Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006, February 22, 1928, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE DAYTOM TRIBUNE
WEDNESDAY. I lltltt IKY 22, I02H
T111 li n 11 >< > k
OVSd
3 3.000 T111 a un X i k River billige
Dayton Box &
Lumber Co.
GRAND ISLAND
DENTIST
RED 4»
OREGON
*
BARBER SHOP
Ladles' Haircuttlng
Agency For Newberg Laundry
RATHS
DAYTON,....................... OREGON
.<+++<
Agate Grinding
Jewelry Made to Order
V. H. BALLARD
Expert Wiilchnmker A Jeweler
Grafaphone* at the Lowest
Price ever known In the county.
. . OREGON
E Worth Wiley reports demand
horse* at
held In
Newberg Saturday to have been good
horses were good and prices
paid for them
He paid 2230
for a spun of dark gray five year old
draft horses.
Ru*sell Tompkins, who has attend­
ed Willamette University since the
beginning of the fall term, is home
on vacation and hue enrolled at Cor-
valli* so he may I m - with hi* twin
brut her. Joe
He will enter
beginning Munii
Merlin Harding Is very bu«y put-
ting up hop trellises In his hop yard.
The Grand Island Improvement
club la making preparations for the
Onawa Teachers Club play. "His
Model Wife," and a pie social to be
given at the school house Saturday
evening. February 25th.
company
The
have only a few minor details to over
com« before they will be able to an­
nounce with certainty the time when
work on the Installing of their pro-
posed Une into this locality will be
! started. Is the report given out by
.1 member of the local committee In
♦
INSURANCE
T Life
We care for your needs.
J Fire. Theft. EinbeMlement slid
.1. L. Sherman & Son
H. W. Burnaid, M. I), j.
PHYSICIAN
X
Red 78
- - - OREGON
AYTOX ROOMING HOI H
BEST BEUS ON EARTH
Mr». C.
K. Mauts, Prop.
■ OREGON
X
X
The Two Critics
Sherwood Anderson, the novelist.
aulii on Ids return from Paris:
“In Paris, one day. I went to an ex-
hlbltlon of spring fashions at II fa­
mous dressmaker's In the Rue de In
Pnlx.
"Two elderly women sat behind me.
nnd when a tnll miinnequln r*itne out
tn a very audm'lous evening gown I
lieurd one of them give it snort und
My:
"‘Thnt creature Is n caricature.'
"‘A Cnrlcntiire?' said the other wom-
nn 'Oh. no. .lune. Not a caricature. A
takeoff:'" Minneapolis Tribune.
Airman’s Camera
The cameni used by the aviator In
plotting Ilie view below Is :i marvel
of Ingenuity. Its operation is almost
automatic and when an exposure Is
made (here Is a permanent and com­
plete record imide of time altitude,
number of the film, angle of the ma­
chine at the time, date and data about
the lens. A special film has beep made
for the newest camera, which I* the
largest film ever spooled. It Is slxty-
flve foot long, sufficient for 100 ex­
posures.
Relic of Cliff Dwellers
Dayton
Lumber Yard
A. IT. Robinson, Prop
X
I
Building Material
of all kinds
Phone 46x9
Box 177
Get
YOUR TOBACCO
AND CANDY
at CHRISTENSON’S
CONFECTIONERY
Hot
Lunches
OHK/.OV HTATR MOTOR
ASSOCIATION
WEBFOOT
Dinner guest* Sunday at the
llllliboro
Ray Milling
cunnery
Jame* Kh bardami hum« were Mr.
I«» lor 1927 rcuihol 21.80o.ooo.
mid Mrs. Olive Hcrumstud uii-1 fam-
lly of Portland und the MI hnch Hau­
reti carload* mint roots
Hu lent
gen of McMinnville
life belli
shipped from Brooks to
Hetty June, tl e fourteen mouths
old daughter of Mr. and Mr*. Em-
merHon Kuhn la Ill with u tonili of
f'loverdule Chees« factory being
pneumonia
enlarged to hundí« 22.000 pounds of
Mr und Mra. Will Crlt«*«r •
milk felly
Sunday In Oregon City with Mr.
Crtteser's folk*, Mr. and Mrs Grant
Criteser.
Mr and Mr* W W Humphry and
t
LADD’S FUNERAL
family spent Sunday al th« .1 ('.
HOME
Humphrey home in McMinnville.
Io Serve Hunmnliy Better
Minx Gllmor« u< l onipauled them
Day und Night Phone Blue 90
Mr*. Ih-ll Morguridge intertill tied
th« Soclul Service Club Thursday af­
Mi .MINN VILLE, OREGON
ternoon. Eight member* were pr«-
setiL After u soclul time delightful
refr«*hm«nt* were served.
Ml** Lol* Taylor of Pleasantdale
Was th« KU«*t Tuesday night of Mi**
Ethel Kuhn
Mr and Mrs. Fred Kuhn and fam­
ily. Mr. und Mr», T«d Laurence and
‘laughter. Mr. and Mr* E. L Kuhn
and daughter and Ml*« Mary
Were dinner gui-Mts Sunday of Mr.
Bulblliig Mat «rial of nil kind*
and Mr*. Floyd Owens, of Amity. ‘
IK MIUS.
LIME.
Th« occasion being Mr Owen's birth­
HAHH, HHINGLEM. ROOFING
day.
GLASS AND BRICK
Mr Will t'rilcser ha* been driving
DR ON TILE
back and forth to Oregon city the
pawl week, where he ha* been help­
ing Ilia father on hl* boat
. OREGON
Mr and Mrs M W Hunvllle were
din tier Ku«*t* Sunday of Mr. and
lleicliHteln of PleiiHlint
Mrs. 1
dale.
--------------- II---------------
DR. O. C. GOODRICH
Office Phone
PAOf: THREE
The lost burial grounds of the Casa
Grande (Arlz.) diff dwellers, prob-
ably a thousand years old. have been
found by an expedition from the
Southwest museum, Los Angelos, A
funeral urn of beautifully shaded red
on buff coloring and containing hone
fragments mid ashes of the dead was
flu- first finding of flic expedition. It
revealed that two forms of burial—
cremation mid earth Interment were
used by the cliff dwellers.
Soles Glued on Shoes
The mending of shoes Ims been
greatly facilitated by a foreign system
of cementing the new sole over the old
one In place of sewing It requires the
use of n cement which has been made
for the purpose and which Is entirely
waterproof. The parts nre held to­
gether In limited clumps while the
union Is being made. The new process
Is said to b<> much more rapid than
the old and more economical.
Pioneer Magazine
The Illustrated London News Is the
oldest Illustrateli weekly.
It was
founded In 1842 by Herbert Ingram.
In a Nutshell
flieh gills wax poor when givers
prop1 unkind.
DAY THAT MARKED
DOWNFALL OF GERM
August Is Notable in Annals
of Surgery.
On August 12. 1865. a youngster,
who*«- name survive* only aa Jaruaa
G„ wm run over by u cart In Glu»-
gow mid gained undying fame, for his
leg. If not for himself. Some one car
rh-d the Injured lad to the Glasgow
Royal Itifiruiury. where presided an
eager young surgeon, newly come from
London, and . .............. I of mi idea Hl*
name was Joseph Ll*ter mid Ida Idea
waa that those inyaterloua living
germ* which Pasteur had just been
investigating had something to do
with the suppuration then considered
Inevitable after any surgical opera-
tlon, aa well >1* lifter bone fractures
tn wliloh the skin also 1* broken, fruc-
tures which surgeons elsa* a* “com-
pound" ones. Young Jam«« had *uf
f«n*d that kind of fracture of his leg.
Most surgeons of the day would have
said, us probably some of them did
say. that James ws* likely to go one-
legged through the rest of his life
Young Doctor Lister thought dlffer-
ently. He tried on the wound In the
leg the new Kerin discouraging meth-
oda which he had been thinking out
and testing. The result was magical,
suppuration followed; the leg
healed. On March 16. 1867, Lister
used the case to illustrate the first
publication of hl* method* in the Lon­
don Lam-et. Antiseptic surgery, per­
haps the greatest of all the gift* of
medical «lienee to mankind, had be
gun.
A world in which the miracle of
painless ami germless surgery hn» he
come a com morn.lace finds it difficult
to realise how short a time has passed
since Its invention. The centenary of
Lister's birth has just been celebrated
by the world's physician*. It Is less
thun half as long since hl* methods of
conquering the germs becume common
knowledge mid common practice. Of
all the surgical operations now classed
a* major ones more than three-fourths
could never have been attempted so
long ns germ Invaders were admitted
with the knife. Nowadays, thanks to
Lister and to anesthesia, surgery Is
perhaps the most advanced of all
arts. Indeed, ft Is far In advance. a*
Sir Berkeley Moynihan said at one of
the Lister celebration, “of all the sci­
ences upon which It* future progress
depend*.” Another Lister I* needed
to open some new field to It* conquer­
ors, perhaps another Jrnnes to lend hl*
leg to some renewed advance.
I CHURCHES f
METHODIST CHURCH
Cuatay school at lit a tn . Frank
'
Hole, Superintendent
Morning
tvhip 11 a m
Epworth League
.0 p m
Evening service at 7.30
Prayer meeting on Thursday
P m
at 7:30.
Service at Webfoot: Morning wor-
•hlp 9:30 a. tn. Sunday school at
11:30 a. m
Harry E. Rurey. Pastor
Fl LL GOSPEL ASSEMBLY
Sunday school 10:00 a. in
rn.
Preaching Service—11:
Prayer Service- Wednesday Eveu-
< at 8:00 p. m.
Rev. Beazan.
CHRISTIA N CHI R< H
Services every Sunday as follow*
Bible school at 10 a. rn
Preaching
service* at 11 a. tn. All friends are
Elroy Parrish, Pastor.
BAPT1ST CHURCH
Sanday school at 10 a. m. Preach­
ing service il a. m. B. T. P. U. at
fi. 00 p. m. Evening service at 7.30
P m. Prayer service on Thursday at
7.30 p. m
Walter G. Smith. Pa»tor.
EVANGELICAL CHURCH
Rev. W. E Simpson. Pastor
Dayton. Oregon.
Services as follows:
Dayton Sunday school at 10:00
Preaching service at 11:00 a.
a. m
On . the 1st and 3rd Sundays
m
preaching at 7:30 p. m.
Unionvale — Preaching service at
9:45 a. m
Sunday school at 11:00
a. m.
Preaching service 2nd and
4th Sunday at 7:00 p. m
Cultivate alfalfa in the spring
with a spring tooth cultivator, hoe
drill or disk, as soon as the ground
is dry enough, says the experiment
station. This Is of particular value
in killing weed* when they are
young and stimulating the crop in
irrigated sections. It often pays for
the extra work on dry land. Where
weed and grass growth is heavy the
alfalfa may be cultivated after cut­
ting if the shoots are not long enough
to lie knocked off.
Spring mark* the open season for
“Gyp" motor clubs und so called mo '
tor service club promoters who make ।
it a practice to gain an easy living at |
the expense of a more or less gullble i
---------- a----------
motoring public. Is the substance of I
According to information just re­
a warning notice just released by the*
ceived from the Oregon State' Mo-
Oregon Htaie Motor association which |
tor Association, the State Highway
represents the A. A. A of this state
Department ha* secured control of all
"These Illegitimate or 'Gyp' motor H,e Un4 lwrderlait on thp ColuBb|a
clubs invariably are long on promis- Hlw HtKhway between Hocd H1VPr
M and short on delivery;" say* Geo. I(| Mo„er
acQnllltloll u tn
O. Brandenburg. secretary of th« I Hnp wUh thp
or the »ig^ay
Oregon branch of the A. A A., they > Department to secure control of
are In the game ’ only for the pur-
place*.
sites, picnic
pose of reaping i a heavy harvest of
ground* and timbered area* botder-
easy money for themselves. Always ing on the state highway* with the
privately owned, and with no affilia­ intention of conserving the beauties
tion that bind* them to make good of these areas for future generations.
on their promises, misrepresentation
Twenty-eight major park sites
is the bait they invariably use in have already been secured in addi­
their endeavor to trap their victims tion to a large amount of acreage on
Automobile owners, garages, auto
which the timber will be preserved.
campgrounds and gasoline service
--------------- $---------------
stations are their particular prey.
and from such sources a harvest of
Beaverton—Ground
broken for
millions of dollar* is ‘reaped an- 212,000 Cady block.
nually.'
" ‘Gyp’ motor clubs promoter*,”
according to Mr. Brandenburg, “use
various mean* of subterfuge in their
FOR INSURANCE
operation*. Some issue contracts on
THAT INSURES
a basis of promised discounts in the
SEE
purchase price of gasoline, oil, au­
C.
S.
LEWIS
tomobile accessories, cheap insur­
Phone 9x10
Dayton
ance and the like for their members,
designating certain 'official' sta­
tion* in outlying district* where
Auto Insurance
such discount* are said to be ob­
tainable.
It is a significant fact.' Fire, Theft, Collision,
however, that legitimate business . Public Liability and Prop­
concerns rarely fall for such 'sucker' :
erty Damage. All in one
games, Legitimate business cannot ;
or separate policies.
operate successfully on a discount !
basis.
All 100% Coverage
“The Oregon State Motor Asso-
Something
special in Col­
elation and the Portland Better Busi­
lision
Insurance
ness Bureau have united their efforts
in the endeavor to protect the mo­
Service
Satisfaction
torists and automotive establish-
EFFER’S GARAGE
P
--------------- S---------------
Copco power plant on North Fork
Rogue River, now delivers 32.000
electrical horse power.
------------ft------------
Studying Street Noises
In an effort to bring about the elimi­
nation of many street noises, a sur­
vey Is being made In the streets of
Chicago with an Instrument recently
devised for recording and comparing
the volume of different sounds. Ac­
cording to this Instrument the aver-
age human voice records 40 and the
the level of one of
Chicago's busiest corners is 657. The
volume of noise encountered at the
top of a tall building Is about one-
third that at the street level below.
A steam engine pulling up a grade
makes th -e time* more noise than
an electric motor doing the same
amount of work on the same grade.
Charlie Lindberg drove thousands
■f miles without an accident to mar
his record, It will be remembered
that no one was sitting behind him
telling him how to drive from the
buck seat.
ment* of this state from being rob-
bed by such unscrupulous method'-
Motorists when solicited to join un­
known organization* of the type
mentioned would do well to consult
either of the*e organization* before
Investing their money.”
“SERVICE THAT SATISFIES”
OREGON
DAYTON
j A Load of Dry Wood
50c
(TTY OFFICIALS
I Mayor______
_____ W. S. U'Ren
i Rec order __
__W. T. H. Tucker
___ J. E Mellinger
Treasurer
City Marshal. Street and Water
Commissioner__T. A. Boulden
Councilmen E Demary, Paul Lon-
derhasuen. James Penland, Iner
Mortensen, Harry Sherman and M.
R. Cooper.
Regular meetings first Monday in
Sure Earthworms Sing
If you don’t lielleve that earthworms each month.
have voices and use them, tiptoe Into I
the garden some warm summer eve­
ning. says Dr. Rudolph Ruedetnann of
the New York State museum. Albany, j
In a statement in Popular Science ।
Monthly, confirming observations of !
the German scientist. Prof. O. Man
gol d.
Listening one evening In the garden. (
I Hictor Ruedemann observed "a chorus
of almost unbelievably small voices." I
Aided by a flashlight, he caught sever
al worms In the act of "singing." The
worms. he thinks, make these noises 1
by dragging their minute bristles over
More New Spring Goods
the edges of their holes In the ground, j
COME AND GET IT
i
Carlton Cooperage Co
A CHANCE TO LAY' IN A SUPPLY CHEAP.
CARLTON, ORE.
New Spring Goods
Have Arrived. The New Printed Carton Crepes,
Printed Rayon and Plain Shangtai Pongee.
These Goods are All New
Spring Patterns.
Mule Long Imprisoned
When hi* mule disappeared. Dan
Darling, pioneer fanner of Nixon.
Texas, started a furflung search for
him. without avail, even putting out
postcards with a reward for his re
turn. Two weeks later, he happened
to cross n dry creek In the middle of
his pasture, and found the tnule
wedged In between two banks In such
a way that he could not get out. Darl­
ing procured help, and released the
mule, which had not suffered much In
spite of his long stay without food or
water.— Indianapolis News.
Money in Old Silver Foil
The so-called "sliver" foil Is really
tin or aluminum foil and a great deal
of it Is used mid much of it wasted
by being discarded after once having
served as a wrapping. A Welsh char­
ity drive took the form of a collection
of tills material for the period of one
year anil the amount collected repre­
sented a value of »10,(M>0, which was
expended In endowing hospital beds.
During the "drive" other money and
valuable material was collected which
brought the total up to $30.000.
Automatic
One of the Los Angeles furniture
stores has a new davenport that they
call "Cupid's Retreat." It looks very
much like most other davenports but
unwary bachelors are warned.
"Why do you cnll It ‘Cupid's Re
treat’?" a visitor ventured to Inquire.
"The upholstery Is quite thin," ex­
plained the salesman, "und by the end
of a year It is sure to lie worn through,
thereby displaying the sign: "It'»
time to get married.”
£
SHANGTAI
PRINTED RAYONS
This is a Silk Fabric with just enough
cotton for extra durability. It has
several different uses. Can be used
for Dresses, Sport Jackets, Shirts,
Pillow Tops, Undergarments, Lamp
Shades, Blouses.
These are all fancy patterns, picked
from a large assortment that con­
tained several hundred. We figure
we have made a good selection.
H
Price 65c Per Yard
Price 85c Per Yard
PRINTS
PRINTED CREPES
Printed Crepes are tub-fast.
have the latest patterns.
Priced 78c Per Yard
We
We have a large selection of Prints.
They were bought right and are
priced right.
Priced 27c and 29c Per Yard
We can Save You Money on Your Spring Dress Goods. Call and look them
over before buying. You don’t have to buy—just call and see for yourself.
We have saved others money on Dress Goods—Why not you?
Shippy & Filer
¡1 DAYTON
OREGON
«