f THE PORT ORFORD TRIBUNE, PORT ORFORD, CVKRY COUNTY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1925. Mother’s Day STRAIGHT TALKS WITH AUNT EMMY On Signing Papers for Strangers ua'ry l,""l926, It to taled 19,361, a new ’ day s of K lam ath county and took with it a dock an d w areh o u se on th e shores high reco rd for th e s ta te . of th e u p p er K lam ath lak e a t Ship- I T h ere a re 2963 reg u la rly en ro lled pington. T h e old b oat had ceased ac stu d e n ts a tte n d in g th e U n iv ersity of tiv e serv ice on K lam ath lak e an d had O regon at E ugene for th e sp rin g term , been used as a dw elling. acco rd in g to fig u res g iven out by Ben D orris of E ugene w as relieved Brief Resume of Happenings of C arleto n E. Spencer, re g istra r. of his com m ission as a m em ber of The firs t of a series of schools con th e sta te gam e com m ission by Gov the Week Collected for ducted by th e s ta te tra ffic d e p artm en t e rn o r P ierce. Mr. D orris had served for th e purpose of ex p lain in g th e pro- j on th e com m ission since Ju n e IS, 1923. Our Reaoers visions of th e new sta te autom obile H is term would have expired F eb ru ary lig h tin g law w as held in Roseburg. 25, 1928. Mr. D orris w as succeeded N ine bond Issues w ere vo’ed on at Two h u n d red K n ig h ts of P y th ia s ' by M. H. B auer of C orvallis. a special city election in E ugene and from i ll p a rts of th e sev en th d is tric t I Mr. and Mrs. H. H. H oppe and th e ir four w ere d efeated. of O regon, com prised of Hood R iver, i th re e children, V ernon, 17; R uth, 13, ll a .r y Knox, 67, tired of lit'-, s ’ ot W asco and S h erm an counties, m et in 1 an d H erm an, 11, lo st th e ir lives in a lilm self at his bachelor haute in hay an n u al convention in Hood R iver. fire w hich d estro y ed th e N oble build P ark , n ear M arsht -id. R esolutions m aking it unlaw ful to ing in M arshfield, containing a gro Tlie re g u la r spring nt ' t i n g of the levy or collect a tax from ag ric u ltu re eery sto re and a cafe in addition to W illam ette p resh y te-y was held in the o r livestock for a period of 15 y ears four occupied a p a rtm e n ts on the o r until 1940, h av e been ad o p ted by second floor, w ith a loss of m ore th a n P re sb y te ria n church a t Mill Pity. T he so u th ern O regon conference of P om ona g ran g e of Yam hill county. 660,000. T hirty-six head of fine H ereford th e P re sb y terian church io id a tv o - R e p resen tativ es of about 20 Oregon c a ttle belonging to C ounty Ju d g e T. S. and W ash in g to n c ream eries m et in day co n feren ce in K lauiu.l. Palis. C ornelius of A storia have succum bed A sto ria for th e firs t session of mem W ork on a m odern s, « ci system before a m alady w hich a tta c k e d th e b e rs of th e new ly o rganized N o rth P a for M onm outh was begun by Ek & h erd la s t w in ter, leaving only seven ctflc C o-operative C ream ery associa Lind of P o rtlan d , th e con'.•ac tors. su rvivors. tlon. C ream ery problem s w ere d is T hom as J. M cM illan, v eteran of the T he b attlesh ip O regon will arriv e in cussed and an n o u n cem en t m ade th at Civil w ar and p rom inent m em ber of P o rtlan d h arb o r Ju n e 15 and will be a m eetin g would be held n ex t m onth t fie O. A. It., died at R ainier, aged 78 accepted lorn ially by th e s ta te cn in P o rtlan d . you rM Ju ly 3 T h is w as announced follow S ales by m ills of th e W est Coast A pproxim ately 16,145,000 ' of tim ing a m eeting of th e b a ttle s h ip Ore- L u m b erm en ’s asso ciatio n In th e week b er will be sold at au 'aon at th e i gon com m ission. ending A pril 11 w ere m a terially high P n t t ■<! S ta te s land office in P ortland, A ctual d am age of ap p ro x im ately e r th a n o u tp u t and shipm ents. Book May 5, 65000 w as done In a high w ind th a t ings for th e w eek w ere 109,874,470 Miss M arie Sw earingen h as been visited U m atilla county and gave peo feet, w hich w as 8 p er cen t above the elected queen of the annual May (11> ple th e re th e n e a re s t th in g to a corn o u tp u t of 101,978,762 feet. S hipm ents fe stiv itie s a t th e Or gun u .a te Norm ;) lu ll ti ro.ido th a t thia p a rt of th e w est w ere 104,147,792 feet, or 5 per cent school. hud ev er experienced. below new business. T h ree p u re bred G 'm r.’ >-?y cows be Mo,if and A shland have joined A bout 94 m em b ers of th e Brow n longing to .1. E. F ish er ol O regon City harm s in a n o th e r a tte m p t to rem ove sm ead com m unity, 20 m iles e a st of wore hilled by liglltuing a s they stood tiie ,lno' ,ii county se a t from Ja c k so n A storia, have signed a petition asking uncle r u tree. ville to Medford. T h e la tte r city of- county a u th o ritie s to co-operate w ith Mrs. C lary ssa N um bers, 85, a rest- f . a ir ■ slto and tem p o rary quar- th em in d riv in g every vestige of Tit ot' O regon sin «• IS tl. déid at the ntoonshining and bootlegging o p era U rs f .• a co u rth o u se. >IiH' of h e r son, li.. E. La ‘ key. iu P rim • L. C am pbell, p resid en t of th e tio n s from th a t d istric t, follow ing the go (¡rove. of O regon h as re tu rn e d to d e a th of E lm er Hill, B row nsm ead U alvi Mr3. K eziuh It. Ye atril, 82 . pionie?r E ugene u . . «-r an ab sen ce of se v eral ! ran ch er, from a c u te alcoholism . Lim e county, died at th e b'-nv • of n; -n tlu st •nt a t C oronado Beach for O regon pensions have been g ran ted •r d au g h ter, Mrs. Adolph Benter, bis h tu iia . H is condition w as report- a s follow s: K en n eth C lark, F alls City. 1 ed to •ar ( ’resw ell. $18; A ugust N. P a rle tt, P o rtlan d , 617; g h tly im proved. A ugust P ederson, P o rtlan d , 615; W il A new autom obile stage line h as \ \ erd i.- receiv ed in M edford th a t •en estab lish ed 1». tw een I’.o gene and Celimel F: tik H . Ray, p rin cip al own- liam Laing, Salem , 612; Jam es W il Miiplclon over the new W illam ette er of t! e Mogue R iver E le c tric com- son, P o rtlan d , 612; C alvin F. P atton, Salem . 615; H elen K. T ate, N orth V alley F lorence stale highw ay. 1 ■ . p io n eer In th e develop- P o rtla n d , $20; N aotnl E. Bower, E u G overnor Pierce issued a proclama- in nt Os V rtrlc pow er In S o u th ern gene, 612; C h arles R athbun, Hood 11, n urging the people of tiie sta te O rr ;on, d 1 a t H u n tin g to n , N. Y. R iver, $15. of O regon to o l.s rve “A m erican i R n p iJ v itk is being done on th e T w o boys w ere in ju red by glass, F orest w eek,” April 27 to May 3. tru e k l«y 4 betw een th e rail head th e roof of th e Condon public school Six men and one woman were under and LL C i \ lie S p rin g s on th e South a rre st ut K lam ath Falls, suip o rted of ern h u j ' i co m p an y 's new line over w as blown off, heavy window panes in th e high school building w ere blown c o m p l i c i t y ill a sell- s of safe blowing m o u n tain s. About 100 th e (»Heu In, a lu m b er w arehouse w as toppled, operatio n d u rin g tie last two weeks men ¿ir, 1 :ig tra c k and ab o u t 300 j g arag es and hom es dam aged and a T i ie Booth Kelly mills ut W etidling a re e m y h j d in all cam ps. b arn dem olished by a heavy wind and S pringfield have gone back to T he ac. i 1 sh o rtag e of fu n d s In th e sto rm of cyclonic c h a ra c te r w hich a tii, Jay w orking week. The c r e w s s tu ’e tr • ■••y d e p a rtm e n t due to j stru ck Condon. T he to ta l dam age w as bad been w orking liut four days a tiie aio-cL u m an ip u la tio n s of Clar- e stim ated a t 65000. week. enve W. , lum pson, ex-cashler, ag T illam ook county su ffered d e feat in T h e F ed erated Clubs of Polk coun g re g a tts ; 08, acco rd in g to Alex a co u rt action b ro u g h t by th e Ore ty cam e Into being when ro p re te n ta n 1 1111. n. bookkeeper, who has gon A m erican L um ber com pany to re tive# of 17 com m unities of the conn complet« d aii a u d it of th e books. stra in th e tax co llector from collect ty m et at D allas and form ed au o r A m u a i. ‘tin g w as held by th e ing a special d is tric t ta x In road dis ganization. citizen s of t iscad e L ocks to discuss tr ic t No. 1, for 620,000 to c o n stru ct a G eorge S y lv ester S ardam , 72, for 11 plans for building of a new high ' road around N eahkahnie m ountain, y ears a resid en t of McMinnville, died, ¡ s, hool fur t! i) locality. It w as de w hich it w as hoped would eventually follow ing an Illness of 16 days, d ur ! elded th a ï t. ■ d is tric t school board co nnect w tth th e road from th e Can I- w hich ho suffered four stro k es be nsk» d to call an electio n to vote non B each sectio n and make a naw id p araly sis. 62i ' e,, i bon.is to ru n for 20 year». coast highway. i G roup 1 of th e O regon S tate Bank D estruction of m uch of th e spring Y our C o a r o rsa tio n e ra ’ asso ciatio n , Including about 150 tru ck garden crop n e a r T he Dalles, b an k ers In th e eight n o rth w estern eith er by being w ashed aw ay or by ‘PAVILION* cou n ties of O regon, will m eet In As hail, and dmcc. -e to fru it of an unde- T he sum m er dance “pi to r,a May 13, 1 tertulned ex ten t, w ere rep o rted by km" la as much a p a rt of Tw o larg e m illsto n es th a t cam e farm ers an d t.- h ard lsts as a re s u lt of cation tim e as the moequl arou n d C ape H orn to C orvallis, via 1 a freak hail s'.ortn and n e a r cloud them aelve*. T ha term ~pi P o rtlan d , 60 y ears ago. a re beiug ere c t burst. Ion" cornea to us from ed on c o n crete p ed estals In th e C or L atin "pnplllo." o r butt* T h ere ts to 1" no letup In co n stru c vallis city pnrk. T h e o riginal pavilions i tion w ork on ti c Roosevelt co ast hlgh- te n ts which sp read out bu Miss A nna Miller. 63, of A shland, way, S en ato r M cNary w as assu red A «true w as b urned to de.iih In a fire which I by Colonel W. B. G reeley, chief of X dy-llke wings. stro y ed th e resid en ce of W 11. th e U nited S lat, s fo rest service. Sev * which la roofed and o th e r < p rotected, b u t of tem po Wi-in -, henck In N ew castle, l’a., w here e ra l sectio n s of th a t highw ay have } character, Is a pavilion. been Included in th e O regon forest sh e w. visiting. ”!WJ- VWWWMI W T he n u m b er of b u sin ess concerns road system . o------------- F ire destro y ed th e old s te m wheel o p e ra tin g In O regon has been tn creas The Tribune gives the news. lug st, a " 'y alucc 1219. u n til on J,in I e r W iaottuu relic of th e earlj- pioneer OREGON NEWS ITEM S OF SPECIAL IN TEREST "Did you ht a r ab o u t th e te rrib le thing th at hap; uned to Mrs. Thom p son Aunt E m m ,V ask ed Maud. “It seem s th a t a man cam e to see h er to ask her to Invest In som e securities his firm was selling, and she said she did not have any -eady money. He asked her If she ’ad som e L iberty Bonds, and she sho ved him h er one L iberty Bond, a th ousand d o llar one. He ‘old h er th a t th e re w ere a num ber of co u n terfeit bonds about and upon exam ining her bond s lid th ere were some m arks th a t indicated It m ight be spurious Poor Mrs. T hom pson n ear ly fainted and begged th a stra n g e r to tell her w hat to do about It. “He told h er not to be unduly alarm ed, th a t th e re w as a chance th a t he was m istaken. H is firm was indig n ant, he said, about the 'o u n terfeit bonds th a t had been foist d on the public and Intended to do everything In Its pow er to run down the culprits. Th8y em ployed a man who was an au th o rity oa co u n terfeits and he could tell in a m inute if her bond was good or not. So Mrs Thom pson le t him have the bond to tak e to his olhne for exam ination." “And, of course, he d id n ’t bring It back.” com m ented A unt £m m y. “W orse than th a t ! ” Maud went on. “He said th a t, being a widow, he should be very careful in her business dealings, so he m ade her sign w hat 1:9 called a receipt, although she didn t read it. A bout a week a fte r his visit she received a num ber of sh ares o; stock th at she says she never heard of and certainly never bought. So she w rote to the Investm ent house the stock cam e from and said she thought a m istake bad been m ade. Im agine her surprise when she w as Informed th a t she had signed an o rd er for those sh ares of stock in exchange for a 6L- 000 L iberty Bond! “F irst she was com ing rig h t over to see you and then decided not to, be cause she felt asham ed when she re m em bered th a t you had w arned her about being tak en in, now th a t Mr. Thom pson is dead and she has to ban die her own business affairs My b ro th er Tom says he th in k s nothing can be done about it, as th e receipt bearing her sig n a tu re is really an or der for the sto ck .” “I am sorry to h e a r this, Maud," said Aunt Emm y. "W h at a pity she did not tak e h e r bond to the bank to have it exam ined if th a t slick sales man aroused suspicions in her mind as to its genuineness. She would have been dealing with people of Integrity, whom she could tru s t absolutely And yet she allow ed h erself to be duped by a perfect stra n g e r! “Yet th ere m ust be a lot of th a t sort of thing when you consider th a t over 6660,000.000 a y ear ts being taken aw ay from th e ho n est people In the United S tates by stock sw indlers If the people would only learn to tru st the guidance of th e ir financial affairs to th e ir banks and never sign any thing they have not read and do not u n d erstan d , th ere would be less un happiness about money m a tte rs.”— Anne B. Aymes. NEW ERA FOR AGRICULTURE New York.—A new era lies ahead for a g ricu ltu re because it now com m ands the b est econom ic th o u g h t of the business wor 1 d irected on Its prim e re q u irem en ts u" b e tte r d istrib u tion and m arketing. P resid en t W. C. Gordon of th e S tate Bank Division. A m erican B an k ers A ssociation, de d a r e s in a re cen t contm unic ,;ion to the th irte e n thousand m em bers of th e division. He seeks to en list their in te re st in th e work of Im proving the m ark etin g of farm products. “T he farm er today finds him selt far rem oved from his consum er-cus to m er by a long line of Interm ediate agencies, w hich often leave him In a position of d isad v an tag e as an In dividual p roducer.” Mr. Gordon says “It Is, th erefo re, not stran g e th a t he should seek to apply to ag ricu ltu re those principles of production and d istrib u tio n found successful in in dustry. H is rig h tfu l am bition Is to m ake, w here feasible, a g en eral ap plication of successful business ex perience to th e m ark etin g of agrlcul tu ra l products. C om m anding the best econom ic th o u g h t of the business world, ag ric u ltu re undoubtedly stands on the th resh o ld of a new era. In lieu of fa n ta stic panaceas, ag rlcu ltu r al w elfare— w hich, a fte r all. is the N ation's w elfare—h as need of a sane long range program th a t Is a t once practical, co n stru ctiv e and econom l cally Bound." He goes on to call a tte n tio n to the “long view program suggested for ag ric u ltu ra l d istrib u tio n ” a t W ashing ton by th e A g ricu ltu ral C onference urging study of It. CO-OPS T h ere a re m any sm all co-operatives th ro u g h o u t Ute U nited S tates, ban dllng wool, p ean u ts, w aterm elons, etraw berrleo. beans syrup, and other products. T he g overnm ent rep o rts th a t th e re a re a t 1. a st 1° 000 local co o p erativ e o rg an isatio n s In the United S tates. T he Iowa F leece and Wool G row ers’ A ssociation does an annual business of $2.331.251; the Ohio Sheep and Wool G row ers, $1,500,000; the O regon wool grow ers, 6500,000: w hile th e New York, T exas and South D akota A ssociations a<e said to be handling about a quart« r of a million d o llars' business each. FEDERAL AID ON : construction completed. ROOSEVELT HIGHWAY Mussel creek-Euchre creek, 5 miles, THRU CURRY COUNTY I under contract; construction will probably be completed by September, A Washington, D. C., dispatch has 1925. Douglas-Coos county line—Coos the following interesting comment concerning the Roosevelt Highway Bay, 9.65 miles urder contract; con struction probably will be completed thru Curry county: “There is to be no letup in con by June, 1925. Euchre creek-Gold Beach, 20 miles, struction work on the Roosevelt coast highway, Senator McNary was as forest highway funds allotted by sur sured today by Colonel W. B. Greeley, vey, which is to be made this year. “At the conference held on Febru- chief of the United States forest ser vice. Several sections of that high arey 27, attended by representatives way have been included in the Ore of the state highway commission, bureau of public roads, and forest gon forest road system. Among the sections of the highway service,” Colonel Greeley said, “a included in the program and the recommendation was made for the status of their construction follows: expenditure of $98,000 on a portion Port Orford-Brush creek, 6.75 of Euchre creek-Gold Beach in 1927. miles, construction completed. Brush creek-Mussel creek, 6.1 miles, Send us your Job Work orders. FOR SAEL « » 1 Salted Shad for Deep-sea Fishing : ANY AMOUNT 4c a lb. F. 0. B. Bandon Wanted to Buy Cod, Red Snapper, Halibut A. E. MORRIS i I —WHOLESALE ;: FISH BANDON • • : DEALER— J OREGON ; < ecu,-; I STAFF Ru-sell C. Keizer, M. D. Phi. J. Keizer, M. D. Ira lì. Barile, M. D. W. D. Butler, M. D. Miss Bertha Schmid, R. N. Superintendent Mrs. Carol C. Hons, R. N. H ead N urse Mrs. Doris Nichols Pathologist KEIZER BROTHERS HOSPITAL Corner Virginia and McPherson Téléphoné 2371 and 2361 ; NORTH BEND »••»♦»♦»♦n i i i i i » » 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 u u si i OREGON ; m m un n i I Wedderburn Hotel A H >me-like Place for Tourists, Fishermen, Hunters with every accommodation possible. Splendid Meals WEDDERBURN Comfortable Rooms. OREGON Make your money Work for Y O U ! IF \O U R money is worth wor’ang for it is worth saving. Saved money, deposited in this bank works for you. Open your account in our Savings Department. Do it today, tomorrow you may forget it—the next day you may regret it. S tart a Bank Account for your boy. One of the most vital lessons is that taught by the Bank Book. A marked step in your boy’s life is recorded when you show him the value of a Savings Account. . B ank §f Bandon BANDON , OREGON T he KO Z Y FOR CIGARS, TOBACCO AND L l’NCH GOODS Confectionery and Pool Room R. R. SMITH, PORT ORFORD