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About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 2, 1921)
Ji Paramount Picture ALL U. S. RIGHTS ARE GREEK SOVEREIGN OREGON NEWS NOTES [HEURE RESERVED IN TREATY LAUDS WORK OF OF GENERAL INTEREST ARCADE SATURDAY. NIGHT D. C.—Full title to "nil NEAR EAST RELIEF the Washington, rights, privileges, Indcmnilh*«. re Principal Events of the Week Briefly Sketched for Infor* mation of Our Readers. Cables Thanks for Christian Live« Saved in “Beautiful Work” of Mercy The spring fishing season on the Columbia river came to a close at noon Thursday. An aggregate of 4458 boys and girls att< nded the Yambill county schools during the present year. The fourth annual fair ofthe Union county grange will be held at Blue Mountain grange ball, October 6. 7 and 8. Pennsylvania promoters have sign ed up 2000 acres in the northern part of Marion county and will prospect for oil. The annual dairy and hog show will be held at Hermtston October 7 and 8. A total of $1100 is offered as pre miums. The prune harvest of Mosier valley is now under way. The crop is not as WALLACE REID in hravy as in some past seasons, but the 'EXCUSE MY DLLST* quality is fine. A PARAMOUNT ARTCRAFT PICTURE B. F. Lindas was recommended by Senators McNary and Stanfield for ap pointment as register of the land of- fice at Roseburg. As the result of a booze raid In Malheur county by the sheriffs of- fice, a total of $3575 in fines was col * in lected from 16 defendants. Between 600,000 and 750,000 pounds of wool, practically the entire 1921 clip, has been sold and shipped over the Prineville city railroad. Adopted from the Saturday All Yamhill county American Legion Evening Post Story. posts are co-operating to make the big “Tne Bear Trap ” celebration in McMinnville September 22, 23 and 24 a great success. A Bit of trickery They are to have a school board A Thrilling Auto Race recall at Bandon, petitions having A Good Fight been filed for the ousting of Chairman A Pleasing Climax. Nielson and Director Zentner. Its the best Auto racing picture A great scarcity of hop pickers is being experienced at Harrisburg, al ever filmed. though the price of picking has been What More Could You Ask? raised to a cent and a quarter. G. E. Gates of Medford was appoint ed a member of the state fair board to Mae Murray and Duvid Powell in succeed E. V. Carter, Ashland banker, “On With The Dance” who resigned because of ill health. Clark Walter, aged 80, well known A Romance of love and home, Umatilla county pioneer and Civil war and of Pleasure’s pace that kills veteran, died a few days ago at Se on the Great White Way. attle, where he had gone on a visit Lavish beyon description. Every A premium of $250 was received by Douglas county recently in the sale of serene a revalation. $220,000 of the $1,100,000 road bond issue voted at the recent special elec- U. S. ARMY HEAD tion. Jess Scott of Elkton was killed near ASKS ARMENIAN AID Roseburg when he was mistaken for W ashington. Major General a deer while on a hunting trip with ames Harbord, recently ap- H. R. Levison, an ex-policeman of por ted General Pershing’s assistant Portland. Chief of Staff, has gone on record in Fifty prominent walnut growers support of the work of the Near East from the Wiliam« tte valley held a Relief in Armenia. He says, in a letter to the Near East Relief: m<“ting at Salem and discussed meth- “Of all the heart-breaking distress ods for standardizing, grading and chat exists in other countries, I be lieve that the Near East situation marketing their product. Umatilla county restaurant and should most appeal to our charitable people. There are many thousands hotel keepers and dairies paid $680 of helpless orphans—children of into the coffers of the state as the re Christian parents in a Moslem land, sult of recent prosecutions for viola who must be helped by our people If they are to survive. The Ar tions of the dairy and food laws. menians have preserved their race, The Union Oil company of Cali- their religion and their language un fornia remitted to the secretary of der conditions of distress for over a state J2O.S86.15, covering the tax on thousand years. They are worthy of a better fate than to perish, and its sales of gasoline and distillate in I believe that will be their fate with On -on during the month of July. out substantial financial and moral Placing the average yield at 30 bush- I support from the good people of our els to the agre and the quality at 100 country. "J. G. HARBORD, per cent, Malheur county stands at the “Major General, U. S. Army.” head of the list of Eastern Oregon General Harbord is one of the trustees of the Near East Relief or counties in the production of wheat. The body of Arthur E. Glover, the ganization, now making a general ap peal for funds to continue Its work only Wheeler county boy killed in the among the destitute of Bible lands. world war and for whom the Fossil post of the American Legion was named, was buried at Fossil Tuesday. Raymond Sweet, a waiter in a Eu Governor Names Fair Delegates gene restaurant, pulled off his white Salem, Or.—At the request of the ex coat and resigned his job immediately ecutive committee of the 1925 Atlan upon receipt of word that he had fall tic-Pacific Highways exposition, Gov en heir to an estate valued at $40,000. ernor Olcott has appointed delegates The home of Dick Williams on Up representing each county in the state per Cummings creek In Grant county way destroyed by a waterspout. His to meet in Portland September 8 to decide on the scope, size and financing barn, chickens, garden and all farm ing implements were washed away. of the 1925 exposition. I nited States treasury checks ag- gr • ating more than $24,000 were re ceived at the offices of the adjutant- ger < ral for distribution among Oregon citizen soldiers in payment for armory drills. There are 52,634 more acres devoted to farming in Marion county this year than there were 12 months ago, ac cording to the annual report filed at Salem by Oscar Steelhammer, county assessor. Deputy game wardens have been in structed to watch closely for pre-sea son hunting of China pheasants and the law protecting pheasants until the opening of the season will be enforc ed strictly. WALLACE REID Excuse My Dust NEXT WEEK for 10c fror one sack o Reports received at ths office of the state highway department from practically every section of Oregon Indicate that the peak of the tourist travel for the 1921 season is past. Al* though September and part of October will be Ideal for the traveler, the num* ber on the road« will not compare with the aggregates fof the months of July and August GENUINE BULL Photugiapu uj gu»ci national. KING AND QUEEN OF GREECB TOBACCO » TO DISPOSE OF LIQUORS Dayton to Portland via Newberg Leaves Dayton dally at 8 a. m ; Portland at 2 p. m. at Dayton, 2nd and Ferry Streets In Powell Building. Portland at «7 North 2nd Street Dayton 72x3 Portland, Automatic 51691 Headquarters Phone», We do all kinds of heavy and light hauling Goode delivered MV piece in Portland. business solicited Phon* Rad SS Strictly cash daalmg. The Dayton Produce House S. C. PURKEY Year round market for your Veal. Dressed Hogs, Poultry, Hides, Furs. TOP MARKIT PRIUS I0R YOUR PRODUCE Acalylana Walding Horae Shoeing Machine & Blacksmith Shop Body dnd Wheel Work in Connection General Repairing of all kinds of Farm Machinery. See us for Plow work and Plow share grinding Accruing Storage Charges Cause of Prohibition Commissioner's Request. Near East Relief organization, 1 Madison Ave., New York City. Her Washington, D. C.—Immediate dis message reads: position of liquors seized under the na “Deeply touched your great kin<k uess toMinh (¿reek war sufferers In tional prohibition act, owing to stor Mralta Area anil Asia Minor. Thank age charges, which are accruing, was you all most sincerely. ordered by Prohibition Commissioner SOPHIE.” Haynes. At the same time, the Greek queen Instructions were sent to prohibition sent her check to Dr. Barton, Chair man of the Near Eaat Relief Commit directors and revenue collectors to re tee, for 1,000 francs as a contribu quest the district attorneys to petl- tion to what she termed the “beauti tion the courts for disposition orders ful work" of feeding, clothing and housing the more than 110,000 little for all seized liquors, automobiles. t children who have come under the bouts or other vehicles sc zed. care of the Near East Relief during as "moonshine, ” adul- Liquor, such O the past year. terated and low proof liquor, having Besides Queen Sophie, Admlial P. Coundouriotis, of the Royal Hellenic no commercial value, should be de Navy, who was regent of Greece fol stroyed, Mr. Haynes sdid, while the lowing the death of the late King higher proof and unadulterated liquors Alexander, on October 25, last, has also cabled to express the gratitude should be diverted to commercial but « of the Greek people for the aid fur non beverage use. nished the Christian populations of Incomplete reports from the various Phone Red 55 Dayton. Ore Turkey by the Near East Relief. districts, Mr. Haynes said, estimated 4 More than $120,000.00 was raised All Work Guaranteed. Accessories, Oils Tires. among the Greeks of the-United total value of good liquors held by the ♦ « States, in two weeks, and sent to the government at about $1,UO<J,too. Near East by the Near East Relief, to be used in helping the widows and orphans rendered destitute by the Legion Opposes Chinese For Hawaii. continuation of disturbed conditions Washington, D. C.—The American in the former Ottoman Empire. The Legion is opposed to permitting funds of the Near East Relief aro gathered by private subscription not Hawaiian planters to bring Chinese only among Americans, but among coolies to those Islands to work on Will be Dedicated September 11 the Armenians and Greeks in the their plantations, as proposed in a United States, whose countrymen In Turkey and Transcaucasia have been resolution pending before congress, President Kerr, of O. A. C., will deliver an address at 11:00 A. M, Lemuel Bolles, national adjutant of through Indescribable suffering. In an official report to Charles V. the legion, informed Chairman John Dr. E. E. Gilbert will speak at 8:00 P. M. Vickrey, General Secretary of the Near East Relief, Miss Glee Hastings, son of the house immigration com of Spencer, Iowa, describes the piti mittee in a letter made public by the Ercrybody Welcome Eux ket Lunch at the noon hour able condition of tens of thousands 'merican Federation of Labor. of homeless, starving, half-naked refugees, driven from their homes in the war area, and huddled in stables and out-houses, or on the bare ground, for lack of shelter. “Most of the refugees are country- people with almost nothing except the clothes on their backs, stupefied and dazed by their misfortunes Bread is given only to women and children at the rate of one-half loaf for a person, each day. The milk Is reserved for the babies and sick. The refugees sit around, huddled up against the walls—women with dull, sad faces, little children that are blue and pinched with the cold, and too miserably lifeless to cry. One family of five sleeps at night on a bare stone floor, under one thin, ragged half cotton blanket. In one room seven; women are wasting away with tuber culosls; in another are some severe eye cases, including two young blind girls, who have no one in the world to care for them. The overflow from these buildings live In a wooden shed with the walls and floors gaping with ers holes where the wood has rotted away and in tents improvised iron rags and pieces of carpet.”’ A nation-wide appeal is being made to carry on this work, checks to be sent to Cleveland H. Dodge. Treasurer, 1 Madison Avenue, Nev.- York City. Fred Anderson, Mgr Dayton Garage Carl Detmering, Prop. Methodist Community House The DIGNITY of LABOR It is not so much the work itself, but the spirit in which the task is ac cepted and performed that ennobles the work Being "Out of One’s Elim-rt." When you see folks out of their e1 ment you can count on strange con duct. The fish out of water Is no i . i >re strange than the average chap In wa ter when he can’t touch bottom A wild duck in a parlor would chu e quite a commotion, but lie wouMn'l be more out of place than would sonic uncouth eccentric at a White H . i e reception, or an angel at a bull fight. Yet all these have their rightful plac« Out of their elements folks are strung,-. The average city boy pokes fun al ilie rustic as he opqns his eyes in wild amazement at the Strange sights of the big city. But that same city boi ls just as much at sen In the wood* or the barnyard. Each sees the ’’strange” In the other. We need tn see the points common to us nil to ex hibit the right sympathy,—Grit, Women right for Union Equality. Atlantic City, N. J—Organized wo men workers of the country presses their demands for eqval privileges with n.a in all unicus, before tint executive council of the Ar.ier.can l ob eratlo^ of Libor, an 1 urg 1 that It take zU; 1 mil pai »H DURHAM k Athena, Greece. The wonderful work done by the Near East Relief organhation in aavinn the lives of teus of thousands of Christians throughout Asia Minor mid Trans caucasia has received signal recogni tion in praise bestowed by Queen Sophie of Greece in a cablegram dis patch by the Greek sovereign to Dr James L. Barton, Chairman, and Charles V. Vlckrev. Secretary, of the parations or advantages" specified for the United States under the unrutl- fled treaty of Versailles Is reaffirmed in the separate treaty with Germany signed at Berlin. Both by blanket declaration and specific enumeration the treaty recog nizes the claim of the American gov ernmeat to these benefits and at the same time disavows on the part of the United States any responsibility for provisions of the league of nu tions covenant, the Shantung settle ment or the political realignments of Europe. There was every indication that ef forts would be made by the admin! tration to secure senate ratification a soon as possible after congress re assembles late in October. Such com | mercial and supplemental treaties as may be found necessary then can be negotiated through the ordinary diplo malic channels. Intimations were given In high of ficial quarters thui withdrawal of the American troops from the Rhino will be seriously considered as soon as the peace treaty has been ratified by the senate and the German reichstag. Murdock Bros. Truck Line ■b.tthi» tv V The principal element which gives labor its dignity—whether on the farm or in the work quality of its voluntary character This store will be clos ed all day Labor Day September 5th MILLER MERCANTILE CO J, W. SHlPPY, MANAGER, DAYTON, OREGON