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About The Gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1910-1937 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 18, 1925)
THE GATE CITY JOURNAL WEAK, RUN-DOWN NERVOUS, DIZZY Mr*. Leo Suffered From All These Troubles, but Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound Made Her Well Location o f Ores Revealed by Smoke O n g T o m m y By GEORGE A. BIRM IN GHAM ffl j . yrlth t b r Bobb*-Merrill Co.—W. N. U. Service Terre Haute, Indiana. —“ I was weak |l=s and run-down and in such a nervous con dition that 1 could C H A P T E R X V I — C o n tin u e d hardly do my work. I was tired all the —21 — time and dizzy, had I “Wherever a Scot happens to be,” no appetite and could said Janet, “ is Scotland.” not sleep. I tried “The law can't really he exactly like different medicines for a year but they that,” said the princess. “ It would be did not help me. too inconvenient.” Then my husband “That is the law.” said Janet. “ If saw the ad. for Lydia I say that I’m married to him, I shall EL Pinkham’s Vege he, and there’ll he no getting out of table Compound in the newspapers and it. That would be intolerable.” “It wouldn’t be particularly pleas had me take it. I regained my strength and never felt better m my life. It com ant for me, either,” said Tommy. pletely restored me to health. I had He ought not to have said that; but practically no suffering when my baby he was getting angry with Janet. A boy was born and he is very strong and woman has a perfect right to refuse healthy. I know that the Vegetable Compound is the best medicine a woman to marry any man who asks her; buf can take before and after childbirth for she ought not to tell him to his face health andstrength. I would be willing that he is Intolerable. No man can he to answer letters from women asking expected to submit tamely to that, about the Vegetable Compound. ” — particularly when he has not really Mrs. W e J. L e e , Route L, Box 648, offered himself ns a husband. Terre Haute, Indiana. “ Besides,” said Calypso, “ if he mar Lydia E. Pinkham’ s Vegetable Com ried you, what would happen to poor pound is a dependable medicine for all Miss Temple?” these troubles. “ I wish to goodness Miss Temple For sale by druggists everywhere. was here,” said Tommy: “ you won’t ------- “As well us I can make out,” she said, “ they’re saying that the photographs on the passports are not in the least like us.” “Tell them,” said Tommy, “ that that’s a mutter of opinion, and that if they know anything about the recent Cubist and Vorticist developments they’ll see at once that these photo graphs represent our subconscious selves and are exactly like them.” “ I don’t believe I could say all that even in German.” said Calypso, “ and I don’t know two hundred words of Megalian, which is what they’re talk ing.” The chauffeur, seeing that some thing hail gone wrong, left his car and approached the Megaflans with his overcoat' flying wide open. They were less impressed than the Germans by Ids display of weapons. In fact they were not impressed at all. All they did was unbutton their own coats and show that they possessed weapons of similar kinds. “This.” said Tommy, “ is getting quite like Ireland.” The chauffeur quacked at the Me- galians in Lystrian. They replied in Megalian, a language which consists principally of sounds like hisses. He quacked again, hut mingled a few hisses with his quacks. They hissed in reply, but uttered a few quacks too. Gradually the speakers drew together until the Meguliuns were quacking which they continually perform, keep rows of spittoons In their churches (a sign of real reverence) and have sev eral well authenticated miracles every year. A new fu ll set o f As soon as they realized that Janet C h a m p io n s every was a priestess, deeconess or abbess, they made no difficulties about allow 10,000 m iles w ill ing the party to go on. greatly improve en Calypso’s spirits rose after passing gine performance and The Cutioura Toilet Trio. the frontier posts. That corner of the Having cleared your skin keep It clear pay for themselves in Megalian territory consisted of the old o il and gas saved. by making Cuticura your everyday kingdom of Lystrla, so that the prin toilet preparations. The Soap to cleanse cess was at last hack in her own land. and purify, the Ointment to soothe and Champion X fo r Fords HOe-Blx« The few peasants who were herding JBox for all other ca n , 75c. M ore cattle on the hillsides were Lystrians heal, the Talcum to powder and per than 95,000 dealer» sell Cham pions. You *1 ill know the gene and no doubt talked to one another in fume. No toilet table Is complete uine by the double •ribbed core» the quacking language which the without them.—Advertisement chauffeur used. The cattle were Lys Champion Spark Plug Co, B ee L ib ra ry a M em o ria l trian cattle, long-horned, active little T o le d o , O h io beasts, which looked as if they afford- i The Miller apleulturul library at W in d sor, O at., L on d on , Paris ded Hi tie milk when alive and not the Wisconsin College of Agriculture much meat when dead. The cottages | contains more than 1,100 books and were Lystrian, the roads, the heather, \ bulletins relating to bee culture. the mountains themselves, all were ! After the death of Dr. Charles C. Lystrian. Calypso drew deep breaths Hiller at Marengo, 111., In 1920, fellow of Lystrian air with keen delight, beekeepers sought some means of per pointed out one thing after another petuating his memory. A memorial to Janet, who was not deeply inter library was finally decided on, which ested. Now and then she clapped her was endowed by the beekeepers and hands with joy. others. Because of the interest which The spirits of the hrlgnnd chauffeur the Wisconsin College-of Agriculture rose too. He still drove carefully. Any displayed In beekeeping the Miller , other kind of driving would have library was established there. brought swift disaster on the Lystrian j The library Is an International mon roads. But he blew his horn when- j ument to beekeeping, says a bulletin I ever he saw a man, woman or child, | by XL F. Wilson, In charge of the I however distant. He threw off his cap agriculture department of Wisconsin and let the mountain air blow freely college. through his thick curly hair. Once, for a short while, he quickened the I L ife ’ s Span E x ten d in g car’s pace and pursued a hare which In spite of the fact that the con- ! was foolish enough to run straight along the road. After a while he be tlnued betterment of health and liv gan to sing, mere snatches of song at ing conditions In this century has first, in the end whole verses. This i given Americans the expectancy of was highly unconventional behavior in j longer and longer lives, the average a chauffeur driving a royal car. Blit American had Ills "expectancy of Calypso did not resent it. She seemed life” reduced from 58.01 years In 1021 actually pleased. Soon she joined him i to 57.32 years In 1923, or a loss of *' MonaWotor ” is the whole story of According to safe lubrication in one word. O il must In singing. When the man heard her about eight months. statisticians of a leading life Insur endure—and MonaMotw does. high treble ring out he dropped natur Your search for the most dependable ally Into a bass part. The Lystrians, ance company, who compiled the lig like most half-civilized people, are very ures, greater prevalence of Influenza oil is ended and longer service from musical, and every kind of singing is and pneumonia In 1922 caused the re your car is a certainty—when you duction, but from advance Indications lcam this one word for perfect lubrican a delight to them. tion, “ MonaKctcT.” Calypso started the Lystrian national ! for 1924 and 1925 the expected spun M enaM oier Q il Company anthem, a wild tune, as exciting ns from birth to death will be a larger L u s A n g e l e s , Cal the Marseillaise, with something in it : number of years than It was hi 1921, 8 a n Francisco, C a l. of the grandeur of the old Russian j u banner year. czarist national air. The chauffeur i joined In with at kind of fierce enthu- I H a s B rains to S p are sinsni. They sang the tune through to ^ Six brains in one are said to he get her three or four times. Then Cn- f possessed by Mr. Harry ICahne, an lypso leaned forward and laid her hand American now visiting In London. on Tommy’s shoulder. Simultaneously he will rend a news P reserv in g W ild C a m e “Join in.” she said. “ You sing, too. paper, write the headlines upside Those who want to see our big Let’s all sing.” down and backwards on a blackboard, game protected commend the stute au She shook up Janet, who was doz at the sunje time spelling the words thorities of South Dakota for their ing. and told her to sing. the right w ay; speak continuously to conservation of several valuable spe Janet has no more ear for music his audience; answer questions giving cies of fast-perishing fauna In the than a crow has. Hymns are the only the exact populations and industries state park set apart in the Black things she ever attempts to sing, and of the biggest towns o f Great Britain, hills. Here there are 110 buffalo, I am told that when she does the rest Canada and the United States; write 1,000 elk, 2,000 deer, 300 beaver, 400 of the congregation suffers acutely. backward anti upside down columns coons and thousands of game birds. It was her attempt at the Lystrian of figures which totaled 7,123,546,937, The nominal value of the creature* national anthem which put a stop to a figure previously ngreed upon by Is 8105,000, but as teachers of natural the singing in the end. Janet, who Is the audience. history they are worth Incalculably quite unconscious of her Infirmity, more. sang loud when she began to enjoy In tropical countries the sound of herself. She has a very powerful thunder is so common that weather It doesn’t matter If beauty Is only voice. The chauffeur must have been men often forget to register all the skin deep as long us the skin Is worn actually musical, more musical than storms. on the outside. either Tommy or the princess. His face twitched when Janet’s high notes I reached him. His steering became I very erratic and once or twice he ran * the car dangerously near the edge of I the roan. He tried to assuage his mis- | ery by sounding his horn fiercely when i he knew a high note was coming in the song. I suppose this only made the discord 'more intolerable. At last he stopped the car. turned round, and quacked out an angry speech to the princess. Calypso understood what he said well enough. She would probably have understood his feelings even if he had 1 Sedas $773, f . ». t . Laming, Mich. not spoken, for she was sitting beside Janet. But she was very tactful. “ Sandor says that we had better stop singing. The mountain air is had for the voice and we shall have sore throats tomorrow If we go on.” What Sandor really said was that unless the English housemaid stopped squalling he would he forced by un controllable emotion to stab her and throw her out of the car. They drove on without singing for the rest of the afternoon, steadily ' climbing into the mountains by twist- j ing and sometimes perilous roads. At 1 about six o’clock they reached the highest point of a lofty pass. On each side the mountains rose to snow-clad j peaks. In front the road dipped steep- ! |y into a narrow valley. Beyond the valley stood, steep and frowning, an other mountain. On its side, perched P f t i c t a : / . a, b. Lasting, Mick. on a plateau—Sandor gripped Tommy’s C O M M ER C IA L CHASSIS . . . »425 arm and pointed forward—there, a ROADSTER............................. »525 gray pile of masonry, stood the schloss, T O U R I N G ......................................... »525 oldest, most Impressive and least com COUPSTER............................. »595 COUPE ...................................... »675 fortable of the palaces of the Lystrian COACH ........................ ..... . . kings. »695 S E D A N ............................. »775 Toe car plunged into the valley, nut of the sunshine info deep shadow. Above them the schloss. with the light D U R A N T MOTORS, Inc. still bright on It. looked like a fairy 250 West 57th Street, New York palace. They crawled over a narrow bridge which crossed a foaming tor General Sale» Dept.— 1819 Broadway, New York rent. They began a winding ascent Dca ten and S e n ta Sia citai throughtnt the U ntiti Sialo along a singularly stony road. listen to me. But if she were here she wouldn’t want to marry me any more than either of you does. But anyhow, if we’re to go on at all, one of you must own up to being my wife. “ I’ll eave you settle It between your selves.” 5 o o th in q a n d He&linq lie walked off, walked to the car ind looked at It, walked a little way -----------------------------I dong the road and back again, finally ■»at down on a stone and looked at the Green’ s river, which ran, turbid and yellow, August Flower tnder a little bridge. f a r Constipation, | But Tommy’s ill temper never lasts In d ig e s tio n an d ! long, and he is a man of active and Torpid Liver | -esourceful mind. In a quarter of an our he was hack with a proposal to Successful fo r 69 year«. neet the difficulty. 80c and 90c bottles— A LL DKUGtilSTH J “ According to that Scotch law of vours,” he said to Janet, “ would you W e a k , N o b le C rea tu res >e married to a man if you said you In tills world there arc» thousands ol vere his wife, but lie didn’t say he weak, noble creatures who fancy thal vas your husband?” “Of course not,” said Janet. sacrifice always must he the last wort “ Even if there were witnesses pres of duty; thousands of beautiful aoulf that know not what should be don< e t ? ” “That wouldn’t matter,” said Janet. and seek only to yield up their life holding that to be virtue supreme ‘Unless we both said we were married They are wrong; supreme virtue con ve wouldn’t be married.” “And supposing while you were sa.V- slats in the knowledge of what shouk he done, in the power to decide foi ng you were his wife another man ourselves whereto we should offer out said he was your husband—quite a lifferent man whom you didn’t claim life. Maeterlinck. it all—which of* them would you lie narried to?” “ I shouldn’t he married to either,” odd Janet. “ Even according to the Scotch law?” “Of course I shouldn’t.” “ Very well,” said Tommy, “ when we ret to that frontier post you say that ’olonel. Heard is your husband. He m’t say that you’re Ills wife because Above Them the Schloss, With the 16 won’t be there. Therefore you won't Light Still Bright on it, Looked >e married to him. 1 shall say that Like a Fairy Palace. ou’re my wife, hut if you don’t claim ne as a husband, which you won’t, nearly ns much as they hissed and the laving already claimed Colonel Heard, chauffeur was hissing frequently. The hen you won’t he married to me and princess understood about half of what 1 shan’t be married to you. In fact, each party said. ve shan’t either of us he married to “They’ve just asked him,” she said, IN SIST! Unless you see the iny one, even by Scotch law. That “ which of us la your wife.” vill he all right, won’t It?” “Tell him,” said Janet, "to say I’m “ Bayer Cross” on tablets you “Besides,” said Calypso, “ Colonel not.” are not getting the genuine But it was too late to tell him any Ieard seem« to be married already, Bayer Aspirin proved safe by md nothing you could say would make thing. He was making a long speech millions and prescribed by phy in mingled hisses and quacks. miy difference to that, would it ? ’ The princess giggled again. “ Exactly,” said Tommy. “That’s an sicians for 24 years. “ He's just told them,” she said, “ that ther point. Even Scotch law can't Accept only a et a man in for bigamy, in that cas- I’m Mrs. Heard, and that we’re all inl way, especially against his will, French subjects.” Bayer package “ I won’t he called French,” said md I don’t suppose Heard particular- Janet. y wants to marry you.” whichcontains proven directions "I hope he’ll he careful," said Tom “ So that’s settled,” said Calypso. ITandy “ Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Janet did not seem satisfied, and I my. “ I can’t talk French any more Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists •an sen reel y wonder. A woman as in- than 1 can German. Why didn't he Anptrin 1* tl»© trade mark o f llarer Manu imately connected as she is with the say we were English?” facture of Muuoacftlcacliicbter o f HaUcylleacld “ It’s no use saying that to the Me- novement for reuniting the Christian ■hurches of the world has to lie very galians,” said the princess. “They E arly H a n d k e r c h ie f Churchmen have been credited with •tirefill of her reputation. It would he think the English never send armies being the first to use handkerchiefs In i terrible tiling for her if it were to j anywhere or do anything except pay Europe, and for a time priests alone •ecome generally known that she other people’s debts for them. But I aimed a married man as her husband. they’re desperately frightened of the were permitted to carry them. Even they were subjected to certain restric Flint is the sort of thing a woman nev- French.” The chauffeur quacked and hissed a tions of use, for the handkerchief •r quite succeeds In living down, and little more. lormcd part of the vestments of the the world is censorious. “ I’m awfully sorry,” said Calypso to cleric’s office and as a “ facial,” by j The men at the German frontier Janet, “ hut he's just told them that hich name it was known, was worn post turned out to he peaceful and you’re my maid.” by the priest officiating before the pilot. They looked i«t the passports The man hail been treating Janet as tint made no comment on them. They altar. inquired whether the travelers were if she were a servant ever since the taking any new clothes, gramophones, party left Breslau. She was deter V e r y Sad photographic apparatus, surgical in mined to assert herself and not to Irene*—"Did you ever see a mosquito struments, telescopes or dyes out of leave the Megalinns under a false im ( •)?” Mildred---"No, hut once I saw ! Germany. The princess said that their pression. “ Please toll him at once.” she said, dresses were years old, that they all n moth ball.” hated gramophones and never took “ to say that I'm the European repre photographs. Janet added solemnly sentative of the League for Establish that the party did not possess a single ing World Peace Through the Union lancet or a telescope. Tommy, when of Christian Churches.” She spoke so fiercely that Calypso ■1 H OSTETTER’S Celebrated Stomach lie understood what was happening, M B itten to a wholesom e tonic. said “ Noin” four or five times emphat dared do nothing hut obey her. She ically. Then there were some inquir did her best to explain to the chauffeur ies about the ear. The princess asked Janet Church’s position in the religious the bearded chauffeur to produce his world. I do not know what the chauf papers. lit getting at an Inside pocket feur thought or how much he under tie displayed his pistols and knives to stood of what was said to him. Nor great advantage. The Germans asked ¡s there any way of finding out what no more questions about the car. did he told the Megalian soldiers, or how not loot at the papers and permitted much they understood. But the effect the travelers to go on. Very likely, on them was excellent. They all took off their hats, knelt like Dogberrys’ watch, they thanked down and crossed themselves piously. God they were well rid of a knave. They must somehow have gathered The Megaliana, when the car reached their post, turned out to be men of that Janet was an ecclesiastic of an quite a different kind. They looked as unusual kind. They continued to kneel wvajr* and were quite as well armed for several minutes in hope of a ben as the chauffeur. They spoke a tongue ediction which Janet did not gi\e which was neither German nor the them. (T O BR CO N TIN V B D .» Trovte tells me that Megalinns have rpiNcking language of the Lvstrlans. Airplanes cans hie of carrying 20 Tommv and Jane» did not understand the reputation of being the luost re a word of It. Even the princess seemed lig io u s people In Europe. They take men and of traveling POO miles without the greatest delight in Passion Plays, a stop have been dsvainprt in Iudg- puttied RESINOL For Rushes and Chafinq Say “ Bayer Aspirin” \Jl Health B u ild er Over the entrance to the principal mine of a lead company In Arizona I hang* a portrait of -Antonio, the I Cave Finder," an employee who roams about the underground passage puff- | lug cigarettes, says Popular Mechan ics Magazine. lie keeps close watch of the smoke as It drifts away, and ! If he sees It disappearing through tiny breaks In the rock formation, the workings are extended In that direction, which often learls to Inner | caves, rich In ore. Minerals In this j region seem to have been deposited I In cavities which lie In an approxl- \ mately horizontal plane. The mine is said to have been enlarged by more than half a mile In this manner. | Tunnels are driven under the caves snd the ore Is dropped directly Into the cars that carry It out of the mine. in one word* MonaMotor Oîïf» & Greases M ore P o w e r ! M ore P u l l ! M ore P e p ! Low -cost T ra n sp o rta tio n Star m Cars Canada and Mexiea Puum : EKiArth, N. J. Lanàri*, M kh. Oakland, Cal. T o ro n », O a t