The Vernon Times, Volume 8, Number 45, Vernon, Jennings County, 23 April 1920 — Page 3
v ' ' : A PHILIPPINE TRAYSLCGU 1 J Mil 1 I . I ( i a ; kk fc. -.4! 3 (J6 S . TWL.i a pr Iff m s r .., : ; ' J . 'f: .a ? p iji. 'jrmg ;ks v p I 1 ff how iiistisa Si. TeOcf f f i f i -r. i h fjc g j txroTc ..o 'raej v ..,, r: - trn-io f H t i St-I '' V otl ti.l'l !., nv, taa tsrA Ciir.nrta Try it tt ojf rik TOr r- ?r for loc!tj ty THE ROMANTIC ISLANDS C P THE FAR EAST. PICTURES OF TUSlfl NATURAL BEAUTY AND HISTORIC SPOTS BECOMING a !iii;o4 Fv'-a -re. VMi A popular vifJTCH n:;-.T. ..i i - -4 isi ' ' r:::3 ILS Ft ; 1
f. y -
V
t i. I
Pcafn"" Tiif Bi Cured ti.-- :-a-t9ittu of " r. Tter only iii ' to cur dea . it. n vui . by cont'.iiuooml i . ru-ii. iaf na la -cu4 by . iuMMatd n4itt. f cou linn. f tka EuiUtbliu 1'.4. Wln-n tkia tub - Infiarae-i ktr ft rumfcUnir tounr or i.i.irrfit krlnff, aoi hea it la enilreiy cloaca. t)f nfa ia ta reault, toil Ufi! tli Jranmftti . fc lkn out ati J t'.ila rtorl t tti rml n.itioa. fc rla itatreyei irvr; tm caa'c out of ua eftuae fcr Catarrh, wr.ii h t noS'.-T b'Jt as lufUrurii ceaJUloa . . . v'v O'u i Daiitu for any ctjv nf i'.. - f tauaird ty catarrbj that cinn.-t l ; Sv CfttarrU Cura. btnil for 'n-'-.il4 f.j ' CO., Teii, CJtioTksc r ; s fat.; j t iiia for centtlftttoa
A nt- U"anted Strong Aut I -tir.ince Co trip j any wiin - )p ,' ir insurance
p'iv y en j ! tr t o trag-e at reducctl n.lv w:mts live agents write u N A ' lO A L AU rp MOBILE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION 307 N. Pennsylvania ST, - india'napolis IN P.
E
The Zigzag on ths Way to Baguio, Summer Capital ot the Philippine:
All rtV..W(l! Let's po! We're startfn?,' fr..iii Lniila, the gri'iit picture-Kpio, Ai.'if'viiutiiA'd Drit-ntul city, und will ;r;i-l hv automobile 200 miles to the north to l'. iunio, the summer capital of the i'Liliinihu-. The trip can also be HKi'lc by train 'W !,.. ' ;;'.. '. of us otie of the most i- -i -t i T speetHeulai- tunl thrilling auteisiobile trips in the worhl. We will have exeeUent remls all the way. The i'hiiippines ar, in fact, a paradise for ant. !sts. possesiin 3,r.tX) miles of tine ma iuized roads. Tht lirst p;irt of tha trip Is through type-al small towns and then across th.o eontia! plain of L n atnl through s.-veral rich nnl tortile province where t !.;;. vegetation is seen at its b,-vi. Here on,? i impressed with the jrr-at -rieiuS ural w 'al tnyf ThjrPhitrrP p'.ne u he-rViCtx'nts one of the K-'TTTe.it--? pr'luc!r.g areas, with tl, e advantage of immense natural re.a.i!i!w for th" development of further pro.hiei io;i. It is r,-jrevtah!y true that eveti i.) the rr.iied. Suites there is faf fiMTa any rea! i:;:!ersUitidins of the poiontiaiii ies of tb h-iaiuls. A! some points ne,. th-hls. lookinir in !be di-!an--o lihe I he jrreer,est of Rreen lawns, :;trei-'.i awiiy a.s far as the eye can see. if veil want color, if you mini to feet the ivm.auce and mystery of an Ori-'tital twilight, pass this way as the red e ed sti at the end of the d.yirej day is swy siiih'nv': behind the tinetidin -Npa!" of p-'-ett lields. At i'us! you ery out in eesiacy at the p-riroou- .v.-ene. I .tit as ou ri. to along, your r es fa-lened on th.e paimraina
of tints duA colors, and with the iiu-j
penetrably black Oriental night coniin,LC on fast, yen bee. une entliralletl. You no loi.uer try to express your feelings. You anr.ot. You readi '.e that those now fast chnnln', -o!orful masterpieces in the heavens and on the landscape arc pletures that no man can adequately describe nor human hands duplicate. So what's the use of tryinjr! True, these are but impressions, but the tra'Velouor considers himself justified in laeuriouin' them, for they are a part of the trip to Iiaguio and return. Indeed, the gorgeous sunsets in all parts of the I'hiiippim-s leave an impression on the mitul of the tourist that is everlasting. We leave the pa! ins and tropical
foliage and enter the zone of rugged pii;e. V. e iass from the soft, incense laien air of the warm lowlands to the crisp, invito. alius ozone of the tempera to yone, all within a few hours' time. For nule after mile the road now follows the tortuous course of a river, the road lyiiiir in the bottom or on the rocky sides of a jzrafate canyon. The Philippines are rich in hydroelectric possibilities. This power is the cheapest power ou earth. And it Is everlasting. Your traveloguer is neither a prophet nor the son of a prophet, but be predicts that one day there will ho imumorahie Philippine povernreer.t ow ned by di o-eleetrie plants in sliis canyon we are now passing threti.: h. Think of the possibilities of sueii a p. reject ! Today the trip from Manila to Ikjvntio is too expensive for ihe average Manila worker and Ids family, taa-ciy of whom may live and the without hoboid"..ii the womlroos i'H-au; ies ef tludr even Island of Luzon. Think of vhat a blessing it would be to Filipino mothers and children to feel upon their fe.ered brows the cool, invigoratiiv.; hn . ; s of the mountain lo; s. now so ne.u and yet so far With the Philippine o emnteut owr.lcs its own electric railways and Lydro-elec-
.- T - ..!!. 1 !,. r..-ht. ti l.rir'r
, W, .. h'ol- Sale
1 1.
tlit? try;) to Baguio within t lie uk ins ol liundred-i of thousands of Filipinos Not only in there sufficient power ii
this river to electrify a line from Ma 1
nnu to iJagmo, teat to operate tm ;
street railways of Manila, Pgkt U:c jD ed f m Kobsi Farm at city und furnish power for manutae tt
luring concerns. j ; -
liut we ha e now arrived at Camp One. From this point the se.-so-i rapidly char.gas as the elevation increases. We are traveling' over (he famous Ceiiguet road, the construction of which through the mountains isn most remarkable engineering triumph. At places the road is blasted out of the solid granite. Hiding on the edge of 100 foot precipice makes one feel like
ii
L
4 I , 3 !
o
"At times vc tz".tr.sd pitiicu jiy riwjr the jumping off place." he is on the rim of the world. to of the turns are so sharp it is imp '-s:ble to see -0 foot ahead, and we seeia to be perilously near the jumping off place. V.'f .-on:h-r if it is safe to lean out and poor into the canyon far below-.
and wizen we dree are perfectly sat ! isfied we ore llii ti?:g with death. Yet j the trip is a ti-' one, providing our j
d ri v
0
a i :.
' ! tlar.ler. s: i..
t i'.l' il.ir - I'm- Sale l- F m phone 87 L. A " i e 1 L. lia ri!e'
A .TED- Good prices io ;! .'. live hordes. 1U I; I'ARMS - Phone 87 L
FOR SALK - Barred Ro3k Kger, $10.) o m- netting: of'ISor 5;t0 a !00. Mrs W F. Rmdall Route Ni. 2 N. Vernon Tnd
FO.i VL'j: Tborob.e.i Hlue Andalusiati Kgs $ 1.50 pee 15. Clyde Heoil, Vern n, Indiana.
! ; U i K K YE I N C U U A l O it For - i itiuirett tins office.
FOR s A 1 4 K Cook tve good a-u. w New Ford run 500 miles Ftr mf: rtrat on jl:one l"8 Y
SHORT SHOTS
Eternity has nu gray hairs. Shawls are of oriental origin. It sr-hh i a pays not to pay your debts. The h'ghesi giving implies shar.ng. Ft!,,! : i diink-j more milk than water.
river has bcter n.M-. o, Ihnn our c,vn. ( a ,:t tiI.othtfp tel, 0- a All too s-w.n we reach the outskirts . , ....... . .. . . girl.
la . oi.,h .v -erica toys and girls iiev- pla.v tit.;uM-. No re-ret i' vain ihr.t inspires us to do better. When rho cat's uwav the night Is al-
ays tpaiet. Diamonds mine legbc-st when sold
trio i-luiJis I; wetU
of Paguio. a (ity an -i.ng the clouds
and are ra;h.-r surp-r-.sed at the modern city we find it u, i.e. ln ten years Faguio has go. :Wii freni a village of huts to the now j is !y famed mouutuin re Sort of the IhiJ:ppines, sometimes called the i'i ibi.jOoo Simla.- It is undoubted'.y dtine-l some' day to become a large city.
Bagnio tnr.fi- i?i elevat!on from ways qu;et 4,o00 to 0...00 fei"t and is surrounded
practically ai all s'do-- hv high metin:
tain ridge- and i;o.-s-uck.s" towering J at cut rates, into the .-k'es .at a height of almost j SAHx") feet. j Wise men always look bo-fore they Aside from the scenery, which is leap for joy. noteworthy, the g refit' !eVshif; of Da- f . guio is its !, mpera:o climate, vrhioh is j Health is the mother of wealth. Sir indeed a - !end to those impoverish- Kingsley Wood. ed by the tropii al ti oiiu-raiures of the , lowland- N'.t only is the mountain j The way of the transgressor Is & air rich iv. o-.oue, but it has been k-iu- vot-!l-l eaten path. oust rated to le eitra.-r-'.'n.arily free. - m
aW tAiSieaJ ( tm - ; rfH kit'ie - twit.
-si. M e"a
M St-w. fUl.fciti.Mter. ii.-. ...
H WTTH iUtr.t A r
n .-rfc -.ii F.i b F
0
Till.. iiinf : ov. H iT- iiniblis ai t7V . ., fm -j . . I ' 3 . - f. It ,4 i ft ijB
v A
'4
C. f
taai t ifi- w f v w ww lyx OF THE
RSCORO RLE OF 41$5lNO - PERSONS
The Salvation Army, because of its branches in every country in the world, conducts what fs probably one of the most efficient of detective bureaus. It Is the Bureau of Missing" Persons, which sends out daily alarms to all sections In its efforts to find those who have disappeared. In the United States over 1,-SOO inquiries for missing persons come into the Salvation Army each year, and in spite of the meagerness of the available information, in spite of the fact that a large proportion of those who are missing do not want to be found, In spite of all the obstacles and hindrances, over 1,000 are located by the Salvation Army each year. There is the child who runs away from home because the terrors of cold and hunger are nothing to him compared to the fear of school and teacher. There is the man who finds it easier to
desert than to support the family that he thInk-5 is too exacting. There is the woman who feels that .the river or the open gas jet is less terrifying than the hardships of life. For all these and many others the Salvation Army is conducting a vigilant, unceasing search. And the methods used in finding the delinquents are as varied as the causes of their disappearance. Sometimes an overlooked clue, an old letter or the address of a friend loads to the end of the search. Sometimes n paragraph inserted in the War Cry the Salvation Army publication, which is circulated in every country in the world or in other mediums calculated to catch the eye, will bring the missing one home. Sometimes the man or woman hunt goes on for years, only in the end to become one of those unsolved mysteries that the worid speculates upon for a month or two and then promptly forgets.
ONLY ONE STLYE IN THIS MILLINERY SHOP
' i -.1
1 M
i i
Each sear tlunng 'he ho season the seiiool teachers of ihe entire archipelago are enabled by the go-.vrnmeut to spend a month at-the t?M:-h-: crap
in Baguio for ret rea :ee ard confer-!
ence on sel-m-! work. Amerb.-a u array officers and tl.vir faitolU-. a I so go to Paguio for the hot rtontl.s.
4rsl row ft-.ttf v.-vsr " n , L ..-tu-.n I -i
vou In Da guio he I eludes i,. will leave Ko ift 53 kter worth givlcg than a
.in tl.isrc f.- v.. I. ...... tr,t.-.Ml Ul -IJUlul UlUasi.t.
insr sih.' fr
in wedding ties. I--ts of grown folks are as hard to
anuis.0 as a taby. JIarrSage U a gamble when there 1j money back of it.
ther- are j, any interostto take, and. besides,
Ik
o is the 1.
o.k
lightful i luce for
a vacation ia the entire
C. II. X.
It's dir.ralt to un'erstttia why &orzi den eat train feci.
a--.. . . . . V r- a
TRIMMING A BONNET There Is a millinery Eiop In NewYork which guarantees its hats never to go out of style. With every purchase goes the understanding that in five or ten years from now the bonnet bought today will be just as attractive, just as much admired and even more la vogue. It is the Salvation Army "Millinery Shop," located at 120 West Fourteenth Street, New York city, in which establishment every boD.net which enters the tenement Louses, rescue homes, orphan a ge nurseries or slum settlements first sees the light -of day. And the j ijtsa rushing I Ui'r.e.-s. Three l;:g:;l l.-r.ts t-ch wc.k ar? trimmed, L;r:2, sintcut to all rarts of the
c:i tl Lr mission d I'i" to every
A try-on' in the onestyle CON NET SHOP
k the a liiat-
cottx-trr zzi star to-
, r t
' e ,it..'
(.lie r
,:r cf th i Cuitei f
porter not tie.? type that coveted word after its name
er of course, hut a real one. .-ry bonnet that graces the head i riy Salvation Army lassie came all the way from across the Atlantic for that purpose. The bonnet itself is Knslish, the trimmings are American, and the wearers embrace every nationality in the world. Many times each week big trutk1 draw up to the door of the shop and deposit their cargoes of nntrlmmod tats. At fivopsont Intervals the piquant bonnets, with ?h ir Ions? blue streamers, bine, niching r.nd satin folds, b-ave the establishment bound for years of s.-rvice in the slums and bleak fp'-ts of the nation. The familiar blue bonnet shaped like nothing else under the sun is a symbol of un-
! selxlsJi service in nurseries, hosp.aiS
Ax.:
Salva
Army
an izi-1 and t
:iit5 the whole world over.
V- v i I t'vit in
:v ; i 1, ti" v v- t
" I n t" ... ....
P
A..Xs,
v.xul win lev i j 1 i 1 1 - ! 1' M 1 So: , : , 'i i v . : lor . o h - chm. h . i S "Mt J ' b I . ' ! i . i i lb tt . ' ! ' - grant in of I'i America mo.o; pinos, d v-i v. hen ii p! . to tl P . !-!.'.' ; b led o i ri V. 1 i n A- i Oh l ml i I tl i w ' I ;k o ,i , - 1 ie r IOt.ii' ' i gO!T'. ut, U- ie, i . , , t. 'lie I . . ; -1 M - t' e -1 le - ' -tl i '1 A " 'I I W " A - e' ; . jsi'lyes, :' j .,!( i f ; o. , ' t: i . i" , - 1 with ''a V h, n '. , law, It si:;,;0-, ' S( I.' 1 l-tol . pines. i hi - Ki.i.ol, ' With t , the Filip'm 1 iv t 1 . ' P .''..
t i i i . l . I i - t - , , . , ,,....:'.. 1 i : l 1 t 1 t L 'J i I'm d - the ( e; no;- c; A ' " n ' t . ' - ! t .!,-: by for.-:"' for lie,. ;-r.il,-e naumly, a g.e.-'-.o; sjfirage of ;," . porlo'J by he of i-'j.ijiTa'eii!;- ...
n
no -n, a:
Tie- PhiiP pio- (j I: ) Pa: et a ee li.i l.t or ce. : ;, pie- 1. r'r h t : . '. of -', ree-P- o .h e'.: ,. f.ih
t!
i . gi -I : A h i If la ; . f fib :o. ' in bp' . ' I. al '.. . the i 5 prolan-.? o, tO giV !: -. ; lf( . fa-.-Tl o I , ff - ; t . i 3 " ' - i f : j i . f T ' I : ; : i,: '. t- ii : I P fr ,r..v Je;e ; e I 3 ..i . f '' : . i ' : x. : . . '
