PORT ORFORD NEWS
Port Orford, Oregon, Tuesday, May 21, 1929.
sä
Pa:
John Masterson of Sixes was in
Mr and Mrs. Ernest Jones, who
have been living in the Neuman town Friday evening.
house in north Port Orford the
LOCALS
W. J. Aikin motored in from
past several months, left Thursday
N. B Marsh and Louis Marsh by auto, en route to Washington Sixes Saturday,
darted trucking Port Orford ce
Mra. Emery Whitworth
and
Thos. Hughes of lower Sixes
dar the first of last week from
daughter. Miss Ellen, of Silver
a tract near the old Ace Carey motored to Port Orford Thut sday Butte, were shopping in town Sat
ianch. It Is a long haul, but they afternoon.
urday.
make four or more trips per day
Long’s
store
is
resplendent
in
C. C. Inman and 3. A Laurance
to the Port Orford dock.
blue and gold. Bill's Place and the made a business trip to Marshfield
8. J. Spoerl and Mrs. Baker of Port Orford bakery are newly Saturday.
Chinquapin were in town Wednes painted in bright green. W. C.
Ix-omas Hickox was trading in
Purdin was the brush wlelder on
day.
town Saturday.
the three places.
Keeper Mabln of Cape Blanco
Mr and Mrs. Henry Johnston of
Mr. and Mrs. R. G. McKenzie
lighthouse motored into Port Or
of Elk river were Bandon visitors Garrison lake motored to town Sat
ford Wednesday.
Friday, Mr. McKenzie going on to urday afternoon.
Mrs M Vineyard of Sizes was Marshfield.
Mrs Gene Gethlng and children
attending to business matters In
and brother, Orland Anderson,
C.
W.
Wright
motored
to
town
Port Orford Thursday.
from Seaview ranch, Elk river, came up from Eureka Sunday
morning for a visit with relatives.
John Hudson of Elk river was last Friday.
trading In town Thursday morning.
Mr. and Mrs. David McKenzie
Chas. Jamieson of Bandon passed
Geo Curry and daughter, Miss through town Friday en route motored to Bandon Sunday after
noon.
Prances, of Elk river, were sh op no rth .
ping in town Thursday.
Mrs. Anna Dietderlch spent a
Mrs. E. A. Lindberg was a guest
Kenneth R Handley and his fa of her sister, Mrs R. G. McKen few hours In town Sunday after
ther, R. H. Handley, of Sixes, mo zie of Myrtlewood ranch. Elk riv noon, returning with Mrs. A. P.
Sweet to Arizona Inn.
er, last Friday.
tored to town T hursday.
PORT ORFORD
Read the
Port Orford
News
$2.00 — 12 M onths
$1.00 — 6 M onths
For
D evelopm ent
and
Lo ca 1
Mr and Mrs Hogatt of Rainier.
M rs. A. B. Hogatt and Miss Nettie
Toole motored down the highway
Sunday afternoon.
V ariou s Id eas as to
S p ots on M oon’s F ace
There exist in various parts ol
Sheriff J. H. Turner transacted llie w orld curious ideas regardinv
official businese in Port Orford the dark spots In the tneou s disk
In the eastern p a rt o f Asia tin
and vicinity Satuiday.
spots are believed to be a raiditt
Mr. and Mrs Geo. H. Sparks of or bare. The Chinese, in p a rtfru
lar, regard them as a hare s lliin i
middle Elk were In town Saturday. up
and pounding rice In a in o riu r
Mr. and Mrs Lloyd Knapp and
little daughter, Marjorie, spent Sun
day with Mrs. Ella Knapp. They
returned to their home in Reeds
port Monday morning
E. L White, C. C. Inman and
S. A. Laurance were in Gold Beach
yesterday morning.
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL
PROPERTY BY EXECUTOR
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF
THE STATE OF OREGON FOR
THE COUNTY OF CURRY
In the Matter of the Estate of
George Davidson, Deceased.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,
That the undersigned, as adminis
trator of the Estate of George
Davidson, Deceased, has filed his
final account as such Administra
tor in the County Court of the
State of Oregon for the County of
Curry, and that said Court by or
der duly made has appointed Sat
urday, the 22nd day of June, A.
D. 1929, at the hour of Ten o’clock
in the forenoon of said day as the
time, and the Court Room In the
County Court House in Gold Beach,
Oregon, as the place for the hear
ing of objections to said final ac
count and the settlement thereof.
I^ast publication June 18, 1929.
LOUIS L. KNAPP.
Administrator of said Estate.
I
H ow N ature A p p e a le d
to F ash ion D e sig n e i
**I never saw anything lik e I t ! It
wus w onderful I Such color I I
seemed to stand on u w a ll o f taupe,
fad ing away to a dim o live ecru
in the distance, w h ile on my left
was a cathedral o f golden airdale,
touched w ith aloma, Miitiqtie. and
ashes o f roses w ith Just a sugges- I
tion o f bamboo and heaver. And
in the distance w alls upon w alls of
blonde, brick-dust, heather and b ru
nette reflected the dying sun In a
thousand tin ts o f n u tria , gamboge,
honeydew and horse-chestnut!
“ And always the colors seemed
to change and blend. K it fox faded
to w ild honey and died away Into
Vandyke; Spanish geld Mushed mid
became int.gerlne, the sun kissed
It nud It became sherry deepening
Into Jockey; glowing monkey skin
became m orning glory, became
straw , became nnt, became oyster,
became pigeon, became popcorn
nnd sweetpea, only to b'«*nd Into a
rio t o f brown sugar mid verdigris,
fle s h cliffs changed to nude mid
softened to fre n c h nude.
“ I tell you it was w onderful. I f
I don’t get a new shade o f silk
hose out o f It I miss my guess I” —
Kansas C ity Times.
ol
W hy 7
Four-year-old Richard and Ills
sister were both very fond o f James
W hitcom b Riley's poems fo r c h il
dren and could say the “ Ragged»
M an" and “ L ittle Orphan A n n ie "
nnd “ Way O ut to Old A unt M ary’s,
word fo r word.
One day R ichard was looking
through tlie hook o f poems again
He seemed quite tho ugh tfu l fo r a
moment, then he said:
"D addy, i f this M r. Riley liked
little boys nnd g irls so well, why
do people call him James W lilpthein
Riley?”
The R eason
A clergyman was congratulating
him self on a convert from a riva l
place o f worship.
“ W hy,” be asked the good lady
“ have you decided to forsake your
chapel fo r my church? Is It ilia t
you find nty sermons o f greater
com fort to you?”
“ No," was the reply. " It's not
exactly that.
The fact is tlie»
have cindered the pathway up
the chapel, and I find it that un
com fortable fo r the feet that I hurt
to change.” — W eekly Scotsman,
A cq u ain ted
V irg in ia Anne, age three years,
was 'ust getting a good start In tlie
prim ary departm ent o f a suburban
Sunday school. The young teacher
was te llin g the story o f the shep
held» and wishing to give especial
atten tion to tlie babies o f the class,
asked :
“ V irg in ia Anne, do you know any
tilin g about the slie(9ierd<?"
"Sure,” replied V irg inia Anne,
" ii lently, “ I know all about 'em
.y live right next door to u s ’
Floras Lake
YOUR 1929 ITINERARY
On The Roosevelt Highway
Southwestern Oregon
FISHING — HUNTING — BOATING
BATHING
FLORAS LAKE HOTEL
John R. Smith & Son. Props.
-t-
»*•
“-nude o n ” th e le<
. . . a n d AThO.W
r e a lly d o e s! . . .
U ltr a -s h e e r a n d
c le a r » »11 p u r e
s ilk , w ith o u t a
o f seism . . . in
fo u r
s e d n e tiv e
•
tv n tn n
Inexpensive, Too
They Sell For . . .
sh a d es.
$1.00
Dashing
Chapeaux
N a v .h o B lan k ets
The Sm ithsonian in s titu tio n says:
"T he Yebectal are nature gods of
the Navaho whose chief fun ction is
liea’ ing the sick. The so-called Ye
lieciil ’dance* is a ceremony fo r this
purpose.
|Jp to some years ago
representaMans o f (lie gods wen
painted In colored sand at the cere
inony and wiped out nt • lie close
Eater, the Navaho began to weave
ihe Yebet’hal figures In rttgs for
sale. These rugs are usually made
on a hand loom. T h is may easily
lie told i f the designs are a like on
both sides ns to form and color
Such specimens were never com
mon.”
INCLUDE BEAUTIFUL
N ew s
h o s ie r y to lo o k
Siamese take the same view O th er,
see In the moon n man and woman
w o rking in a field.
Curiously, the N orth A rin rlc iin
Indians have almost the same su
pe rstition as the Chinese. On old
monuments in Central America lit»
moon appears as a Jug o r ve-- ■
out o f which an anim al lik e a rub
Mt is Jumping.
Soutli American
Indians, on the other hand, helievi
th a t a g irl, who bud fallen In love
w ith ttie moon, sprung tow ard li
was caught and kept by it, and that
It is her figure which is seen on
the moon's face.
Samoan islanders regard the
spots as representing a woman
ca rryin g a child.
O ther southern
people have s im ila r beliefs, the
woman and child sometimes bt-hig
altered in to an old woman bearin':
a burden on her hack.
NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN,
That I, I-ouis L. Knapp, the Ex
ecutor of the Last Will and Testa
ment and of the Estate of Sarah E.
McPhillamey, deceased, with power
to sell, will on Wednesday the 29th
day of May, 1929, at 10:00 o’clock
A. M. of said day, at Public Auc
A rthu r’s “ Round T ab le“
tion, and If no sufficient bids be
T tie • table which 1» now called
received at said time, then there
after. at private sale, sell to the "T he Round Table o f K ing A r
highest bidder for cash in hand th u r" Is to be seen In ttie Great
at W inchester, England, part
the following described real prop I o hall
f the old castle there.
At tie'
erty, to-wit:
west end o f th is ha ll, above the re
The south half of subdivision ! mains o f the royal dais, hangs this
It is
three of block 47 In the town of I table, 17 feet in diam eter.
Port Orford, Curry County, Or ! known to have existed in the T lilr
! teenth century and lg possibly old
egon.
i or, and was repainted in the reign
That said sale will be held on I o f Henry V III. (Jf course there is
the premises, and the right is here no way o f tracin g uny coiineclion
by reserved to reject any and all o f K in g A rth u r and his knigh ts w ith
litis table.
T h is tuble is d lvldo ii
bids.
Given under my hand and dated uff Into placea fo r tlie king an ’
o f his knights.
According t<
at Port Orford, Oregon, on this 24
one version o f the K ing A rtiu p
the 29th day of April, 1929.
legends, there were 13 seuts around
ttie table, white according to an
’,
LOUIS L. KNAPP,
Executoi of the Last Will other there wsre 30 seats and tin
and Testament and of the total number o f knigh ts of King A r
Estate of Sarah E McPhil- tliu r was 140.
A30t5 lamey, deceased.
NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT
T h e n e w v® «n e—
For Every Feminine Type
Hashing hats of becoming modes
to harmonize with your summer
costume. Off the forehead types,
tiny brims, long in back or lengthy-
side droops, turn-down brims, and
so on.
Gayly Trimmsd
$3.95 to $6. 50
Novelty Straws
—
Crochet Viscas
Felts and Combinations
Charming Colors
Golden Rule Store
For The Vegetarian
I
/"
11 1
/
4«sd
jU °
Ik
1/
r
ti,n' »mce vegeta-
ruins h ire had to vegetate in
the country to get their vegc-
ables. Nearly all kinds of these
.ucculent food? are now available
■eady prepared in cans. Rut it was
not un til some fourteen hundred
years after Nebuchadnezzar was
umed ou ^ to grass "like ti e kine"
that the f - '- r h - - ~ n Nicholas A«»-
pert. diso - t r . d tl e pr .< s which
.as en.i led xgetarians to become
city dwellers.
A t the present titre there are
th irty or forty different kinds o f
vegetables canned, several comhina-
tions and varieties of many o f them,
and more kinds are heinc added to
the canned menu every »ear. Some
of th
prmctPi vegeta"'« which
a
universally and always avail
able in canned form in th ? country
u e artichokes, as,arag :s, beans.
Dr. Simmons Goes
To Klamath Kails
Dr. and Mr«. A. M Simmon«
plan to leave tomorrow for Klam
ath Fall« where Dr Simmon« ha«
engaged quarters In the Poole
building for the purpose of estab
lishing an optical «hop
He is
taking hi« equipment from Ban
don for temporary u«e In his new
location but which will later be
taken to Purrs O r -. where a
te its, Er
sprouts, ca age,
canots, cauliflower, celery, c t . i ,
* ' • ny, kalr, lemiis, musbr raa,
okra, olives, onions, teas, pc ers,
tickles, punientoa, potatoes, y mp-
kin, sauerkraut, spinach, so- i«h,
tomatoes, turnips and whole’’ a t
A H e a lth y D ie t
Not only can the city d w -llc r
get ail of die canned vegetable? he
wants, hut he has the assurance of
scientists that they are equal in
nutritive qualities and superior in
vitam in content to fresh vegei Me»
cooked in open receptacles h? the
usual home methods. Thi» is be
cause canned vegetables are pro
cessed in hermetically sealed cot»-
tainers, and the oxygen whirh at-
treks their vitam in content is ex
cluded.
branch office is to be started
Dr. Simmon« came to Bandon
nearly five year« ago from Port
land and established the Optical
shop He has been very successful
In his profession and has been an
active worker In civic and fra
ternal affairs. For several year«
he was secretary of the Bandon
Chamber of Commerce through
which he has obtained a wide ac
quaintanceship t h r o u g h o u t the
state