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About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 8, 1922)
«MWWSW**************»********'*******' ********* v******************l OF GENERAL INTEREST PROUD OF WORK BY Principal Evant* of the WeeX NEAR EAST RELIEF’ Briefly Sketched for Infor mation of Our Readers. Saya American High Commis sioner. Congress Is Told of Great Accomplishment Bay highway annomuintr We renew our invitation to call and look at the many items in our large stock appropriate for Christmas Gifts. All fairly priced and the profit knocked off of a number ot lines we are closing- out. Holiday goods are moving and early buying i suggested. R. L. HARRIS, Druggist. Remember the Free Matinee Sat. afternoons, Dec. 16-23. Community.Christmas Tree Saturday eve, Dec. 23. 7:15, ▼ WHITE Sewing machines at Dem- aray’s Hardware store. Ihe Oregon Fire Relief is your own home company are you keeping your money at home. E. S. Benson, agent 45tf. i FARM LOANS at iowest rate of in- terest Repayment privileges atfer the first year. Wm. Bain, room 10 McMinnville Nat. Bk., McMinnville OregOn. 39tf. WHITE Sewing machines at Dem- aray’s Hardware store. For Sale: Oats and Vetch ready to sow, $3.25 pen hundred. Gray oats cleaned and ready to sow $2.25 per hundred. Riley L. Clark. Phone Red j 54. 51-tf ‘ Ladds Funeral Home. Oregon. Phone Blue 5. McMinnville, 15tf. ROMAN MEAL which should Le us ed “every day some wav” is sold by F. J. Bardali Miller Mercantile Co. and K. L. Cinnamon. Roman Meal Btead is baked by Log Cabin Baking Co. Portland Oregon. 25-tf. INVESTMENTS AND LOANS. Loans on farm and city property at I lowest rates. Mortgages, notes, bonds and contracts bought and sold. Keep I your money busy day and night. See the undersigned for mortgage invest- I merits. Sixteen years of safe invest- i merits for clients is a tecord of merit. Attorney B. A. Kliks, McMinnville. Oregon. V1OLIN teacher, call Red 61. 49tf Jessee Eaton and family accompanied h'9 mother, Mrs. J. R. Eaton all of Vancouver, Washington, visited st the home of H. Kuiper, in ibis city a few days ago, Mrs. Eaton, Sr. being a sis- terinlaw of Mrs. Kuiper’s. BORN —To Mr. and Mrs. Sandy An- der8on, at their home near town on Monday morning, December 4, 1922, a pouncing boy. Andrew Livigston, who about six- teen or more years ago was a well kown resident of Dayton, accompanied by his family ail of Fairbanks, Alaska, tarried a few hours in Dayton the first of last week. He saw a few persons ne once knewn snd was well pleased with the advancement Dayton had made while he was away. For anything in Real Estate see J. E. PROFFITT. KIAOCHOW IS GIVEN Pact UP for Restoration of Territory Signed by China and Japan. Pekin.—An agreement formally re storing the German leased territory of Kiaochow to China under the terms of the Washington conference treaty was signed by representatives of Japan, in possession of the land, and China, from whom the territory was seized in 1898 by Germany. When the world war broke out Japan seized Kiaochow and received an award of it under the terms of the Versailles treaty in 1919. In the agreement December 10 is definitely fixed as the date for the physical transfer of the territory to China. On that date all public prop erty, with the possible exception of the Tsingtao-Tsinanfu railway, will be handed to China and all Japanese civil and military authorities will be with drawn. A Summer Clime Winter Outing that’s California Like many othrrs at this season of tha year you are thinking of a trip to a watmer climate. California is just the place for your winter outing. Here the day’s are fleoded with bright warm sunshine. You may enjoy all outdoor recreations or simply relax and rest in comfort under sunlit skies. There are noted golf courses, polo fields tennis courts, miles of splendid high ways and countless places of scenic and romantic charm. go now and take advantage of Excel lent Train Service and Through Sleep ing Cars to San Francisco and Los An geles. LOW ROUND TRIP TICKETS Now on Sale Foe feres, train schedule«, sleeping car reservation« or descriptive folder«, ask local railroad ticket agents, or write JOHN M. SCOTT General Paasenjrer Agent Portland, Oreson The Roseburg-Coos has been closed. Portland soon will have another automobile stage terminal. Bend grocers have signed an agree- ment to retail no bread not made In Bend. Ninety-six violators of the prohibi tion law were arrested by the morals squad of the Portland police force dur ing November. Headquarters of Willamette univer sity has announced that $803,960 of the endowment fund of $1.250.000 has been subscribed. More than 100 people attended an annual Oregon products dlnndY given at Bend under the direction of the woman's civic league. At a special election recently the people of Falls City voted a bond issue of $15 000 to purchase the electric light and power plant there. The state laud department, through George G. Brown, clerk, turned over to the state treasurer during the month of November a total of $155.- 987.48. Only one dog may be kept Inside the city limits of Eugene by one per son. firm or corporation if an ordi nance introduced in the city council is passed. A total of 133,653 motor vehicle li censes for the year 1922 had been is sued by the state motor vehicle de partment at the close of business No vember 30. Roy Ritner of Pendleton, acting governor during the absence from the state of Governor Olcott, arrived in Salem Sunday night and will remain until Christmas. The foundation has been completed for the new Brooks-Scanlon Lumber company mill at Bend and construc tion ot the frame work of the building will be started immediately. Following the examples set by the Riverside and Crabtree communities of Linn county, Knox Butte citizens have Inaugurated a movement in their district for a community hall. Vessels of all trades entered at Portland for 11 months ending Thurs day numbered 1062, with a total ton nage of 2,884,862. In the same period 1070 carriers of 2,884,397 tons were cleared. Schools throughout Union county are making vigorous protests follow ing the action of the county court in cutting off the appropriations for the county nurse and the county library service. The Tillamook County Mutual Tele phone company, with headquarters at Tillamook, has filed an application with the Oregon public service com- mission requesting a slight increase in rates. Twenty carloads of dried prunes have been shipped this fall from the plant of the Eugene Fruit Growers’ association, according to J. O. Holt, manager, and ten carloads are left in the warehouses. The state highway department, at a meeting to be held in Portland De cember 13, will open bids for the con struction of roads and bridges aggre gating a cost estimated at approxi mately $500,000. In order to preserve the surface of a number of roads in the ccunty dur ing the coming winter, the Lane coun ty court has issued an order regulat ing the weight of loads to be hauled over particular roads. November, 1922, was the coldest November in the last seven years, ac cording to the figures of Lee Goet- schius, weather observer at Eugene. The rainfall during the month was the lightest since 1914. The balance in the various funds of the city of Portland on November 30, which marked the end of the fiscal year, was $1,919,945.47, according to the financial statement compiled by William Adams, city treasurer. Clyde Lafollett, member of the loweY house of the legislature from Marion county, narrowly escaped being drowned when an automobile in which he was riding plunged off the Wheat- land ferry and into the Willamette river. Three men lost their lives and $30,- 000 worth of property was destroyed , when fire of an unknown origin swept ■ the Ben Hur hotel at 247 Oak street, Portland. The dead are: Chrisostomo Madarang, 24; Thomas Carino, 26, and J. J. McDonald. Some relief was noted in the car situation by the mills of the north west last week, according to the fig ures of a report for the week ending November 25, issued by the West Coast Lumbermen's association. Ship ments were within 8 per cent of new business placed on the books of the 152 mills reporting to the organization. New business was 13 per cent below production and production wm 4 per cent above normal. Washington.—The annual report of the activities of tho Near East Re lief organisation, filed with Congroa« by Charles V. Vickrey, General Sec- retary, constitutes the modest history of one of the greatest pieces of phil anthropic work ever undertaken and carried through by American men and womon, according to well in- formed persona in the capital. Ad- 11. fl. flallarb WATCHMAKER and JEWELER All Work Guaranteed to Give Satisfaction. Call and look over my line of Silverware. Dayton, Oro gon Phone Red 70 >«^%^%a********* ************************** **************'**********' Dayton Evaporating & Packing Co ot FruiU and Vs^oUbl**. Pacher« of and Dealer« m Prut» Vaaatablaa and all khula of |»ruduoa. (ways in the man st for Green and Evaporated Fruits B« sure tu see us I efore selling any kind of produce. Grocer for Gold Nugget Evaporated Soup Vegetables Pleatantdaie PERSHING TELLS WAR PLANS G. H. Foster and family spent Government Control of All Resources Thanksgiving in Monmouth st the hum« In Event of Conflict Contemplated. \ UkKEl Bristol, United mirai Mark States High Commissioner to Turkov for exauipln, decline«: “I have bei-u clos oly associated with the work of the Near East Relief committee for about 22 months. On the whole the work of this relief committee has been such that Americans should b« proud of this great humane ef fort' The Near East Relief here in Constantinople is run more like a business organization than any relief organization with which 1 have ever come into contact.” Charles V. Vickrey’s summary ot the activities of the Near East Relief shows the disbursement of over $60,000,000.00 in cash and supplies, contributed by the American people to the salvaging of the Christian pop ulations of the Near East. 711 American and Canadian men and women relief workers have been en gaged in this huge task on little mor« than a volunteer basis. 63 hospitals, with 6,522 beds, and 123 clinics; 11 rescue homes, where young girls rescued from live« of shame In Turkish harems are taught to forget their sufferings, and to be gin life anew, self-supporting and independent, are maintained. New York National defense plana of the war department contemplate governmental control of the entire re sources of the country under "an ef ficiency council, or board of control," General Pershing announced here at Madtaon Square Garden before the Merchants' association of New York. “According to these plans," General Pershing said, "the Industrial and manufacturing Institutions, agricul ture and transportation would bo un dor government control, while per sonnel pertaining to all of them would bo mustered Into the service as are those that are called to the colors An efficiency council, or board ot control, conforming to our experience In the war, would then be placed In charge of all resources with authority to make such disposition of them as would best promote the success of the nation in war." HELPED OuT MOTHER NATURE Venetian Women Went to Some Paine to Acquire Hair of Tint Greatly Admired. of tho former's methsr. Mrs. Daivd Robinson gave her usual Thanksgiving dinner and had with her all of hoi childien and several grand children. Needles* to ssy this annual home coming is a gresl pleasure lo Mrs. Robinson. Chas H im !ley and wife have moved to their new homo In Dayton this week. Roy Edwards and family spant Thanksgiving at Hie home of Mrs Ed ward's brother, Toney Cinnamon, in McM innville. Mrs. Jennie Senn was quite sick ■ few days thio week. W. L. Reichstein and family were guests Thanksgiving day with rclalivoo in McMinnville. J. A. McFarlane and wife were coun ty aeal visitors Saturday. Chas. Rsichtein of Medford visited ■ few daya Ihe first of Ihe week with rel atives In this vicinity. Melvin Hanvillo and family visited Monday at the Wm. Reichstein home. Mis. Robert Addison and children visited relatives in Salem laat week. Dale and Gerald Hadley were Sheri dan visitors laat Monday morning. Some ungHlIant bookworm has dug up a scandal that Sappho was bald. There tire not wanting grounds for the suspicion thnt Queen Elizabeth's red wig concealed a nude scalp. As for the thrice lovely Mary Queen of Scots, she actually wore a wig when site went to have her head cut off. and m I ii * left a suspiciously large col lection of wigs behind her. The lovely and naughty Queen Star- got, wife of Henry IV, kept a «rain of pages with yellow hair for Ihe re- Mr. snd Mrs. W. D Davis. « grand pleulMhmeiit of her wigs. daughter of Mrs. H Kuiper, from How much trouble the Venetian women took to acquire Ihe reddiah Aberdeen, Washington, visited a few hirsute tint that Is admired In the days al the Kuiper home in tills city pictures of Titian may be Judged from 110,000 Little Children this account written by an Italian Edward Roseman and fatuity alo The most remarkable feature of chronicler In 1580: the work of the Near East Relief is, Kose- “The housea of Venice are common Thanksgiving dinner with Mrs. however, the salvation of tens of man's parents. M. Oliphant and wifu thousands of children who have lost ly crowned with little constructions parents and relatives during the past iu wood, resembling a turret without al |.aFayette. There were twenty six years. For thene little ones Amer a roof. At the base these lodges or seven present including 14 grand child ican generosity has provided, through boxes are formed of masonry and cov the Near East Relief, 299 homes— ren. one, In Alexandropol, Armenia, hous ered with a cement of sand and lime F. M. Hord whs In Corvallis Monday to protect them from the rain. It is ing 18,000 children—where, last year, 54,600 children were housed, in these that the Venetian women may of this week on busines». clothed, fed and taught, while an ad be seen as often as, and Indeed often- Robert Addis of the Oregon Farmer ditional 56,039, outside the Near er than, in their chambers; it Is there was in town Wednesday morning »nd East Relief orphanages, were saved that, with their heads exposed to the from starvation and death by food full ardor of the sun, during whole among > Iher imp«.riant things he did and clothing sent them from the days they strain every nerve to aug- WSh to renew acquaintanceship with United States. ment their charms. forre. Mr. Vickrey’s report states that “Seated there, they keep on wetting Tribune approximately 2,790,490 Armenians J. «1. Williams who ha« been em their luiir with a sponge dipped In are still living in the Near East, out of a pre-war population of over some elixir of youth. They wear on ployed st Parkdale, Oregon, the past 4,000,000 and estimates that had it their heads a straw hat without a three or more monll a arrived home not been for the aid given by the crown so that the hair, drawn tlirotigli American people through the Near tlie opening, may be spread upon the Tuesday evenn g last. He reports his East Relief, fully half of those now nephew, Lynn Williams and wife com- living would have perished. Food borders; this hat doing double duty as forts!, ly and contentedly located there a drying line for the hair and a para was furnished to 561,970 homeless I where Lynn hits a good and permanent refugees during a large part of 1920, sol to protect ttie head and face." And consider Hie Roman matrons job. J. O. »a«« "Yamhill and the mud while 300,000 garments, comprising 1,500,000 pounds of clothing sent who used to Idondine their “crowning out from the United States were dis glory” with a mess of decomposed pleasm him tetter than the hills and tributed to barefoot and rag-clad leeches. the snow which is rep« rted to be about wanderers, all the way from the 18 inches deep when he left.” Mediterranean to the Caucasus mountains. G. H. Abdill and wife who seldom Makes Wster Do Ditch Digging. Work .Must Continue Digging drainage ditches with water get out of town broke the slay-at-home Commenting on these figures Mr. at a cost thnt is but a fraction of the Vickrey stated that “ this distinctive usual am.amt has been accomplished | rule Thai «giving rd w ire in Newberg ly humanitarian relief work, as an near Vale. Ore. This feat was made for their Thanksgiving dinner with expression of brotherhood, should possible by the use of a sluicing ma th ir grandson, Archie Abdill and fam help to mark the beginning of a nevi era ot peace and inter-racial good chine. shown in Popular Mechanics, ily. and invented by one of the fanners of will in the Near East. George Martin of the Telephone Keg- “The tremendous task undertaken the community, working nt the sugges 1 l»ter of McMinnville, spent a portion by the American people in saving the tion of the Oregon experiment station. children of the Near East is one To dig n large main drain by the 'of the dsv Sunday with friends in Day- which cannot be left unfinished. We method, a few furrows are plowed ^n. have an investment of over $60,000- along the line of the proposed ditch, 000 in human life, that America has I Hsnrj May and wife and Mr. and saved. If we falter or pause now. turned in at the upper end, and the sluicing machine Is dragged back and 1 Mrs. H. W, Critesor all ut Oregon City that investment Is imperiled, or may even be lost altogether. Most of the forth along the bottom of the ditch by ! visited over 'lhurs<l»y last with children we have saved from death means of a horse at either end of a daughter and siater, Mrs. C. C. Carter are still too little to take care of cross pole. and family in Dayton. themselves, and conditions through out the Near East are still too uncertain to let them shift for them selves. It Is morally sure that for at least five years, and until these little ones that we have snatched from a terrible fate are able to support themselves and enjoy an even chance of life as useful citizens, the Amer ican people who have rescued them You will always find at our store the purest Christmas must see them through. Candies and the best grades of Ice Cream. “It is the purpose of the Near East Relief to do Just this, and we appeal HIGH GRADE CIGARS, TOBACCO AND PIPES to the generosity of the American people to see this noble work is car LOG CABIN BREAD ried out in the spirit of mutual help fulness and Christian charity which RESTAURANT IN REAR OF STORE is so essentially characteristic of the American ideal.’’ Contributions to the work of the Near East Relief may be sent to oca CONfECTIONERY AND ICE CREAM R. L CINNAMON Cleveland H. Dodge, Treasurer 1 Madison Ave., New York City. ,--------- , _ Subscribe now to the Tribune Remember the Free Matinee Saturday afternoons Dec 16 23 Community Christmai Tree Saturday fvp Dec. 23, 7:15