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About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1927)
UIDMSIHV, DEC. 21, |l»27 THE DAYTON TUIKI NE RATES FOR tHSSHILD ADI EltTINING hk ; h school news Anmnimuno-tilH and ar« i'hiirged ut Hi« mi« of Im per lln« Figures count an words No advertisement taken for loan tolephouu if th« advertiser la u criber to phono AdvertlnomentH will he accapted until io ii in Tuesday for Innertlon In Ihut wiok’H Tribune. LADD’S FUNERAL HOME. r<> Ke««« Huuianily B«*Hrr Day and Night Phone Blue 90 t J. OR. (). (’. GOODRICH DENTIST OftD. Phone PUJE THRFl Play Caat Named By Josephine Conn Th« cunt for th« Henlor play of th« Duytou high Hchool han been iiMinad and th« student» are already learn ing their lines under the tutelage of Miss L«na Stillwell The action coaching of the play will be under the direction of Mrs. Huffy. Al though the exact date of the play has not laten Het It I h underHf ood that It will b« presented In 11 • lut - ter part of January. Following I h the casi Admiral Grin* Orval Whitman William Faraday .lames Wuke- field Colonel Smith laturun.'i Porter. Robert Fuuer Verimn Thompson M m I« Kenneth Hadley. J ainoa Kabn-li Mae Fields Martin Lester Withee Celia Furadiiy Josephine Conn Madge Furuday Mina Heawler. Evelyn Faraday Elizabeth Hib- I 'ti y II I m Fu ruduy Helen Hartman Mrs. Chlstdn Velen» Goodrich. Mrs Huffy will spend her Christ- man vacation at Teer, a small place In northwest WuHhlngton. MI hh Stillwell intend» to Hpend a few dayw In Portland. Miss Launs- puch will be with relatives In New- berg and Portland, during the holl- Bonaparte Heart 1/ t by Baltimore beauty Jerome BoiiMpurie, younu1 ’ Imo ’ of Napoleon, lH»i,aiiMr the bm.baml of an American woman, b-euu*» of a bit of old lace, thus bringing (lie Nil poleonlc atrain to Amerien I i romo sought refuge In Afrarlca from Eng lish pursuers OU the high sens In 1803 Ihr girl wlib whom hr was Io Inn«* an unhappy romance » II bout Intention, It I h believed Ilie rure old laiv on Ilie gown of I liz.nle.1’ Palor *>on, u beautiful Baltimore woman, bo calne entiingl««) on a button of Bonn- parte’» cout. Introduction» followed and Bona pa rte went to Bnlooiore to ptuxue his courtship. Later he mur rl«<l Miss Patterson and Ilo* ; ou: g bride followed lor hu-bnnd to Frunce. She waa not allowed to hind. however, anil ala* went to Englund, where a child was »orn. Merini Ime Napoleon unnulled inni rings. placed th«» erstwhile bmband on the ; Iiron« of Wewtplnillu nnd forc-d him ■ o marry a German princess Tho igh ih«» validity of her marriage wu- sub sc<|in ntl> attested by the po«,», Eliz-i belli Patterson never saw her bus band again.—Woman'» Home «'oui pnidon. English Writer Uns Contempt for Laugh How Indians Fashioned Implements of Stone ; Indian» obtained their material for I J •tone Implements freshly from the ! X eurlb when possible. a piece of 1 T •tone wiiH first split Into suitable X fragments by holding It edgewise on I a hard base and hitting It »harpiy ♦ with a on« slde«j twist of another | T stone. suya Pathfinder Mu The j ♦ frarment» were trimmed to h leaf- X •hupe by Htriking them smartly with ! ▼ a bummer of horn, boti» or granular »tone mounted on a II-hl J hamll«». Stones th us prepared then carri« <1 io camp to he flnlshed at leisure. They were burled In dump i «-•II. not to bide them, ax often sup i but to «keep them even-tern [ ¡»red. Tills practice accounts for the of crude arrowheads often j found. Tin- linishing was done with n i-hisel like pn sure Implement of Lone or buekhorn. Fnopnmtly the «ru le arrowhead was folded In a buckskin pad to keep It from break Ing ami then placed on a stone or notched block of wood with the mar gin projecting plying strong, Hf.r pressure at the proper points h the pressure tool a skilled urtlsan detached flakes with considerable en'-e In thl montier margins were trimmed, Htems formed 'notches mode and jsilnts sh.irpem-d Heat and tire played no part in th proc«»»». i For Tone and Reliabibility h CROSLEY RADIOS Get Our Prices Dayton Motor Company TAKEN FROM FILES OF EIGHT YEARS AGO Committed To Salem Chas. Atkins, of Sheridan, who has been in the county jail serving sentence for stealing chickens, was Miss Vera Hash, who has been slowly recovering from a recent op committed to the Oregon State Hos pital at Salem Tuesday. eration in a McMinnville hospital, was able to walk down town Satur Fined $25. day evening for the first time. Floyd Creesy, of Yamhill, was ar Trying to do business without ad vertising is like winking at a pretty rested Saturday night by Deputy girl through a pair of green goggles. Sheriff McQueen on a charge of You may know what you are doing possession of intoxicating liquor. Creesy plead guilty and was fined but nobody else do«»». Miss Ruth McAulay combined bus 125. and costs by Justice Olds, of iness with a little pleasure Saturday McMinnville. by spending the day at the county County Gets $5,344 seat. A government warrant for $5.344. Born: to Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Par- ish in this city December 22nd, 1919, 27 was received Monday morning by Homer Parrett. County Treasurer, a bouncing boy. A lady in this vicinity was recent- from United States Treasurer Mel ly urged by her friends to marry a lon. This amount is Yamhill Coun widower, and as an inducement they ty’s apportionment of the Oregon and spoke of his two beautiful children. California Land Grant Fund for “Children,” replied the lady, "are 1927: In April $52,734.30 was re-* like tooth picks, a person wants her ceived by Yamhill County, which a- mount is equal to the taxes that own.” C. C. Carter and family will spend would have been collected for the the holidays with his mother and years 1916 to 1926 inclusive, on the Oregon and California Land Grant brothers in Newport, Oregon. The Bank of Dayton is sending out Lands to which the United States cards announcing the arrival of holds title. their record books which they are of Estimate Receive«! fering the farmers of this commun Homer Parrett. County Treasurer, ity. received an estimate from the Sec retary of State which estimates the total receipts from motor license fees to be received by Yamhill Coun Poverty in Plenty ty during the coming year at $38, There are 3.000 languages and dla- 580.02. This is approximately $3. lects in the world .and yet every now 000. in excess of the 1927 apportion- and then somebody is saying that ment, The motor vehicle fund, un words fail him. der the Oregon session laws of 19 21 ia used for the payment of interest All Fall for Them and retirement of bonds. -- S' '■ Oceans are crossed and marriage« are made for the privilege of seein Roseburg — Public Meeting calyed Niagara falls.—Woman's Home Com to approve $275,000 courthouse pro panion ject. Mr. Gubser has stated that he In tends to tak«* a vacation with the ex Men and women laugh becuu c they Research Into Past ception of two days which will be arc happy or amused. This, at least, BARBER SHOP spent at the teach«r’H convention in lias been tin* universal thwry; hut a Wovld Be lntercs*'ng Portland London psychologist comes forward How fond we are of pn» !;»<■> ' Friday afternoon there Is to be a with Hie self contriidli-tory theory that There I h a Hteudy and nnfaillng d» Christmas program In th» asst-mldy. the really happy man never lauglpt lllUGGX mand for prognostlcatiops; the novel Dayton girts defeated Sheridan and thut th«» unhappy man canndt l»ts and utopia-mongers, the sclentifli lust Friday. The boys played well laugh. According to this authority, popularizers are ready to supply It but lost. the laugh Is a hideous grimace, the We read In an endless succession of Faith Wagner and Fred Hessler, smile alone being beautiful and per- books and pamphlets and newspaper both graduates of D H S. are home mUalble. + nil depend* who articles about the future of polities tor two weeks holiday vacation d<«-s the laughing, whether It Is beau and marriage, of art and war. of cook ------------------- tiful or comparable to the snarl of Ing. science, religion, clothes, flying OIHTI1RY OF MIKS the hyena. Perhaps It Is because machines, morals nnd a thousand oth BESSIE It. GIBBOX are ho used Io laughter, thanks be er things. Among the few Important Phone Ited 7^< unto Infinite wisdom. Hint these dicta entitles alwiut which nobody, so far a, MI hh Resale t It. Gibbon, daughter will Htrlke most of uh as the twaddle I am aware, has yef written a proph of George H t and Minnie E Gibbon, of a st-eker for notoriety. It Is true Ï ecy Is the Past. Tills Is the mon* whs born at Dayton, Oregon. At that there are all sorts of laughter, surprising, since our Interest In times McMinnville E Street hospitul, De some of It unpleasant and some gone by is as ke«*n ns our Interest In cember 16, 1927, she passed to her | aroused by h sense of the ludlcroua, time to come. A prognostication of heavenly home. Bessie was a beau but In Its more welcome sense the the Future of the Past, based on a tiful character She was beloved by word betokens harmless merriment M LON ROOMING BOISE study of the Past’s past and the Past’s all who kn«w her. and waa u faithful and a reflection of the charm and Bi st BEDS OX EARTH present, should make a mutiple ap I nnd loving daughter and slater. beauty of living. peal to the “time snobs" of th!« age. I Whll«» she was a great sufferer thru Researches Into the Past of th. Fu j a prolonged and painful illness, her Mrs E. Munt», Prop. lure would be scarcely less poppi Best Gift of All life was a wonderful example of Aldous Huxley, In Vanity Fair Maga . . OREGON I courage and patience, always pre- Surely there are few among us— zine. i ferrltiK otlieni in every way. She was not one, I hope—who fall to find a | thinking always of her loved ones, great deni of enjoyment, true nnd un- and trying to hide her suffering for adulterated. In making others happy. “Haunted” by an Odor their sake, always trying to cheer Happiness I h a rather peculiar thing. A Monmouthshire farmhouse here Is them with kind words. The beauty you know—in that the more of It we Z. HI'ANGLE’ “haunted" by an odor of violets, says of her Iff«*, ho nobly lived, will be an i give, the more we have, while the the Newport (Engl nd) correspondent BARBER SHOP Influence for good that will go out more eagerly and persistently of the Associated Press. Louies' Haircutting over th» entire community In which seek It, for ourselves, the less An overpowering perfume of fresh ' sh«> was reared to womanhood. There 1 have or the surer we are not to Agency Fur Newberg Laundry find ly gathered violets fills one of the whh a hymn which was a favorite BATHS It. That marvelous bluebird. etn- with her. which she loved_to sing tdenintlc of happiness, Is shy, elusive rooms to such an extent that the ten DAYTON,....................... OBEtJON ant has had to vacate it, and although i with her «inter; that beautiful hymn. and not to be caught with the chaff the floorboards have lieen examine«] “Does Jesus Care.” which gave her of selfish seeking. But Just get busy and the walls distempered the odor particular comfort. “doing something for somebody persists. The house is nearly three She leaves to mourn her death, quick.” adding your mite to t lie hundred years old. her father and mother, three slaters, world ’ s X store of Kindness, and see A legend has been unearthed of « and four brothers, us well as many what happens; Grinding In an instant you girl who was stabbed on her wedding T j relative» and u host of friend». The glimpse the flutter of blue wings, as Jewelry morning by a Jilted lover,. and the JI sisters aie: Mrs. Jennie I’ratt and happiness settles down In your heart story says that she was killed while X Miss Vera Gibbon of Dayton, Ore., to stay.—Kansas City Star V. II. BALLARD arranging a bowl of violets. and Mrs. Maude Noble, of Oregon City. The brothers are: Frank, The fanner discredits the tale, but E\|«*it Wut< hnniker Ä Jeweler The Oldest Tune George and Clifford Gibbon, of Day- careful Investigation leaves the mys ton. and John H. Gibbon, of Molalla. tery unsolved. The oldest tune in the world Is said Oregon to be "For he's a jolly good fellow." Grafaphones at the Lowest She waa Interred in the Brookside There are those who declure thut this Í Price ever known In the county. Would Scrap Gibraltar Cemetery, Sunday. Rev. E. H. Rarey tune was brought back from the East officiating. « ,*by the Crusaders, and that the an Surrounded by the world’s oldest civilizations, the Mediterranean yet cient Egyptians learned It from the - - OREGON ----------- «------ :---- has never been completely explore«! Babylonlana. This idea was nppar- FIRE AT THE HOME OF for its fauna. This is peculiar owing •M-+»!-M»*{»»M“M»-! HERBERT UI I.LARD , ently first suggested by Chateau- to the virtual separation of the Medi brlnnd. who heard Arabs singing whnt terranean waters from those of the Saturday evening about 8 o’clock, he took to be the tune. Th«» idea is Atlantic because of the shallowness the fire bell wan sounded and notice scouted, however, In nutloritative of the strait of Gibraltar. A Danish given to our fire laddies that they dictionaries of music. A more likely Ï DAYTON BOX and hydrograpber who has made a life wen1 needed at a fire that had bro- circumstance connected with the tune study of the Mediterranean proposes ken out on the Herbert Willard Is that, put by the French to their ¥ LUMBER COMPANY that Gibraltar, which forms a natural farm a couple of miles from town. satirical song, “Malbrouk s’en vn-t-en barrier for marine currents, be tun Th. building that was burned was guerre," It wns the only tune that Na- Building ^Interini of all Kinds neled or blasted away so as to estab the old house that had been moved (Hileon could remember nnd sing. DOORS, lish better circulation between the MM I hack by R. N. Snell when he built oeean and the sea. A bigger channel, the present residence and has been Another Problem he believes, would ¡“nd to phenomenal used lately as it storehous«» nnd gar GLASS AND BRK K A farmer, visiting his son’s college changes In the Mediterranean bed. age. Orang«» Willard, needing some CONCRETE IUCXIN TILE gasoline, proceeded to get the gus mid wandering Into a chemistry class, and took along a lighted lantern with saw some students busy with retorts the above results. In about 15 min- and test tubes. HZNZHZHZWZNZHZHZNZNZMZMZNZMZMZNZMZHXHZHZMXMZXZMZNZNZWXMZNZHXXNZMZMZHZMZNXNZMZWXN OREGON JJ “Whut are you trying to do?" he utea or less .nearly all the young X men In town were on the grounds asked. >M*+++4*+ “We’re endeavoring," replied one of rendering all the assistance that could be given The building con the students, “to discover or Invent a ~M~i.+*F+++++++ tained besides the gasoline about universal solvent," 4»»H»-H»»J*+* two tons of seed corn, some wheat, “What’s that?" asked the farmer. INSURANCE and a few chickens. Th«> abundance “A liquid that will dissolve any- of help prevented the dwelling house tiling.” Life. We care for your needs and a nearby hog house from burn “That’« a great idea,” agreed the Fire, Theft. Embezzlement and ing. Property destroyed was well in farmer. “When you* find it, what are su red. you going to keep It In?” :: Horseshoeing and General Blacksmithing Machine Work, Plowshare and Disc Grinding. Acetylene Welding. Wagon and General Wood Work. Heavy, well built Trailers and Wheelbar rows. Everyone fully guaranteed. FRED ANDERSON DAYTON OREGON CHRISTMAS SHOPPER .1. L. Sherman & Son Merely War Slogan? Think It Over '•¡•❖•¡"¡••{"F-î-î-d"! Da y ton :: Lumber Yard A. H. Robinson, Prop Building Material of all kinds Phone 46x9 Box 177 After 41, the kind of curries about within one’s Important thing, and the side takes all Its grace, value from khat. world one self Is the world mil color and Time to Be Careful Never have I greater reason foi suspicion than when I nm particular ly pleased with myself, my faith, my progress nnd my alms.—Christian Scriver. Waves of Delusion I am not sure whether we should Ilk«* the mdse of the waves so much if It were mjtde. not by waves, but by a factory,—Robert Lynd. Extensive Traveler» f Sandy One firm is shipping five carloads Christmas trees from here. Every minute of the day on the nv erage, the 8,(MK> cars of the Pullman company travel a total distance of 2, 087 miles.- Liberty. Myths attaching to vivid words born of stressful moments are nu- ■nerous. The years of the World war produced a great ninny. Fact hecnmi* Action nnd fiction fact In the effort to sift chaff from wheat Did Kaiser Willlnm ever refer to Eng land's troops ns a “contemptible little British army?" A few newspapers In 1014 carried the information that he did, but Inter Investigation failed to authenticate the rumor. It was Anally put down as Just one more war slogan. Understanding Most of life's troubles come from misunderstandings. If we know each other we shall understand each other; If we shall understand each other we shall trust each other; If we trust each other we shall work together In unity of purpose; If we work to gether In unity of purpose there Is nothing worth while which we can not accomplish.—David H. Blair. ; j. You will take pleasure and derive profit by doing your Xmas shopping in our Store. OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT OUR SELECTION IS GOOD TOYS! TOYS! TOYS! Useful & beautiful gifts for mother in the Hdw & Furniture Line Practical gifts for Father Electrical appliances and Atwater Kent Radios for the home U’REN HARDWARE We wish you and yours a Merry Christmas and a Prosperous and Happy New Year MXMXHXNXMXHXHXHXMXXXMXNXKXHXHXHXNXNXNXMXNXMXMXHXWXMXHXMXNXHXMZHXMXHXMXHZWXMZMZMy