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About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1925)
WORLD HAPPENINGS OF CURRENT WEEK COOLIDGE FOR CO OPERATION Farmers Told to Stick and Work get her Government Will Help to SOLDIERS’ BONUS PROGRAM MAPPED SCHOOL DAflS in BRIEF. Washington. D. C. An address by Building permita Klamath Full«. President Coolidge indorsing the co aggreyi.tluc $1.702.598 were grunted by operative marketing system and a the Klamath Falls city council during Brief Resume Most Important I criticism of Henry Ford by R. W. U. S. Treasury Makes First De the past year. It was shown In the an nual report made public Friday. The Bingham of Louisville, Ky.. for alleged Daily News Items. posit of $100,000,000. permits totaled 557. antagonism to farmers' co-operative Pendleton. A request that city in organizations, marked the opening spection of meat carcaases be Instltu- here Monday of the third annual con- vention of the national council of the city council when representatives of I Farmers' Co-operative Marketing as- the Pendleton Pmklng & Provision social ion. company appeared In behalf of the Events of Noted People, Governments Addresses by Frank O. Lowden. ex Additions to Fund Expected to Care proposal. and Pacific Northwest, and Other for Gradual Increase of Ma- governor of Illinois; Carl Williams of Salem, — Republican presidential Oklahoma City, Okla, and A. J. Mc- Things Worth Knowing. turities of Future Years. electors from Oregon will meet In Salem January 12 and select one of Phail, president of the Canadian their number to carry the returns to i Wheat Producers. Limited, were other Dr. Felix Meyer, member of the In . features of the meeting. Washington, D. C.—The treasury has the primideutial electoral college which will convene In Washington within the stitute of International Law, died in _ , . Mr. Coolidge in an address to the mapped out its financial program for next few weeks. Berlin Sunday. association's members at the White meeting the requirements of the sol Union Mrs. Elizabeth Godfrey died The highest radio station in tbe House, described co-operative market- diers' bonus nnd Saturday made ita at the home of her daughter, Mrs. world has been opened on the Pic-du- first deposit. J 100.000,000. in n special Surah Ricker. Saturday morning at Midi, in the upper Pyrenees, near the ing as the best means of stabilizing account, from which the adjusted serv- the age of 105 years, Mrs. Godfrey the country's agricultural organization, Spanish border. It is 9439 feet above born In Maine In 1619. und had sea level. but warned that the system possesses ice certificates will bo paid. she lived until April 5 would have to add each year It was the plan President and Mrs. Coolidge Friday no magieal attributes and must start been i 106 years old. sight attended a charity ball for the from the soil and be developed up- a similar amount under the law to Eugene. — Frank IVoples and Copyright children’s hospital at Washington with the fllrnler3 contributing this special account, and this sum. McCoy of the Mirane valley were fined This is the only ball of any kind that with its interest compounded annually .. . . , . the major aid. $50 each in Justice of the Peace Wells' they would agree to attend during the wjnter • Mr. Bingham, chairman of the meet at 4 per cent, was calculated to be court Friday on a charge of killing ing, in his criticism of Mr. Ford, refer- sufficient to meet all payments on the two spotted fawns. Peoples and Mc Rear Admiral William Nelson Little. ; . , . , , .. -, , ¡ red to a recent issue of the Dearborn service certificates when they mature Coy operate a small sawmill near where they were arrested U. S. N., retired, died in Mountain Independent, containing an article on some 20 years nence. Provision was Lake. N. J., Sunday at his home at Klamath Falls A convincing testi made whereby the fund was equipped the Staple Cotton Co-operative asso- the age of 72. He was graduated from Bi F. A. IF ALKER from this date to meet such matur monial of the march of progress In Annapolis in 1875 ami retired from • ion, and also read an attack on Klamath Falls during the past year Is the manufacturer in the organ of the ing certificates as might be due as a the Increase of 17 per cent in the re the navy on December 31, 1914. SEEKING HIGHER HOPES result of deaths to the beneficiaries, ceipts of the local postoffice, which Is The French memorandum drafted by association, published at Greenwood. and the additions to the fund were shown In the annual report of John HpilERE nre perloiln in eivry mor M. Clementel, finance minister of the Miss. expected to be able to care for the McCall, |M>stmaster, made public Sat | tai’s existence w hen he or she Is Paris government, regarding payments Despite attacks, the commodity co Inspired to seek n nobler life, u better of the war debt of France to the Uni- operative marketing movement. Mr gradually increasing maturities of the urday. future years. tuunhood or womanhood. ted States was received in Washing- Silverton.—The body of Cyrus W. i Just whnt it I h Hint prompts uh to Bingham asserted, is stronger now in The first step taken by the treas ton, D, C.. Sunday night at the state Barger, pioneer stage driver, was ta reach up Into the unknown, to sour members, volume of business and ury was the issue and sale to itself department. ken to the cemetery Saturday In a to higher hopes. I h illflb ull to deter- achievement than ever before, and of $50,000,000 in five-year 4% treas horse-drawn vehicle. In accordance 1 mine. The livestock industry during 1924. has the direct support of the presi ury notes, and a like amount of special with a wish expressed before his death ) It may ti the Hmlle of a loved one. although showing improvement over dent and forward-looking financiers. treasury certificates of indebtedness, The body was brought here from Port the wit nnd wisdom of n scholar, the 1923 conditions, failed to measure up the latter being redeemable at the Ex-Governor Lowden advocated co land on a Southern Pacific train, and bard sense of the philosopher. the to expectations, the department of operative organization among corn option of the treasury, so that funds was met at the station by a few old merry laughter of a little child, who Is agriculture declared Sunday in a leading us without our su*|M*ctlng It, growers and dairy farmers and de instantly would be available when re friends. or the sudden outburst of a storm, view of the situation. clared he thought he could foresee quired. By issuing the special securi Klamath Falls. Klamath county ; when thunders crush and the earth ties for the bonus fund and selling when “ everything produced upon the Self-exiled Rhode Island republican them back to the treasury, all dis soils are ideal for the growing of sugar trembles. senators went home Saturday, the exile tarm, for the market, will be market sweeps new Ui turbing influences ot open market beets, and there Is no reason why the which began after the release of ed by tbe farmers themselves through industry should not thrive and prosper which we nre at n less to egplulll. operations were eliminated. The secur j! We feel It In ev ery fiber of our bromine gas in the senate chamber on an organization of their own creation.” in this county, according to E. U. Pointing out that co-operative mar ities will be handled always at par । body nnd bniln. June 19, ended when the general as- value of 100 cents on the dollar and Combs, California sugar refiner, who I' We nre wnrmed by -i 1 I messu nt sembly adjourned Friday after a ses- keting raises the basic price of a pro the amount of income therefore never reported to the chamber of commerce 'spray of fine finirle»» i Intellectual sion which began on January 1, 1924. duct to all farmers. Mr. Williams said results of his survey of the county and murili exnltntiim. h us we have efforts this year should be directed will fluctuate. never experlcnced. Secretary Mellon believed that the this week. The allied ambassadors in Berlin toward bringing every member into 1 Our exultation over our enemies, our met at the British embassy in the Ger an intelligent and loyal contact with plan evolved had many advantages Salem.— Receipts from the state in- proclamation from i <• housetops that over the suggested practice of dealing man capital ounday and signed identic the association's purposes and come tax for 1924 ■ggrathted $1.7!»". ! our transgressions ire not us other in government securities in the open 000. according to a report prepared by men's sins, become In a little while our notes, announcing the refusal of their methods. governments to evacuate the Cologne Mr. McPhail declared that under market, in that the exact actuarial Earl Fisher, state tax commissioner. undoing for perhaps the seventh time. bridgehead on January 10, according the wheat pooling method practiced requirements of the law would be met. for the consideration of Governor | In the privacy <>f <>ur chamber we to an announcement by the foreign of in western Canada over half the wheat These requirements furnished the Pierce. Of this amount approximately may admit seven Is a low score, but we nre glad to let If go at Hint. fice. acreage in Saskatchewan bad been basis of annual appropriations to the $200,000 represented four installment I We have fallen again through our The manufacture of rouge for the pledged in a five-year contract pool special fund and they thus became collections which were due early In own Incumplirá!»!« fidly. the key to all operations in connec December. modern woman of fashion has develop directed by the farmers. I In our bosMtful flight lost ed into an art in France. Artists, real “There is a school of co-operators tion with the bonus payment and its some of the plnbuiH of our om »• pow- Halfway. — Hundreds of horses are i erful wings. artists, of the type that might have who seem tc beiieve that the pro financing. The bonus act authorized the roaming the range throughout the We must fly now to the taken up painting and sculpture had gram can be started at the top and hilly section between Halfway and ground, nnd even kneel In humility If . they not adopted the no less aesthetic built downward,” President Coolidge treasury to invest soldier bonus funds Baker half famished, some mere walk ¡¡we would continue to seek higher profession of making women beauti- said. “They want the government, or in interest-bearing government obliga ing skeletons, unable to find either hopes. tions and to sell the obligations for ful, are engaged in the work. the banks, or philanthropists, or provi food or owner. Great droves of hungry | In tbls moo<f It I h often n question the purpose of the fund. Nine persons, eight of them small dence to lay out a scheme big enough animals, driven from the snow-covered ,wlth uh whether we shnll persist In our The secretary, in a statement, said children, lost their lives early Sat to cover the country, set its machinery that in order to make the fund suf hills to the valleys below, crowd the flight or openly admit our frailty und urday when fire swept through three moving, guarantee it all needed capi ficient to meet the bonus payments, highways, at tinos nearly causing ar failure. | Whnt mime shnll we put upon our dwellings in two different sections of tal and then invite the farmers to sit it was necessary to keep the moneys cidents Io auto stages and trucks. actions nnd doubts? in |;he places reserved for them and Montreal. In each case, the flames invested at 4 per cent from the time | What penalties shnll we Impose up proceed to garner their profits. Let Salem Failure of Misa Celia Holl spread so rapidly that the victims of their receipt until payments were man. until recently private secretary on ourselves, know Ing we nre guilty, me say that I offer no such Aladdin- were trapped in their beds or were and '.hut In spite of every «-fT«»rt we like project. I want society as a whole required. to Governor Pierce, to file an answer make nt reparations we get deeper overcome as they attempted to flee. to help; but I want the farmers to do to the complaint In the alienation suit ¡and deeper In the mire nnd farther Lunch Given With Cash. Boston fishermen who put out from their share and I warn them that this filed against her by Mrs. Fred Bozell away from those lofty hopes townrd that port to ply their trade off the will be the lion's share.” Des Moines, la. — Sandwiches and of this city, probably will result in a jwhlch we have been groping for yeargt- Massachusetts coast have developed The line thing Io do Is to hold to Co-operative marketing, the presi coffee were furnished by a local bank default, judgment for the plaintiff. a new use for radio. Several schoon dent continued, must have its begin at noon Saturday to a group of deposi Miss Bollman, who Is now located In courage. When doubt benls nguln*t this dust ers have been fixed up with receiv nings lit small and modest units and tors who were waiting to get their Portland, had failed to file answer ing sets. The fishermen tune in on must train the people who are to use money in a "run” on the institution when the time for this procedure ex hnbltntlon of ours anil threatens Ils ; destruction. Mammon Fulth and march market reports and when fish quota it to think co-operatively. He used as following the closing of two Des pired Friday night. on under ner divine protection, sure tions are right, they pull up the trawls an illustration the building up of the Moines banks on Wednesday. Portland.— Postal receipts at porf ^of Ihe <»ut»’»ime. and head for the market. MeClur« N«»w»p«per Myndlcat« ) United States Steel corporation, as- The depositors had been waiting for land for 1924 were $2,763,415.21, a gain 1 '® The measures announced by Pre sorting that it never could have start- several hours when lunch time came, of $177,667.62 over the total receipts mier Mussolini in the chamber of ed from the top but that Andrew but did not wish to relinquish their for 1923, or 6 86 per cent. The year's he Young Lady deputies Saturday for overcoming the Carnegie built one section of it; an- places in line. The bank's officers postal receipts were the largest in the Across the Way other man built other sections and came to the rescud, however, order history of the office. Receipts for the opposition to the fascist government within 48 hours are already being put none at the outset had tbe vision of ing the management of a nearby last quarter of the year were $770,129,1 into force. The fascist railway militia "the enormous concentration to which restaurant to furnish sandwiches and compared with $730,016 for the same | coffee to the depositors. have halted the execution of a plan, their activities were tending.” quarter In 1923, a gain of $40,112. The The president also advised that co The bank withstood the "run.” unearthed by the police, of stirring up gain for December was only slightly , disorders on the railways, as recent operative marketing be approached as more than 1 per cent. Tobacco Crop Smaller. ly evidenced by incendiary fires at a principle, not as panacea. Astoria. — Recommendations for an stations in Rome, Florence and Parma. Washington, D. C.—Production of all Issue of from $300,000 to $500,000 in Tax Hearing Advanced. types of tdiacco grown in the United All employes of municipally-owned general obligation bonds, to be used . Washington, D. C. Appeals brought States was smaller in 1924 than in in supplying inducements for Indus ! institutions acting in proprietary ca pacity rather than serving govern by the Santa Fe and the Southern Pa 1923, the department of agriculture trial concerns to locate In Astoria; for 1 mental purposes, such as water, light cific to test the validity of California's reported Saturday, the total crop being the establishment of a city planning I ; and street railway companies, are sub tax upon their properties were ad 1 243,000,000 pounds, compared with commission to work toward a pro-1 ject to income tax on their compen vanced by the supreme court Mon 1.515,000,000 in 1923. The cigar types gramme of beauty in public construe-1 showed a decrease of 24,000,000 pounds tlon; active co-operation of the city sation. They will have to pay taxes day for hearing February 24. The court refused a request Uf and the types used for chewing, smok commission with local civic organlzn on their incomes as far back as 1918, and the bureau of Internal revenue has Washington state that it dismiss a ing, snuff and export were reduced tlon, and a movement to bring about notified the collector of customs to proceeding in which the Northern Pa 248,000,000 pounds, caused by decreas better feeling on the part, of logging compel the filing of returns over those cific and other roads are challeng ed plantings and poor yields. camp employes toward the city of As ing the authority of the state’s depart years. toria, were Include»] in the messag»» 1 Rail Shops Reopened. Kupper Bier, a butcher who says he ment of public works. read by Mayor Setters before a spe is the oldest active business man in Tacoma. — Reopening of the car cial meeting of the city commlaalon Rail Issue Is Decided. the United States, celebrated his 105th shops of the Chicago, Milwaukee U St. Friday morning. birthday at hfs home in Hoboken, N. Washington, D. C.—Tentative valua- Paul railway Monday on the railroad’s J., Sunday by eating a hearty dinner, tions of railroads made by the Inter car rebuilding and construction The Rome newspapers Sunday pub smoking a strong cigar and refraining state commerce commission are not schedule, with a force of close to 1000 lished a report issued by Signor Cre- from giving advice on how to attain a open to review by the courts before men, were announced Saturday. J. A. monesf, royal commissioner of Rome, long and happy life. He has 142 de being made final by the commission, Wright, district master mechanic, said which showed that In the capital there scendants, among them 14 children, the supreme court decided Monday. that probably from 950 to 1000 men were 10,000 hotel rooms and 10,000 The young Indy hi - khs the way says ranging from 23 to 70 years of age. The case was brought by the Dela would be required to handle the work rooms Jn private houses which might It seems only fnlr to give Germany n Next Sunday he will attend the wed ware & Hudson and other eastern In the car and locomotive depart be used to accommodate pilgrims dur Ittle more time to collect her resplra- railroads. ments. ding of his youngest son, Arthur. ing holy year. ¡thins. COMPILED FOR YOU SHUNS OPEN MARKET 4 h 1 "“s ■"•d”" “""’• Someth ing to Think ¿4bout • <(8> by McClure Newspaper Hyndlcate.) S omc . Tines IT TXiej Two «U**!>»»W AWtfClS To «IT a Fe LUSA. Turn) BRINGIN’ YOU By DOUGLAS MALLOCH »qn ux i he flow rs I n Ma -. m i< Taln't the suigin' birds mi' such, Taln't the skies all red an' gold Plttmh ns full in they kin hold. Taln't the niortlin'. 'taln't the dm»— What I mlns the most Is You. Taln't Ihr winter, now It's hero, Miike« the peorcHt time o' yeer, 'Taln't Ilie <li 1ft in r<«» tbe trull. Nor the north wind/nor the hull: Here's whnt makes it look ho gray— It's because You went nwny. For you siilil remeiiilx-r when?- You'll be back In spring ngnln. That's the rennon timt I loo Ev'ry mornln' by the brook For some young anemone Watch the »kies an* ev'rytblng For the faintest sign o' spring. For tills spring, of nil the rest. Tills will be about the best, Bluer blue nn' greener green. Ju«t the best I ever seen — Though It's brlngln' duwn nn' doo, nil It's brlngln' You ! <P by McClure Newspaper Kynúlcete 1 hid.t-n Petry lirtw lb beauty of the world, and ntnk«*n fa* miliar objuctu ba as If lhu> ......... not familiar shelly. WHAT TO EAT n pot of pnrnley growing in W ITH the kitchen window or In the basement, with celery nearly always reasonable price, with n good »nimi dressing In muiu II quantity always ou tap. there will be no trouble tn have u few salad-, nt little expense. Apples with celery nmt a few nuts make a most fusty mid well-liked siilud; for väristy mid u stewed prune or two with u sprinkling of peanuts to the-apple, or a few dates willing mid thought- or raisins. The ’ ful cook will I always nulo» something worth while from the ord I miry foods. I wonder how many throw away baked pot when there nre but two or three left? Do you know tlmt n dish of creamed po tatoes, enough to nerve four amply, cun be prepared from two ordinary* sized baked potatoes. Cut them Into cubes after removing the skin mid mid to a nicely Kcnsoned white nam e. Al low the <H h I i to stand over hot water until the potatoes are thoroughly hot mid you will find n flavor In this dish of creamed potatoes surpassing the ordinary kind. A cooked beet or two cut Into very small cubes, even If It Is pickled beet, lidded to n little chopped union and siiliid dressing and served on lettuce, makes a very good salmi. A few pe can meats yvlll make It deleetuble. If you have n small amount of »•hopped pickles, corn chowder or chill siim »- or a few cucumber oil pickles, they all add to a snliid. Only n table- spoonful of chopped vegetable changes the flavor of ordinary combinations Into something unusual. Freshly boiled beets chopped fine ami a salad dressing of mnyonmilse which has been colored pink from the beet juice added with pecan meats Is u sh I ik I to remember. Serve on heart leaves of lettuce. Cooked pens, canned siring beans, cabbage, uh well ns cold meat! and flah, may be used In salads. Sweet pickled watermelon rin»l or ripe cucumber cut Into dice, cheese and peas I h a combination unusual but very good. All one needs is a llttl»> Imagination, a few staple salmi foods for a basis and the milking of n salad Is easy. (©. 1924. W.at.rn New«paper Univa.1