” she said, coldly, Suddenly John laughed and took her hand. Picking Up a Pin “I know that, my dear, And you In this country to pick up a pin needn’t get huffy at my Interference seen on the pavement Is supposed to with your Independence. But don't be an indication of thrift, In Russia you think if you married me we could this Is not so. A traveler writes: make a pretty happy family? The "I was walking one day with an old kids are willing, I’m sure, If you Russian lady down a street In Mos­ are.” cow. Seeing a pin on the ground. I "Marry you?” Mildred said, And stooped to pick it up. when my com­ fhen she began to cry, she who had panion restrained me, saying: been so brave for eight hard yi ears. ‘“Don't do that. According to a John took her Into his arms and at Russian superstition, if a person af­ a signal from him the boy and girl flicted with a disease drops a pin and stepped from the room. somebody picks it up, the disease will pass from the dropper of the pin to the picker-up.' ” Wild Animals Swayed by Musical Sounds It Is a well-known fact that some animals are fond of music, whllq others are exceedingly particular as to the instruments played in their presence, says Ruby Denton in Our Dumb Animals. Lions have been found to listen with marked attention to the piano. They appreciate the top and middle notes, but begin to roar terribly when the bass notes are struck loudly. Tigers cannot endure the shrill notes of the fife. Scientific experiments have been made to show that the ears of the tiger are much more sensitive than those of human beings, and that sharp-toned instru­ ments Irritate the sensitive organs of hearing. That is why some people in the Jungles of India and China have some­ times been able to save their lives by playing a fife or some similar instru­ ment that they have happened to have along with them when attacked by n wild beast. The ferocious animal has appeared to forget all else but the Irri­ tation caused by the sensitive mem­ brane of its ears and has been more than willing to flee with all possible haste. In zoos experiments have been made with horns, fifes and violins, and their effect upon the animals noted, ilie result being that all take rather kindly to the softer notes of the vio­ lin. but are much disturbed by the shi ill tones of the harsher instruments. In those countries where oxen are used for labor they take great pleas­ ure In the singing of their driver. They work better at the plow when stirred by a cheerful song. It Is also customary for the Arabs to sing to their camels during long Journeys across the desert. Phases of Life As the ice upon the mountuin, when the warm breath of the summer’s sun breathes upon it, melts, and divides Into drops, each of which reflects an Image of the sun. so life, in the smile of God’s love, divides Itself Into sep­ arate forms, each bearing in It and re­ flecting an image of God’s love.— Longfellow. A corn and apple show is to be ar annual feature at a bank in Baltimore County. Maryland Another baukei has been able to get bis county t< ‘thinking corn,” over 5011 farmers planting improved corn. Many other bankers in the state are giving moral support and funds to thi3 work. Pry From Tire, Damage to tires has been great and indignation of motorists cor­ respondingly greater, due to cuts wrought by gravel imbedded In PLANER ENDS Oregon-American, de­ livered during July, August and September for $1.50 PER LOAD. Phone 253 Famous Cemetery Arnone the first large cemeteries ID America was Greenwood cemetery, which had Its beginning whan a stock company in Brooklyn purchased' the wooiled heights of slowanus bay. Aim’ll of the land was swampy, rocky «aste >nd thick undergrowth. The founding of (Ids cemetery was to provide n largo centriti burying ground to re- plnce the many -mall, private ones, whore too often the hones of the dead lititl been scattered by tho growth of file city, -a.vs Maude Stewart In Gravel The State Highway Department and the Oregon State Motor as­ sociation issue the following ad- motorists driving over vice to freshly oiled and grevelled roads. The warning is this: After you have driven over new­ ly oiled highway and at the end of every eight or ten miles of oiled highway, stop and with a screw driver, pen knife, or what you have, pry out all bits of crush-1 cd gravel that have collected on the tires. J PORTLAND - VERNONIA Truck Line INSURED CARRIER be Vernonia Office At Resourceful the Brazihg Works Avenue. on Rose Phone MAin 343 ' Brown's nene Is the limit." "AA'hat's he done now?" Portland Office “He called yesterday morning to Auto Freight Terminal borrow a gun. saying he wanted to -hoot a dog that kept him awake I E. Water and Yamhill Streets nights.” «Ast 8226 Office No. It "AAvIl?” DELIVER TO YOUR DOOR “My dog's been shot." tires, according to the highway de-1 partment and motor association who have been bombarded with calls from all parts of Oregon during the past few days. No. 1 Sonora at San Francisco. 1 at $12.50 a hundred* duty paid at Coast malting barley continued firm New York. The domestic crop is I but central western barley went about half as large as last year’s lower permitting exporting from ¿the carryover about 100,000 pounds Chicago. more. The Danish crop is a little Orchard Grass seed—Danish or- better than last year’s, the carry- The exact condition is this: Oil­ ing of the principal unpaved high-, chard grass seed has been offered over less. ways is necessary. Spreading of | crushed rock and gravel over the I 5=52=-!“ new oil to keep it from splatter- HOTEL HOTEL ing over the under sides of auto- mobiles is also necessary.* But, VERNONIA NEHALEM and the film of oil that gathers over the tires picks up rock and gravel. After the automobile has left the oiled stretch the rock is ground into the rubber by constant press- ure between the car and highway, and consequently punctures the tire, Thus, damage to the ttres We Try To Please brings about indignation of the Hot and Cold Running Water driver, with a subsequent recoil upon the highway department and Harry G. Phelps, Manager motor association. The state highway department have carried on a series of investi­ gations to remedy the situation and arrived at the conclusion that both oil and gravel are necessary to the motorist. The motorists themselves must keep the gravel from working into the tires anti that is where the screw driver, pen knife and what nots enter into the situation. This condition is purely tempor­ ary and will only exist while roads are freshly oiled and onlv causes trouble for a few days after the gravel has been spread. Were it posisble to shut off the oiled road I and eliminate the necessity of k gravel, — it would -------- be — much ------- better! —| for the highway denartnv nt. and for the motorists themselves but this condition is not always poss- ible and since it is not, this gnev-| ance must be born as the lesser of two evils. Wlherever possible the highway department is providing detours so that the oil and gravel be avoided. The highway department is now experimenting with rolilng the I gravel after it is spread over the ' oil and should this prove success- ful, much of the trouble will be eliminated. Meals Served Family Style MODERN ROOMS McCormic Dnering Agency A10W E RS RAKES SEPARATOR; > CULTIVATORS PLOW^ Twine Farm Market Review From page 1 ember delivery at Portlanc $2.20, $2.25 the hundred for Vernonia Trading Co