The Turner tribune. (Turner, Or.) 19??-19??, January 15, 1931, Image 3

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    THE
The Turner Tribune
gum«*.
aÙHHCKII'TION *1.26 »'Kit YKAIt “
Jo
TURNER
T R IB U N E
«lays here last week looking after his
Gfor»> Christenson o f Marion sold
Mr. an«l Mrs. R. L. Stevenson anri
parents, Mr. and Mr*. White,
were here from Mukiltis, Washing­
ton, for a several days' visit with
Mr. Stevenson’s mother, Mrs. U. 8.
Talobt, and husband an«l his grand­
father, S. H. Baker.
McKinney and Doc Eplcy «in« ranch and visiting with hi* mother, hi* service station nnd farm to a Mr. her
Mrs. Hiolge.
(»<•0. Given* without hi* pipe.
Knti i < d et t Pnv t o f f l e c at Tune r,
I.ee Barber trying to k«-«-p a liiun
Oregon, .».• «• cond-clait* matter, under
new
set o f store teeth in hi* mouth.
the Art of March S, IM7K
Mathew, of Minnesota, who is taking
possession this week. Mr. Mathews
has moved hi* family to the Christo­
pher home on B street anil will look
for a new location.
Mr. ami Mrs. I^vi Fliflet and
«laughter, Edith, ami son, Albert,
w»-re «linner guests Sumlay at their
sister’s, Mrs. Arthur Kunke.
Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Woo«l o f Salem
were out here Sumlay looking after
things on their ranch.
Ed Schilling has r<-ntc<l the F. A.
Wood ranch an«l will move his family
there soon.
Mrs. Grace Thomas and her daugh­
ter, known to ull as Anna Zirkle,
spent Wednesday here with her sister,
Mrs. Eva Cummings.
And Bill Ball, Hester Crum«- and
every Thursday at Turner,
Professor Fox riding up the city’s
M ition, < 'Minty, Oregon.
throughfare in an Austin automobile.
—
--- —
M 1(8. CHAS. 8. CLARK
Kditor*
If Joe McKinni'y «lon’t quit t« awin’
und
CHAS. S Cl ARK
Publisher* u about our column we’ll mention his
name about seventeen times in it. Just
the same Joe ’taint evcrybo«ly that
can be u ripping columnist, by jove.
Hoover prosperity, our purm-s *o full,
-----o.....
The recent proposal to make a 1»0
Some people think he’s a live wire,
per cent rut in our immigration figure While some think it’» all bu— ;
i* the Muncst relief nieuMure ever
When the "corner” boys urgue it
brought before the American public
out, what will they say o f poor
wwwwwv
und u glurice at our present source*
Meier?
o f influx should help any sensible
A fter all the big events of the lust 1
lawmaker decide from what countries
two
weeks we are ufruid to leave the
even the 10 per cent should be ad­
house
for f« ar o f getting *hot or be­
mitted.
UNDERTAKERS
A check-up o f the vuriou* national ing robbed. Beware people, beware!
By, by, till n«*xt week.
representative* already in our midst
---
-o.—
-
prove* conclusively the desirubility o f
LLO YD T. RIG DON
immigrants from northern rather than
County Coroner
southern Kurope. The people of Nor­
CLOVERDALE
E
■
way, Sweden, Denmark, Holland, Ger­
Mr. ami Mrs. Jay Cook were in
many or Belgium as u type they are
Salem, Thursday, looking after the
big plucid people, honest and hard
sale o f their prunes.
working, who are interested primarily
Earl H edge o f H'-ml spent'u few
in getting a good home und educating
their children. Their second genera­
tion over here make citizen second to
none anywhere.
When one moves down into south­
ern Kurope, however, not so good.
Not so good. France, Spam, Portu­
P o r ^ O n t
gal, Italy— immigrants from that sec­
tion are a doubtful risk. While many
flue citizens are o f such extraction,
there are too many others who black­
en the reputation o f the entire sec­
tion.
In chirking over the names o f no­
torious personage-I mixed up in white
clave traffic throughout the ports o f
the western world, about one in u
thouHind will have a Nordic name.
» »•
fl«fail:....tiiililHftífeliÍilillliilllllil^i
The other 999 will be invariably Ital­
ian, Spanish, French, Portuguese,
Itussian or Polish Jew.
Newspaper write-ups of the gang
wars which have rocked our cities for
the past few year* and made us the
lit tilt*
objects o f derision throughout the
world, feature almost entirely names
le-tunl
Quota Regulations
S - E - R - V - I - C - E
B u ild in g S u p p lies
ROUGH
TURNER
STATE
DRESSED
s
LUMBER
T
W. T.Rigdon&Son
Wood
AND
R
Y
U
T U R N E R L ’b ’r
M.F.G. CO.
E
AND
E
W e T r y to Sell Y o u W h e t
U
You Need
NOT
S
S
E v e r y t h i n g W e Can
P. O. Box 208
BANK
P h o n e 275
i >-A-T-I-S-F-A-C-T-I-O-N
Paid on 6 months Time Deposits
Fire—Automobie
Insurance Written
W. J A Y
General Contractor and Builder
Cement Work and Plumbing
eiiiiiiiiiiiii»
All .loin Hand* and
Circlo To The Left
e n d i n g III Ml Mi . ”
o r "in
Traced
to their origin, not one in ten but
hail* from somewhere in section un­
der this unfavorable discussion.
The quota regulation passed a few
years ago was a step in the right di­
rection, because it made a radical
cut-down in immigration admitted
from this section. Even so, it was too
lenient. If admissions from southern
Europe were limited to u dozen a
year, our country would be infinitely
better off. Some estimable people
would undoubtedly be exclude«!, o f
course, but that loss would be made
up a hundred fold by the black-hand
ringsters, white slave runners, bol­
sheviks nnd gun toting gangsters that
would be thereby kept out.
Whim wheat proves to be made up
o f more tares than good sound grain,
the safest plan is to throw out the
whole thing.
--------o----
SOUP FOB SOUP SI,MS
T u rn er
Turner, Oregon
Community D an ce
E v ery
• A W A W / A V d V A W .’A V A T A P A flA W M W M W
Saturday Night
IxM's Get the Old Community Spirit, Give us your Support.
Being your friends to the biggest and best
M ake 1931
OLD TIME DANCE
A n E le c tric a l
E v e r y S a tu rd a y N ight
Sponccrcd by Ball Bros, and (he People of the Community
iiiiiwiiiiiii;-
î
grappini
California
!
on your train trip East
at no additional cost
I f we were Mr. Knot we would
linve tied Mr. Smith for first place,
but Knot* are funny. Sometimes they
g« t thairselve* around a man’s neck
and tie him up for the rest o f his life.
Things we’d like to see—
The T. H. S. basketball team win a
C o a c h
Year
One of your best resolutions for
the coming fyear will be to do things
electrically—to get away from drud­
gery and time-taking labor—to do
things cheaply, thoroughly and in less
time with electricity so that you can
have more time to yourself.
Whether you live in the city or
on the farm electricity is the greatest
servant you can have—and by far the
cheapest.
By M a s M c K a y
California has two kinds o f weath­
er "usual” and unusual.” Wo notice
that the Los Angeles $10,000 golf
tournament hud to be postponed on
account o f two days o f heavy rain
. . . is this a misprint or some more
o f Cal’s “ unusuul” weather?
Anyhow here in old Oregon we
don’t hnvc to postpone unything on
account o f rain. We just say “ weath­
er permitting” we will carry on.
■ ■ o ■ ■ -
Walter E. Keyes o f Salem offers
$26 annually to students taking first
two places in an oratorical contest.
We see that Mr. Smith wins first
while Mr. I.afky and Mr. Knot tied
for second place. Mr. Knot ought to
b<* ashamed o f himself o f tieing up
Mr. Lafky.
DENHAM
No tiresome days are ahead for
you in 1931 with a vacuum sweeper,
refrigerator, range or washing ma­
chine. Plan now to take advantage
o f the many electrical servants dur­
ing the New year.
a n d
tourist fa re s
r a d i c a l l y cut
*5 0 *o CHICAGO
Southern Pacific has cut
coach fares Hast to new low
levels. Sec C a lifo rn ia on
your way. It costs no more.
Tickets arc good in warm,
clean coaches on fast train*.
Liberal stopovers at impor­
tant cities en route, such as
San Francisco, Los Angeles,
FI Paso— now at the height
o f th eir gay m id -w in ter
season.
(from main line points)
via San Francisco, Los Ange­
les and other winter resorts.
ORLEANS
ST. LOUIS . . . .
NE W YORK . . .
NE W
$62.30
30.00
60.70
and many olben.
Ask ab«xit «be new tickets good
in Tourist Sleepers. This extra
comfort costs but little m«>re.
Southern Pacific
H. S. Bond,
Mountain
Power
STAYTON
Local Agent
W l
W3?¡j¡ States
Company
OREGON
,% W ,S W V .% S ,A V A W A W W A V W y W J