Say ton V olume x N o . 50 ©rtbune DAYTON, OREGON, NOVEMBER 11, 1921. NEWSLETS GATHER- ED ABOUT COUNTY COURT HOUSE Minor Matter of More than Passim) Interest Filed October 27, 192). Action for money, M E. Blalnck, plaintiff, vs Iva L. Blalock, defendant. Filed October 27, 1921. Divorce. J. 8. Williams and Jeanette Wil­ liams, plaintiff, vs Elias Thorne, et al defendants. Filed October 28, 1921. Mortgage foreclosure. H. A. Banister, plaintiff, vs Austin Hayes, defendant. Filed October 28, 1921. Transcript of judgment. PrebeU Ceert Afeeiated is Drew BudKri H. O. Curfman, deceased. Filed Oct­ W, 3. Allan of Dundee, A. J. Bew­ ober 28, 1921. Letters of administra­ ley of Sheridan, and Elmar Campbell tion. Inventory and appraisement. of Hopewell, have been selected to aa- Clyde Johnson, deceased. Piled Oc­ eiel the county court in making the tober 27, 1921. Petition for order to county budget for next year. borrow money. Order authorizing ad­ NetwaliuUea Matter« ministratrix to borrow money. It io likely that the coming term of Arietta Obye. adoption of. Filed court will witness many aliens receiv­ October 26, 1921. Petition; consent ing their full naturalization papers. tor adoption; petition for adoption; Borne petitions filed two or three years order for adoption. ago by applicant who hive failed to M. A. Hartman, deceased. Filed put in an appearance will be dismissed. October 29, 1921. Letters of adminis­ tration; inventory and appraisement; During October County Judge Dan­ order approving inventory and appraise­ iele officiated at four marriages and ment; final account; order approving Justice of the Pesce Rogers solemnized final account. three weddings. Edmund Wood, incompetent. Filed Sixteen wedding licenses were ob­ October 28, 1921. Petition; anawer to tained in this county during October. erose petition of Edmund Wood. 8. C. Thompson, deceased. Filed Glory IkW» Issu'd October 27, 1921. Inventory and ap­ The first wedding license obtained in praisement. Order approving inventory November waa granted to Nora Dovie and appraisement. Davis and John Carter Hill both of Mary A. Warren, deceeaed. Filed McMinnville. October 26, 1921. Report of sale. On October 24, a marriage license John A. Jacobaon, deceased. Filed was granted to Alvyta M. Terrill and October 26, 1921. Order dosing estate. Edward Adams Romig, both of New­ berg; Buis Gertrude Estes and Ortia William Ingram, both of McMinnville secured a license on October 25. Una Linden and Perry Porter Whitmore aecured a glory ticket on October 26. Miner Matters Glen L. Rowell of Sheridan, is a new deputy in the sheriff’s office. The Spaulding-Miami Lumber Co. has filed its log brand with the county clerk. Articles of incorporation have been filed by the Lafayette Hardware A Lumber Co. W. G. Courtney, E. L Courtney and E. V. Littlefield are th* incorporators; capital stock 85,000; principal office, Lafayette. Oregon. The construction work of the armory on the Plaza block, north of the court house is progressing satisfactorily. The brick-layere are now working on the second story. Is Greek lesrt Sheridan State bank, a corporation, plaintiff, vs J. A. Kirkland defendant. CITIZENS VOTE BONDS APPLY EARLY FOR Bonds farry by Large Majority. Tick et Elected as Nominated At the regular City Election bald in the City Hall on Tuesday of thia week, one of the largeat votea lor a bond lasue was poled aa has been polled in the city for aome time. The election re­ turns are aa follows: R. L. Harris, Mayor; W. T. H. Tucker, Recorder; J. L. Stuart, Treasurer; Councilmen for one year, T. A. Boulden, D. A. Snyder, and O. C. Goodrich; Council- men for two years, J. 8. Morin. W. S. Hibbert, and M. G. Miller. The bond election went aa followa: Bonds for $4,000 for the purpose of improving the water aystem Yes —130, No.—27, Bonds for retiring the war- rsnt indebtedness of the city, Yea— '81; No.—38. TEAM AND AUTO SMASH TOGETHER Ernest Berry Badly Cut About Head and Face THOMAS ß. CLARK o^o none 04.0 homi ■TOW* 4W,a The Homo Paper” is the fondest visitor to every city dweller thrown by circumstances among tall buildings and smoky stacks; thrown among new and untried friends. It is the warmest visitor a man can have who has gone out in the world. As Thanksgiving approaches, you cannot give a more welcome gift to that boy or girl who is far away; that father and mother who have retired to distant parts; that friendly old neighbor who has gone to the city or to another state, than a year s subscription to the “old home” paper. It will mean an hour’s re­ turn of fond recollections to him or her every week of the year—an every-week remembrance of you! COUPON Editor of the DAYTON TRIBUNE. Please send a sample copy of your paper to: M P. 0. Address State AUTO LICENSES Application blanks for 1922 licenses have been mailed by the Secretary of State to all motor vehicle ownere in Oregon, so as to permit them to apply for and receive auch liceses before Jan­ uary 1, 1922. Motor vehicle owners will avoid much trouble, annoyance and unnecessary delay by promptly apply­ ing for their 1922 licensee upon receipt of the application blanks. Deferring applying for licenses until about the first of the year only congests the work of the Secretary of State’s office snd may result in the arrest of the ear owners by traffic officers for failure to have the 1922 licensee on their cars after January 1st next. License plates foi 1922 will have a yellow background and black figures and letter?. “Up to the present time during the 1 year 1921 there have been registered and licensed in Oregon 613 motor ve­ hicle dealers, 6,436 chauffeurs, 178,620 motor vehicle operators, 3,106 motor­ cycles and 116,609 passenger and com­ mercial cars, from which the total license fees aggregate 12,319,807.00. The fees, less administrative expenses. are distributed one-fourth to the counties from which the registrations are received and three-fourths to the State Highway fund for use in road construction and improvement through- out the State generally. “The distribution of the registrations up to September 15, 1921 shows that | LET THE COUNTRY, ONCE AND FOR EVER, TO REFUSE TO SURREN­ DER TO RAILROAD EM­ PLOYES (Name) Thomas B. Clark died at his home I on tho morning of Tuesday November 8th 1921, aged 67 years 8 months and 4 days. He was born in Pontiac, Illinois March 4th 1854 and came to Oregon about 42 or more years ago and hat> lived near Dayton continuously since his srrival in Oregon with the exception of a few years spent in Portland. He is survived by his wife and two sons Riley L. Clark of Dayton, Oregon, and Kichaid F. Clark of Portland, Oregon. He was a devoted husband and a kind and indulgent father. But the greatest of all he was a man. And as a man it is that those who knew him best honor­ ed and respected him. And so while we moutn the loss of our dead we may rejoice that there is no cloud so dark that there is no light behind it, no sorrow so poignst that there is not a blam for the wound It inflicts. The remains were gently laid to rest in the Brookside cemetery Thursday morning November 10th 1921, Rev. F. R. Fisher conducting the services. NEWS ABOUT ORE GON INDUSTRIES Hay growers will ship 35,000 tona For more than five years the Ameri­ outside of state. can people have permitted themselves La Pine—Eastern capitalists invest­ to be browbeaten and bulldozed by the ing in ledge pole pine for paper. railroad employes to an extent that no Scio—Large feed mill began opera­ foreign foe, who had captured our land, tions here November 1. would ever have presumed to do. Real estate pays 721 percent taxea in These men have constantly threatened Oregon. to starve the nation into submisson. Portland—5 ships for Europe and 7 In 1916 they appeared before a spine­ for Orient cleared Saturday. less Congess and under an Administra­ Portland industrial payrolls for 1920, tion that seemed willing to yeild any­ 846.814,000. thing to a socialistic demand ard buy McMinnville to get water supply at peace at any price, and the sovereignty coat of 8350,000. of a nation was cowardly surrendered Ashland raising 150,000 for a new in the Adamson Bill. hotel. Whenever it has suited the men who St. Helens—Large mill increases cut constantly betray this country's honor to 200,000 feet per day. ’“d ,n‘e«rity •« order to Mitchell votes 830,000 bonds for new demand to threaten some new school building. srike, the nation has continued coward­ La Grande—Grand Ronde Meat Co. ly to submit to their dictates and com­ putting in packing house here. promise or permit some new board or Sellwood Ferry to be displaced by commission to continue surrendering, 8500,000 bridge. in one way or another, the nation’s Highway from Mapleton to Rainrock sovereignty. to be built. If the American people have not completely lost their backbone; if their spines are not of jelly fish character; if the men of this nation who would rise in a moment to repe) the invasion of foreign foes, are still willing to save thia country from a worse than foreign foe invasion, the time has come to answer the threat of the railroad em­ At about eight o’clock last Thursday evening as Ernest Berry wss driving to Dayton and a short distance from the Fairview school house he was met by a runaway team hitched to a buggy. The fog waa io heavy that be could not see Dwerce Saks Greated only a few feet ahead of bim and aa he in Yamhill county there were registered ployes, not by compromise, not by con- Oct. 25—Maycil Gilbert, plaintiff, vs caught a glimpt of something coming 14 motor vehicle dealers, 171 chauffeurs tinued yielding to their threats but toward him he killed his engine end pul Arthur S. Gilbert, defendant. Ion the brakes, and the instant this was 5,651 motor vehicle operators, 41 with one determined, united voice to Fred Feiger, plaintiff, vt Ada Feiger, motorcycles, 3.049 passenger cars, 6 ! say that, “every man who wants to done the team struck hie machine. The defendant. ambulances ar.d hearses. 1 busses and work on a railroad shall have that compact threw the horse that struck Alfred Dundas, plaintiff, ve Etta | stages, 74 commercial cars of less than privilege if it takes the entire armed him over the machine and killed the Dundas, defendant. one ton capacity, 232 trucks of from force of the country to protect him. No horse instantly. He had a miraculous There are more than twenty divorce | escape from death one to five tons capacity and 10 trailers longer shall America cowardly sur- cf from one to five tons capacity, or a render to a foe at home when it would suits filed in the circuit court. He was struck in the face and his total of 3,382 licensed passenger and I courageously fight a foe from abroad. ” Six divorces were granted on Oet. left eye waa seriously bruised, his face commercial motor vehicles.” 25 by Judge Belt. was bacly cut by flying glass from the The foes at home, in the form of the wind shield, snd he was knocked un­ railroad employes, who are threatening ROOPER—FOSTER WEDDING conscious and when found a few min­ to strike, are seeking to starve the Miss Elizabeth Cooper had a narrow utes later by his employer who was ------------- men. women and children of this escape from losing that heavy head of following him in another car, he was A beautiful home wedding was country, to cause the death of hair that she is so proud nf. In going standing by the car in the ditch. He solemnized at the home of Mr. and Mrs. I thousands, aye of millions if necessary. about the chicken house and carrying s waa immediately hurried back to Mc­ W. E. Foster near Day ton, Oregon, I to accomplish their purpose, to abut lighted candle, and in aome unexplain­ Minnville to a doctor and waa put under Sunday Nov. 6th 1921 at 3 p. m. when every factory in the country and to stop able manner the flame of the candle the care of a trained nuree. He re­ their daughter Sellah was united in every wheel that turns and gives em­ and her hair came in contact, and mained in an unconacioua state until marriage to Henry Earle Rooper of ployment. For their own selfish end ”Bif” by dropping the candle and about 3 o'clock the next morning. The Antelope, Oregon. they would cause this great nation to grabbing her hair she escaped any next day it waa discovered bia lower Proceeding the ceremony Miss Ruth stand still in all of ita business ramifica­ eerioua conaequenee. After thia Eliza­ tions, and in all of ita domestic activi­ beth let the —-old ehickens go to bed jaw was broken in two places once on Stermer sang "I Love Y?” Truly.” each side. So much for the driver. The bridal party entered the parlor ties; they would freeze every hospital with out any light. The car body was a complete wreek. to the strains of Lot engrins wedding and every home, they would starve A. C. Detmering spent Monday and This runaway was caused by an auto mar-h played by Miss Wilva Foster sis­ every man, woman and child in order part of the day Tuesday in Portland. The impressive ring that their spirit, born of Satanic veil running into the rear of the buggy, and ter of the bride. throwing the driver out. At this writ­ ceremony was read by Rev. M. H. to seek only their own personal welfare regardless of others, may win out. ” I ing Mr. Berry is imposing but is Kendall. The bride wore white beaded Georget­ Even Germany with all of its hell-born undergoing the ordeal of being compel­ led to live on liquid food, hia teeth be­ te Crepe over white silk and carried a spirit would not have threatened a more ing wirid together and bandaged up shower bouquet of Ophilia Roses, Bou- dire calamity if it had been able to against his upper teeth. vardia and Lily of the Valley the veil conquer this country. REMEMBER YOUR ABSENT ONE, OR WE WILL DO IT FOR YOU 04.0 HOMI SUBSCRIPTION $2.00 PER YEA* Astoria—Steamer clears with 8,000 cases salmon, 250,000 lbs. flour, 1,500,- 000 ft. lumber and 150,000 lath. Seven Portland I. O. O. F. lodges plan 8200,000 building. Oregon highway administration for 1921 will cost 6 percent. Linn county assessed valuation 81,- 000,000 below 1920. First National and First Savings Banks of Albany conaolidated, with Peroy A. Young as the new pesident. Western states to get 82,000,000 each federal road funds. Scappoose will build 820,000 water system. Grants Pass has raised present tax levy <>f 22 mills to 23 mills. Baker County assessed valuation de­ creased 81,061,330. Tillamook, Lincoln and Yamhill Counties organizing to secure tax re­ ductions. For the fourth time Roseburg lost ita proposed bond issue of $500,000 tor the purposed of acquiring the holdings of the local water and light system. Deschutes county potato erop totals 8250,000. Roseburg to vote on 8500.000 water and light bond issue. Ganta Pass farmers buy 825,000 irri­ gation bond issue to water 1,000 acrea in Fort Vanney district. U. S. expense to be cut 8439,000.000 in 1922. Plans under way for 825,000 modern hotel building in Milton. Albany College alumni planning 850,000 building. Newport—Strong oil indications re­ ported in Lincoln county. being held in place by a wreath of We have had threats and threats year Dallas to get street and sidewalk Orange blossoms, The groom wore a Lafter year, threats to stop every car improvements. suit of dark blue. Miss Bessie Foster and locomotive, threats to starve the Taxes doubled in North Dakota under sister of the bride acted as brides maid people of the country into submission, wearing white lace over pink silk and for five years the people have the Non-Partiaan regime of state carried a shower bouq let of Columbia cowardly submitted, led by cowardly socialism and the recall followed throw­ Roses. Mr. D. V. Bolton acted as best politicians. Republicans and Democrats ing the administration out of power. man. alike. President Harding now has one No one need be surprised if the recall Following congratulations light re- j of the great opportunities, is used in other western states where which per- freshments were served immediatly chance once in a century comes to the taxes have been sky-rocketed. after which the happy couple amid leader of a nation such as this. If he Gold production in the United States showeis of rice took their departure via will take a firm stand and simply say during 1920 fell off by 89,146,000 com­ auto for their future home near Ante­ that every man who wants to work on pared with 1919. During 1920 the lope Ore. Many beautiful and useful a railroad shall have that right and that country produced 2,476,166 ounces of presents were received. no union organization of any kind shall gold, valued at 851.186,900, and 55.- Out of town guests were: Mrs. by riots or srikea or murders interfere 361,573 ounces of silver, valued at Rooper mother and Mrs. Landfre grand i with the right of free men to work, 860,801.955. mother of the groom, Mr. and Mrs. then the trainswill run and business Southern Pacific announces 20 per John Rooper and little daughter Ekina, will resume its normal sway and the cent cut in freight rates. Mr. and Mrs. D. V. Bolton and daughter American people will have regained Postal savings are being withdrawn Verna and Mrs. Fred Berning all of their sovereignty. —Manufacturers’ from centers where deposited and loan­ Antelope, Misses Henrietta and Ruth Record. ed in competition with chartered banka. Stermer of McMinnvIle, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Terry of Carlton, Mr. and Mrs. Clotis Sloan and daughter Gladys of Newberg, Archie and Grace Parker, Charlie Leonard of Monmouth, Mr. Chester Berning of Portland, Captain and Mrs. A. D. Foster end son Alen of Csmp Lewis, Wash. Otto, Irvin and Raymond Leckband George Tucker of Portland and sons of William Leckband and wife nephew of W. T. H. Tucker of this who at one time lived on their farm plsce is once more visiting relatives in near Daytnn, arrived via: the auto Dayton. route from Ocheyedan, Iowa. These W, D. Scott fpent ■ part of Saturday young men seem to be much rejoiced night and Sunday with acquaintances to once more become residents of their In McMinnvillv, much loved Oregon. Red Cross Officers for ensuing year. Mrs. V. Low, member executive com­ mittee and chairman of Day ton branch. Mrs. W. O. Barnard, Secy.; Mrs. H. G. Coburn, Teas.; Mr. John Shippey, chairman of the Roll Call committee. There are many disabled ex-sevice men in Yambill county who still need the Red Cross, and we can stand back of these boys by renewing our member­ ships Nnv, 11th to 24th. The Govern­ ment does not render the individual service that the Red Cross can give ard it Is the Red Cross service that means much to our disabled ex-service men, There are indications in New York that certain cf the wsr bond issues are in much greater demand and it is pre­ dicted in some circles that they may be selling at par before tha end of 1922, If business recovery continues in the course it is now following. The highways were built to attract touriat traffic and not to render the railroads obsolete. The uae to which auto trucks and auto stages are putting the highways is calculated to keep tourist traffic away, and not by the space they take up, but by the rata they make.