Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Ontario Argus. (Ontario, Or.) 1???-1947 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 17, 1922)
THE ONTARIO AUG OS, ONTABIO, OBEQdff, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1922 Successful Graduates Are the Best Recommendations of Tliis Institution offers n thorough, practical, and standard cduca tion at a cost within reach of the high scliftol graduate- It offers training for collegiate degrees in: Agriculture Mines Commerce ' Pharmacy Engineering and Mechanic Arts Vocational Education Forestry ' Chemical Engineering Home Economics Military Science and Tactics It offers training also, in: The Schoolrtif Music, Physical Edu cation, Industrial Journalism. -, Fall Term Opens September 18 For circulars of Information and illustrated booklet, write to TUB REGISTAR, OREGON AGIUCUIrUKAL COLLEGE Corvallls, Oregon ' Stability starts with the crude One of the most important requirements of a good motor oil is that If possess stability that is, that it maintain its chemical composition and .its lubricating body under all conditions of engine operation. If an oil changes its chemical composition "breaks down" ethighoperating temperatures, it can no longer maintain a lubricating film be tween the bearing surfaces, and its value as a lubricant is destroyed. Certain crude oils possess a higher degree of stability than others. Because of its large pro duction of practically every type of crude, this company is free to choose for the making of Zerolene only those crudes which are partic ularly adapted for the purpose. Tje Patented Vacuum Process ,In the process of distilling and refining these selected crudes, it is of the greatest import ance not to destroy their natural "oiliness" and stability. For this reason we employ our own patented high-vacuum process exclusively. By this process the. oil produced Zerolene re tains all the natural "oiliness" and stability of theoriginaljSelected crudefrom which it is made. No other refiner on the Pacific Coast uses any form of vacuum distillation. No other refiner in the United States uses as high a vacuum as this company. Zerolene of the correct grade for your car gives perfect lubrication and permits the develop ment of maximum power, speed and gasoline niileage. .rrt) (pomi more powerfispeed less friction and wear thru Gnred fabrication STANDARD OIL COMPANY California) CV I iTIkJS fe Every surplus dollar not actually hidden away is earning money for some one. ' Until you have a better, permanent investment for your funds, a savings account, at this Bank ' is the ideal employment for them. " Do not let a single dollar lie idle. Put it to work here. ' SUMMONS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE . COUNTY OF MALHEUR Jool Looper and Bryant Looper, Plaintiffs vs. IC. S. D. Fruit Land Company, a corporation; Albert Belisle; Hen ry Bolisle; Mary Ann Bollslo; Albert J. Appoll; Julia Klesel; Wllhelmine Paulino Shearman; Mary A. Thompson; Fred W. Kle sel; Etta Johnson; Minnie Neeco; Lillio Ambrose; Anna Dale; Charles L. Thompson; Robert A. Thompson, Jesse E. Thompson; Mabel Morgan; Charlie Brace well; Gerald Bracewell; Robert Bracewell and Vera Bracewell, Defendants. To Mary Ann Belisle, Albert J. Appoll, Etta Johnson, Lllllo Am brose, Mabel Morgan, Charlie Brace well, Gerald Bracewell, Robert Bracewell and Vera Bracewell, being nine of the above named Defen dants. IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON, You and each of you nro hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above ontitled suit ou or before the expiration of six weeks from the date of the first publica tion of this summons, the same be ing the last day of the time pre scribed by order of the- court direct ing service of summons in said suit to bo made upon you by publication; and if you fall so to answer, for want thereof, the plaintiffs will ap ply to the court for the relief de manded in said complaint, to-wlt: For a decree of said court quiet ing plaintiffs' title to the following described tract of' land situated in Malheur County, Oregon, tewlt: "Commencing at a point 1335 feet West and 30 feet North of the Southeast corner of Section 7, Twp. 19 South, Range 47 E. W. M., and running thence North 1133.35 feet, thence East 2C5 feet, thehce South 1133.35 feet, thence West 265 feet to point of beginning, and embrac ing and including therein what has heretofore been known and de scribed, as Lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, C and 7, of Block 13, and all of Block 14, in the Village, of Arcadia in Malheur County, Oregon; and adjudging that you and each of you have no right, title, estate or interest in said lands, and that plaintiffs' title to the same is good and, valid, and for all other relief demanded In said com plaint. You are further notified that this summons is served upon you by pub lication in pursuance of ah order of the Hon. Dalton Biggs, Judge 'of the above entitled Court, which said order was made and entered in said cause on July 13, 1922, and directed that this summons be published once each week for six successive weeks in the "Ontario Argus". The date of the first publication of said summons is on July 13, 1922, and the last publication is on August 24, 1922. WELLS W, WOOD, Attorney for Plaintiffs. My residence and postoftice ad dress is Ontario, Oregon. MAflRIAGE MADE A BUSINESS Practice in France That Can Hardly Be Said to Savor Much of Romance. Anyone can marry anyone, every one I If they have a business mali nger who knows the business. Since the war, In Francs, weddings have doubled, births Increased anil deaths declined In the most astonish ing manner. Now, as nil know, marriage does not necessitate a business uiiinager the olil helter-skelter way of tailing In love by hazard will undoubtedly con tinue very much In vogue; but If nnyone Imagines that marriage Is not moving with the times and yielding to business organization, they know llttlo of what Is happening In France today ! Never before have girls done such marrying In France with available bridegrooms so reduced In number! What Is more, this organized promo tion of marriage gives every girl a chance despite handicaps of unnc qualntnnce, social disadvantage, plain looks, lack of money, luck of family, lack of pushing friends to aid the match. Your business manager's your" push ing friend I Helns clfls to mnrrv? Helps men. also. I Perhaps even, more so. . . , You will object. -And" romance? "But the quality, monsieur, think of the quality !" said madame. "Durable solid, the best mark In France! Before the young folks are" allowed toiiieet, both had been Investigated, weighed compared and balanced by social ex perts and the pairing-off O. K.'d In final conference 1 Now, there's a mar riage" that will last. It's got good wear In Itl" SIXTY FARMERS HEAR SEED EXPERT LECTURE Buck! horn, Mnrshcldcr and Al falfa or Sweet Clover Mixtures Over sixty farmers gathered at the Grange hall at Cairo last Thurs day evening to hoar B. F. Shoohan, who Is secrotary of tho Wostern Seed Growers Marketing Company, sales agent for the Idaho and Utah cooperative seed growers associ ations, speak on clover seed grow ing and tho grading and marketing of it. Tho gentloman has had a wide experienco In tho seed lino and is familiar with production problems, over aVumber of states and under varied conditions. Ho Is familiar with Malheur soils and climatic conditions from several years ob servations and Isvcry positive that this section Is a superior clover seed country, capable of producing high yields and superior quality. Ho bolloves that clover is moro profit- growers of Malheur county were go ing to be invited to Join tho Idaho Seed Growers association and pool thoir seed with tho Westorn Seed Growers Marketing company and that as soon as the membership was about completed, meetings would bo held in tho different communities to elect committeemen to have charge of tho affairs in this district and to reprosent tho Malheur county grow ers on the board of directors. He arranged with S. B. Conklin to at tend the membership work. PARROT FISH ODD CREATURE BONDS CALLED FOR PAYMENT MALHEUR COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 8, OREGON Notice is hereby given that tho total remaining outstanding block of an issue of $40,000 bonds of the above-mentioned school district, dated April 1, nineteen hundred and eleven, due April 1, nineteen hundred and thirty-one; optional for redemption on and after April 1, nineteen hundred and twenty-one being bonds numbered 1 to 92, in clusive, In denominations of $500 each are called for payment and will bo paid on and after September 1, nineteen hundred twenty-two at the County Treasurer's office at Vale, Oregon, and no interest will be al? lowed after September 1, nineteen hundred twenty-two. W. L. TURNER, Clerk, Malheur County, ScBool District No. 8, Oregon. First publication July 27, 1922 FOR SALE) 62 acres under Warm Spring Project three miles west of Ontario, known as Springer ranch, $600.00. Write Geo. H. Foster Co, Baker, Oregon, May 25 Aug 31 pd. Must Have Been Devised. When Moth er Nature Was In Unusually Freakish Mood. If some one asked you, "What Is that which has a beak like that of a parrot and cheek pouches lke those of a monkey, lives In the sea and chews the cud like a cow?" jou might Imagine It was some kind of catch rid dle. Yet there Is a creature which an swers this description perfectly. It Is called the parrot fish. Tle upper and lower Jaws have be come hardened Into a sharp, curved beak, which Is Just the tool required for lopping 'off, lumps, of tough weed. Each piece snipped off by the beak Is passed Into one of the two curious pouches which adorn the cheeks, and there It remains until the parrot llsh feels that he has collected enough to make a good meal. He (hen lies on the bottom and chews the cud by means of the splendid set of teeth which nature has plnted, not In his mouth, but In his throat. Exchange. Time's Changes in England. The poacher, tho trespasser, the man ho by accident lets his pigs or hellers out upon the public road, the urchin who robs an orchard, and many minor rural "malefactors" are, It Is generally claimed, heing more person ally dealt with by modern country magistrates. In England. The abolition of the old-time benches of squires and landowners', whose right to he made justices of the peace was almost re garded as hereditary, and their substi tution by men of Integrity In every walk of life, and now by women, has wrought a change In rural police court Justice which the country mind under stands and appreciates to the full. On a country bench recently, a prominent landowner, his agent, one of his la borers were all adjudicating together. NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON, FOR ' MALHEUR COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE ES TATE OF CLARENCE W. HO WARD, Deceased. Notice, la hereby given by the un dersigned administrator of the Es tate above namod, to the creditors of arid all persons having claims against tho Estate of Clarence W. Howard, deceased, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers accord' Ing to law, within six months after the first publication of this notice at the home of tho administrator of said estate at Vale, Oregon, or at the office of the attorneys of said estate. The first notice hereof ra pub lished in the Ontario Argus, this 3rd daj of August, 1922. ANDREW W. HOWARD. Administrator of said Estate. BROOKE & GALLAGHER, Ontario, Oregon, attorneys for estate above named. FOR SALE Are acreo on bill 8-4 mfle from High School under Ad vancement Co. ditch with water right. Fine place for chickens ' or garden, All good soli. Price 600. Inquire W. H. DoolitUa Trustee. A Kind Wish. When Jean went to her little neigh bor's to visit she often talked to the grandmother of tho house. "I have a grandmother, tpo," she Vould say, "but she's In heaven." And she and the grandmother of the house were good friends until one day the grandmother was cross. She scolded the two little girls for leav ing the screen door open, for walk ing 'In a flower bed and dropping crumbs on the floor. The two youngsters sought re'fuge on the porch. Grandmother started to follow them there a llttlp later, to try to make up. Sho realized the necessity of doing so, for when she reached the door she heard Jean sny "Ruth, I wish your grandmother was vlsltln' my grandmother today." Still Shrouded In Mystery Mary and her little brother were playing In the back yard. A worm came to play Its humble part In their lives, too. . "Oh, Mary," he cried, suddenly. "I hrfvc found a worm I" A robin looked enviously from a tree. "QJi, Mary," the child exclaimed, "is a worm good luck? Say, Mary, Is a worm good Iuck?" Mary replied, but her voice was quiet, mo that I do not know yet whether a worm Is good luck or not. Washington Star. Husbands They Would Like. Half of the women enrolled at (he University of Wisconsin re willing to marry a man on a salary of 32,f0( a j ear, according to a report Issued by the statistics committee of the uni versity. An average of one cooil out of seven wants u husband with a sal ary of at least 5,000 a year, while one coed demanded a $20,000-a-year hu band. able than most of the crops now be lng rown by tho majority of the farmers. The speaker dwelt at length on tho absolute necessity of avoiding tho common mistake of over half of tho farmers In Idaho that of plant ing foul seed which will Immediate ly lower their grade .and render their land almost permanently un fit for the production of high grade seod because of tho weed seed living in tho land for years afterwards. He cautioned particularly against dodder, saying that 33 states' in the Union noy make it .unlawful to sell seed containing dodder and that the price or ciovor containing even a little dodder is certain to bo much less than puro seod. Ho also men tioned buckthorn as a very serious wood and advised growers to bo waro of foxtail, watergrass, marsh elder and mixtures of alfalfa and sweet clover. "Trust no seedmen whatever, but always have- a state test of tho seed you buy beforo you put It in the ground. This will cost you nothing hilt a two cent stamp to send a sample to your seed laboratory at Corvallls or to the Idaho Socd .laboratory at Bolso.,, Then you are sate, but If you buy without the test you may havo-an experience like a man who bought seod last fall from a dealor who said it was puro and it later turned out to contain 18000 dodder seeds per pound .after having passed up seed offered by another dealer who was honest and Informed tho farmer that it contained 12 dodder seeds por pound, said tho speakor. "If you have doddor In your field, then tho only thing to do Is to get In there at onco and cut it out, pile it on the spot and burn It as soon as dry." Care should bo tak en to get all of the tendrils as thoy aro often spread out farther than will bo noticed. If even a small piece Is left it will grow and make a largo patch In tho field before harvest. A llttlo straw or keroseno will help to do tho burning. Cer tain weeds such as China lettuco and pig weeds aro not serious, as their seeds can bo separated from tho clover quite- readily. Tho speaker advocated fall seed ing as tho most successful practice for this section. This Is accom plished by drilling 8 to 10 pounds of seed per aero with a double dies drill into clean grain stubble dur ing tho month of August and irri gating It up by tho first of Septem ber. Somo vory goods stands have been secured by seeding up to the 20th of September, but earlier seed ing is bost as it gives tho plants time to mako a strong growth In tho fall. The first season after planting, a crop of hay can be takon In June and a crop of seed In September. Tho second season, tho first crop should bo taken for soed and the second again tor seed If It makes. Otherwise It may bo used for hay, pasturo, or the land plowod for fall wheat. " It Is considered advlsablo to delay Irrigation somewhat tho first spring In order to force the plant to root deeply, wator being applied whon tho plants begin to show nood of it by wilting in the aftprnoon and as needed thereafter to produce a good crop of hay. After the hay crop is cut it is also consid ered advlsablo to delay Irrigation somewhat until now growth Jiag. started, whereupon a soaking Irri gation should bo given. It needed, tho wator should be run lightly over tho field whon the plants aro In full bloom and another light Ir rigation when tho eood Is filling, Tho variation botweon soils, bow over Is sufficient to make It neces sary for every grower to study his conditions and sook to apply water in tho way that gives him bost re sults, rather than follow a fixed rule. Mr. Bheehan said that tho clover GUARDIAN'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE Notice Is hereby givon that under and by virtuo of an Order of Sale, duly made and entered by the Coun ty Court of tho Stato of Oregon for tho County of Malheur, on tho 29th day of July, 1922, in tho matter of the Guardianship Estato of Newton F. Zahllor, a minor, tho undersigned guardian of said minor will, on and after the 9th day of September, 1922, at tho law office of Wells W. Wood In Ontario, Oregon, offer for Bale, and soil at private sale, in one parcel, for cash In hand, sub ject to confirmation 'by said County Court, the following described tract of real ostato owned by said minor, to-wlt: Tho North-east Quarter of Section Thirty-one In Township Sixteen South, Range Forty-four East W.. M in Malheur County, Oregon. Done and dated and first pub lished this 10th day of August, 1922. ANNIE E. CARLILE, Guardian ot tho estate of Newton F. Zahllor, a Minor. . Last publication September 7, 1922.- FARMERS WANTED to leaso de sirable alfalfa and grain Ranches under Irrigation. Ample wator, no maintenance charge, good roads and schools, LIboral contract. Will rent for one, throo and five years with prlvologo to buy. We want bona fide farmers who want to mako all there is in it. Must bo properly equipped and come woll recommended. A CHANCE TO .GET AHEAD. Call on or write. H. D. Etsmann, Mgr. Malheur Land Co., Jamleson, Ore gon. 35 tt. Professional Cards LUCY LEE MILLER Violinist Pupil of R. R. Plttenger Caldwell, Idaho Will toach In Ontario on Saturdays Phono 170 W . DR.G.A.P06UE Office at residence, one block west and two north of Moore hotel, Phone 57W. IVAN E. OAKES Consulting Engineer Irrigation &,Drainage work General Engineering Office City Hall, Ontario, Ore. DR. J. O. BARTLBTT PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Office In Wilson Bldg. Over Post Office ONTARIO, OREGON DR. R. IA. MOON Chiropractic Physicians Electro-Tli?rapcutlsta Spine &Nerve Specialists Phono 108 , Ontario, Ore. DRS WEESE&FORTNER OFFICE HOURS: 9 to 12 and 2 to 6. Office over First National Bank. Telephone No. 33 J. Ontario, Ore. DR. A. R. ROBERTS Dentist Between Ontario Pliarmacy and Depot. PHONE B8-F.1 DR. HARRIET BEARS Osteopathic Physician Wilson Itldg., Over Radera Phono 40 DR. O. M. TYLER DENTI8T Office in Wilson Bldg. Office Hours 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. Phone 117 for Appointment. ? X 3 2 i r, I --w I t? n. I 3 fl U (I rs 2 1st a ii o s T I I ,0 It mjtirzv3r v sw