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About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1920)
;?I Z W - \ Z Sag ton ''vJR j#/'* NEWLETS GATHER ED ABOUT COUNTY COURTHOUSE' | RUNS FOR PRESIDENT FROM PRISON CELL Minor Matter of More than Passing Interest Marriage licenaea have been iaaued to Veona May Urnson, of McMinnville and Chai lea Wealey Sullinger. alao of M cM .nnville' Bertha May Elliot, New berg, and Roy W illiam Eaatburn, AI bany, Lino County, O re .; Gladys Marie Laughlin, Y im h ill and Guy Carlton Ilaynea, Yam hill; Jean Dnrtha W lthy- -combe, Yam hill and W illiam Elba, Carlton. In Circuit Qou. t Divorce auit; Kuth A. Davis va. C. O. D a v it; B. A. Klika attorney for p la in tiff. Divorce auit; Emma G. Hastings vs. John 3. Hastings; Itamaey, Lange and Nutt, attorneys for p la in tiff. Suit to quirt title ; James H . Cook and Signs Cook vs. Joseph Teel et al; default and decree. Lafayette State Bank va J W. W at erman and Fred J. Dceta, default and decree in chattel mortage foreclosure. Around the Court House According to the affid avit of owner ship filed with the ■ ounty cletk, V. G Henderson and C. H . Houser, both of Sheridan, are owners of the Houser- Hendcraon garage in that town. Rev. Frank P. Leipsig, an ordained Catholic priest; Rev. W alter L. Ualev, a Baptist elegy man, have tiled their ministerial authority certificates with the county clerk. The preparation of the election bal lot boxes, and incidental paraphanalia is in progress at the court house. Edward V/. Hoffman, and Robert Ixickwood are among the chiropractic phyalciana who have registered their licenaea with the county clerk. There are nine chiropractic physicians who have registered their licenses to prac tice in thia county since the law went into effect. VICTORIOUS FORCES PURSUECARRANZA Troops Cap* tu red ; P re s id e n t is Fug i tiv e in M ountains. Vera Crux.— Mexican revolutionary forcea commanded by General Pedro Sanchex and Hlglnlo Aguilar, are pur suing President Carranza and the troops which fled with him from the battlefield near San Marco, on Friday. Government troops numbering 3500 were captured by the revolutionists, following the escape of Carranza. Mexico City.— Venuatlano Carranza, defeated In battle Friday In the Vicin ity of Rlnconada. Vera Cruz, la fleeing Into the mountains of Vera Cruz by way of Perote. Revolutionary forcea captured 2000 Carranza soldlera, 24 railroad trains, four pieces of artillery, about 200 ma chine guns, numerous automobiles, one airplane and large quantities of am munition and gold and silver bars. In his official report of the battle. General Guadalupe Sanchex, command er of revolutionary forces, which for a week have been opposing Gencrul Carranza’s efforts to fight his way to the Gulf coast, suld the fighting began at 10 o’clock Friday morning. After three hours’ heavy battling Carranza and the leading members of his p%rty fled from the trains In automobiles, es corted by about 600 cavalry. A revo lutionary cavalry column was sent in pursuit. Human Envy. "They any that If you save a man from drowning he Is likely to turn on you nnd become your enemy." " It’s the snme way with almost any little kindness," commented Mr. Growcher. "A lot of people are eo envious they ciih't Imagine anybody would do them n favor except for the sake of showing Off." . . . TIME (OR SOBER IHOUGHT In the bumble judgment >f this scribe right now ie the time for some deep end sober thinking on the part of all t ie people, end yet all evidences point to the concluaion that they aie doing less of that kind of thinking than they ever did. Otherwise they would not continue on this spendthrift debauch. Burning up money like a Coal Oil Johnny is always a boomerang that flie j back and knocks the burner silly. Qlory Tickets Issued F e d e ra l (Lrtlntxu* DAYTON, OREGON, MAY 21, 1920. VOLUMK IX NO. 25 3500 XBui The Socialists In convention at New York have Just given to American Political History an un usual event. It Is the act of nom inating a presidential candidate who Is confined within the prison wnlls of (he nation he is to lead— If elected. Eugene Debs, Socialist leader, Is In the federal prison at A tlanta, Ga.. serving a ten-year term for disloyal utterances d ur ing the war period. Despite this the Socialists have selected him again as th eir candidate and he will' conduct his campaign from the loneliness of his orison call MADE BIG "BAG” OF GERMANS Raid of Doughboys Within Hun Llnee One of the Moet Brilliant Exploit« of the War. It was the most audacious night hike of the great war. The Infantry bri gade of the Second division. Ameri can army, wna making I t Platoon afivr platoon of rain-soaked, murl- painted Yank dotighhoya. In columns of twos, inarched silently atralght through the atrong German line, u distance of four miles— like a huge khaki-colored monster ready to spring nt the throat of the German defense. They did. Joseph Mills Hanson, former Amer ican held artillery officer, gives this graphic description In the Home Sec tor. the ex-soldlers’ weekly conducted hy the former editorial council of the Stars and Stripes, of how the midnight surprise experts of tho A. E. F. floun dered and struggled up the hill toward La Tullerle farm on the night of No vember 4. 1018. where German officers were living close to Beaumont, think ing that the neareat American soldier was eight kilometers away. He says: "Silently the Americans, panting from their long march, formed and closed In upon the farm, as old Mosby's men used to close In on some devoted federal outposts In Virginia, or an George Roger« Clark's grim fron tiersmen closed In on the British at their hall In the wilderness fort nt Vlneennes. “There was a pnnse ns they crept up close. Then a sudden rush, a gust of cries, and through the doors nnd windows they hurst In. Knots of Ger man officers, bending over maps nnd dispatches, looked up In horror Into the muzzles of rifles nnd the stern, white faces behind them ; men curled up In blankets In the corners staggered to their feet and held their hands aloft. This sort of warfare had a tnng of the new-world daring In It that the dis ciples of Von Clausewltz and Luden- dorff could not comprehend. It set German logic nt naught, but they were obliged to yield to It. Ln Tullerle farm, a German headquarters,' four miles from the front, had been throt tled hy n hand reaching out of the darkness. Many of h'.s Imperial maj esty’s trusty officers nnd men had been made prisoners In n flash, though un fortunately two generals made their es cape hy darting out of hack doors." ’ How She Knew. A Hoosier school tegcher received a very Indignant note from one of her patrons, demanding that she stop some hoys from annoying her tiny (laughter on the wny home from school. Imme diately after she hud read the note the teacher begun an Investigation. She asked the little girl, "How do these boys annoy you?” "Why, they talk awful about me nnd to mo,” explained the youngster. "They cuss ine nnd sny terrible things." "But how do you know they are cursing and the things are really ter rible?” persisted Miss Teacher. Even «he was stunned hy the wee child’s answer, "Because.” she rea soned. "they are Just like the things my papa snye when he gets mad at my mama." It has never failed yet and it is not gonig to fa il this time. Thia inflation is abnormal, and anything abnormal ad justs itself sooner or later. Things in flatable are always filled with gas or wind, and that is just exactly what this present balloon is inflated with — bank credit and hot air. The puncture is due to arrive Inside of a year, and the sensible man and woman w ill get ready for it now while tiie fish and fools who have no brains or judgment wiiTgo right on hitting the high pla ces up to the last minute, and then when the crash comes be out of both jod and money. The drunk is not con fined to the working classes altho they are doing their fu ll part, but infects every walk and class. Profiteering and dishonest dealing also infects all classes, and the diapatebes are full every day of greed, graft dishonorable actions ahd .dishonest commercialism. SUBSCRIPTION $ 2 .0 0 PER Y E A fifl THE WORST SPEEDER HELPS HER HUSBAND SEEK PRESIDENCY Old Father Tim« Dreaks aii the speed record« and defies all the speed cop«. EAT BEANS AND RE DUCE LIVING COSTS Y ia re ago somebody wrote him: Potatoes are high, almost out "Backward, turn backward, Ob, Time, in thy flight, And make me a child again, just for tonight. ” sight, pries is going up, everything is exceedingly high in pries except Laana. A large consumption of beans on the But it ia a safe bet he didnt do it. We do not notice what a speed bur ner that old guy with the scythe and Bolsheviki whiskers is until we begin to feel rheumatic paina chasing up and down our frame and discover hte silver threads among the gold. In youth we run the old man a merry race and give him the laugh, and then lie steps on the accelerator and throws everything Into high, and next thing we know we j are full of grouch and indigestion, and the doctor tells us to cut out coffee and red meat and go on a diet of boiled bay and predigested chips. Then our eyes i go on the tlin k and we cant read what ihe senatros and congressmen are call ing each other until we cough ub $20 to an occulist, while microbes raise large fam ilies in our teeth in spite of the dentist who plugs them with zinc. The Fathei human raately finally speed burner proclivities of Time are tbe worse bumps the race gets up against, and u ltij he runs every one of us down and fataly. There was never anyhting like it in the history of tho world before, and if Londonderry Ruled by Mob. old Diogenes were out with his lantern Ixindonderry, Ireland.— Rioting Sun lookiug for honest men now he would day night between Nationalist and have a similar job to that of thousands Unionist mobs was even fiercer than of government sleuths out searching Saturday's fighting. Groups of men for concealed booze. and women ln the Unionist quarters of Fountain street and sim ilar groups in the Sinn Fein quarters of Bridge Memorial Cottages. The number of lives the war took street followed an exchange of party hns not been adequately- reckoned. The cries with stone and bottle throwing. number of families It broke up Is like Then more than 100 revolver shots wise uncounted. Yet right after It we followed. In addition to the killing have a greater shortage of housing cf a former soldier named Doherty, than ever. There Is Interest In this three others were wounded. When the connection tn a letter to the London Spectator, evidently from one of the hostilities broke out the police were sufferers of the war. It contains a sug withdrawn and for a few hours mob gestion which may or may not he new law was supreme. in this country. The w riter calls attention to an Germany to Pay *30,000,000,000. nrtlcle In the Ixmdon Chronicle tell Paris.— It is understood in official ing of the building of 120 cottages for circles here that the Anglo-French ex-service men In Westmoreland, conference at Hythe, which closed culled war memorial cottages. It Is Sunday, decided that the sum total not clear to him whether these were which Germany should pay as repara built by public or private funds, hut never mind th a t “Would It be pos tion would be fixed at 120.000,000,000 sible.” he asks, "for individuals to do marks gold (approximately $30,000,- likewise? What more practical me 000,000). morial of nny fallen hero than to pro Washington Democrats M eet vide a home for a disabled soldier or sailor or for his widow and children?’’ Spokane, Wash.— The largest dele Though our war widows and or gated convention ever seen In the phans nnd our disabled soldiers are state of Washington was held in the few compared with the losses of Great state Armory here Monday when the Brituln. we have need enough for more democrats of this state went Into sea houses, and the memorial cottage Idea sion for their state convention. Is not a had one. HOW CAN WE PLOW IF WE CAN’T HAHhu VUrtoA. of part of the public w ill m aterially lower the cost of living and they are about the only important food product that is reasonable in price at thia tim e, in fact, materially lower than prices which pre vailed two years ago. Beans are sold closer to tbe cost of production than any other staple food and are therefore the most economical edible in daily use. She lived in Washington when her husband was a member of Congress, now she la'helping her husband in his fight for tbe Re publican presidential nomination and election— which, of course, would send her back to the cap ita l— the first lady of tbe land. 8he ia Mrs. F ran k A. Lowdea. w ife of the governor of Illinois— and popular In Washington so ciety. GOVERNMENT CONTROL ASKED BY JAILROADS O fficials Request In terstate Com m erce Com m ission to H andle C risis. Washington.— Railroads of the coun try, through the association of railway executives and the American Railway association, have asked the interstate commerce commission to exercise its emergency powers to relieve the car shortage and freight congestion. In a statement filed with the com mission, the railroad officials declared the situation was such as to “warrant and to require emergency action sim ilar to that taken when this country entered the war.” The railroads’ formal petition asks the cgmmission to assume its emer gency power under the Esch-Cummina bill, which gives it power to supervise distribution of cars and motive equip ment, curtail passenger service and issue priority orders. Appeals of the railroads for help have brought to light new dangers. De velopments showed that a decidedly menacing condition confronted the commercial world through the tie-up of the financial resources of business houses. Delay in movement of prod ucts was declared to have brought many plants face to face with an im mediate shutdown. Interest rates at this time ase so high as to make it out of the question for most of the manufacturing con cerns that borrow to finance further production, according to treasury of ficials. I t was said the congestion was costing lb« nation “millions a day” through under-production. Wholesalers and retailers alike are Buffering through inability to obtain delivery of good, railroad men said. Domestic beans are an excellent sub stitute for potatoes and meat, and with the warm weather coming on, being rich in protein, the importance of their food value and low coat ahold be more fully realized by the average housewife. This is especially important when the housewife is having great d iffic lty in trying to keep the grocery and meat bill within the lim its of the fam ily in come. Another advantage that beans have over tbe ordinary edible ia that they can be purchased in quantity and put away in the pantry without any possibility of deterioiation. Every housewife should avail herself of the present low price and put in a supply against a rise in price later in the sea son. ■ Beans are healthful, nutritious and of high food value. A comparison' of the nutritive value of other staple foods shows one pound of beans at the aver age price of 10 cents to the following: 1 pound beans at 10 cents lOcenta 5.1 pounds potatoes at 9 cents per lb 46 cents 1.6 pounds sirloin steak at 40 cents per lb. 64 cents. 20.8 eggs a t 50 cents a dozen 87 cents 5 pints of m ilk at 8 cents a pint. 40 cents 1 pound ice at 18 cents. The aveage housewife thinks of beans only a9 something to be boiled or baked. This is a wrong idea. Beans may be prepared in many d iffe re n t and palat able waya. They are alao one of tbe few foods that may be cooked, set aside and afterwards reheated and served. In fact, tbe second cooking improves them wonderfully. One of the moat economical ways to prepare beans is to cook them a t tbe same time tbe Saturday or Sunday roast is being prepared, or when bak ing bread, cake or pastry, m aking the same heat do doable dnty. Beans do not necessarily have to be eaten tbe same day, but can be put away in the ice chest or cooler and served either as tbe main dish or w ith the " le f t overs” from the preceding day. Those house wives who have a fireless cooker w ill find it a very simple and convenient matter to prepare beans w ith practic ally no trouble or fuss. Tbe high coat of potatoea and other starchy foods, so necessary to human consumption, can be met by substituting more domestic beans, thereby keeping the grocery bill within tbe lim it allowed by the fam ily income. Eat Beans. PEAGE RESOLUTION ADOPTED IN SENATE WAR TAX ON TOILET PREPAR 3 3 ? IM ^ . Washington.— The senate adopted. 43 to 38 the republican resolution de claring the state of war w ith Germany and Austria-Hungary at an end. The measure was In the form of a substitute for the peace resolution re cently adopted by the house, which dealt with Germany alone. The two proposals w ill be adjusted ln confer ence. Leaders for the Knox substitute and the party alignment were about that anticipated. Three democrats— Reed of Missouri, Shields of Tennesiee and Walsh of Massachusetts— joined the republicans In supporting the resolu tion. Two republicans— McCumber of North Dakota, who was paired, and Nelson of Minnesota— lined up with the democratic opposition. Predictions by leaders on both sides that the treaty of Versailles would re main ln Its present unratlfled position Indefinitely were made. The number of .vote« mustered hy ATIONS CHANGED Under a recent ruling by the Treas ury Department the tax on toilet pre parations and patent and proprietary medicines ie based on tbe selling price of each article «no not upon the total price of a number of articles. I f a per son buys fiv e packages of 5 cent cough drops, a 1 cent stamp must be attached to each package. I f a person purchases a tube of tooth paste for 35 cents and a bottle of perfume for 65 cents, a 2 cent stamp must be placed on the tooth paste and 3 cents on the perfume,— a total of 5 cents. In other words, the tax is on each article and not on the combined purchase price. This revokes a ruling previously made by the Depart ment. When s man Intimates he Is going backers of the reeolution la the eenate to tell you something for your own good would not he euffioleat to PM> UIWW that (a a sign you are going to hear a veto, - -. something dlaageerable. i f ■' «