Image provided by: Santiam Historical Society; Stayton, OR
About The Stayton mail. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (April 17, 1913)
WELCOMED A KICKING. SÏAYT0N MARKET REPORT T u r k i s h P r i s o n e r s of W a r U nder G u ard o f Bultfarians Hi . 13 to M H iring»________ 12 to 13 Broilers__ . . . . . 12 to 13 Ri’Obtero............... ____8 to » Mixed Cbii-kins 12 to 13 Geese 9 Duck I 13 to 14 Turkey« ........ 17 Dri-used Turkey* ........... a ‘ Veal . 12 to 13 Pork .. 9 to K»J U v H -KN ( 'hoice 8 t«m I < > Llv Hug*, Heavy Rough 7i Ï-KK»........................... 17i Corredici ThurwIayN lu t s u b jtd to change u it lu ut notice. » m West Slayton A. H. Wolf and fami'y spent Sunday at the Branch home. George Sherricks was on the sic< list the first of the week. . A carload of fat hog* were ■hipped from this place to Port land Tuesday. George Iieome ma le a busi ness trip to Staytpn Monday. Messrs. Fery and their fami lies visited w i t h relatives in Slayton Sunday. Mr. McNeil o f Albany has been visiting his daughter Mrs. K. VanNuys. Copyright. toil, by Ainertcnn l*re«« Aaaoelntlon D E F E A T E D . dtnaruu'd ami cloaeljr guarded, hundred* or Turkluh sol- dlorn m ere tnkeii from llie Macedonian hattlvIivMx to Klara /agora by ltie Bulgarian vlrtor*. «« »howu In Mil* photograph lluiulllatwl ami cowed by the r capture the prlxonvra of war were furtlier *ub- Je, ted to the tutml* amt Jeer- of the vi.-t«rt..i:x guarit* The Ign-'Uiy of defeat ««■ bad enough but the added lirnn I of ■ >ftnre must have fanned to pitch heat the #re< of hatred lu th- br <-1 >i 'f tin • • h • ar “ F i t * ” C c .m u n ;.mi wife who *|K-nt the winter In Kh math Pa'I* returned home today. The people of this place have organized a Non Sectarian So ciety. Cap. Briggs and wife were Stayton visitors the first of the Silverton’a city election, which week. will be held May 5, will have two Jessie Mclnnis returned home women on the election board. Monday after an extended visit For Sale—young team of driving with relatives in Portland. ...... . a d 6 yeare old. W m M ex- West Stayton Warbler Mr*, l.u itrr B u tm a n ai d l ate,- rt- tarw | hot ■ where they have Let'll v.niting. Mrs. change for larger home* or mule*. Chiu*, l-.ply ..c< "inj a «1 t - ■ in 1 . u Fur particular* address Box 183. I)r Mitre* Anti I'nln Hill* for riirum.itlein sta y ton. Ore. The S T A Y T O N M A IL Published every Thursday by E . M . Olmsted John Caldwell and family and V. J. Philippi and family visited at the M. H. Titus home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Conway of Port land visited last week at the E. E. Lee home. IS - ' W l I 'T K I N S , 1 n o p u r y e a r In u d v u n c e A ■ I v x - r t Itx ii K n t e s o n m |> j » I K - u t t o n C a s k s of T h a n k s —? .50 O m ituakiks - $ 1.00 up. Positively oil ¡mjters stopped on e.\ pit ¿it ion o f subscription WATCH THESE BIG REALTY OFFERS J After visiting a few days at J. W. Kiphart's, Elmer Dodson and wife left for Grants Pass Monday, where they will make j their future home. Mkie Gassner is haulinpr lum- ; ber to build his new house. M. S. Titus and wife visited at ; Andiew Shaab’s Sunday. by S. H. HELTZEL ' acre tract, 3 blocks from Stayton 00 acres, 2& miles from town, P. (). Price $1500 cash. improved. Price $70 per acre. K in g s to n K in k s Mrs. Richardson of Stayton visited at the home of her broth- er, P. P. Crabtree, Sunday. Ent* m l as second class m atter ut the postofTlcc at Stayton, Marion county, < regon, under the act of Congress of March 3, 1S79. All communication* should be addressed to THE STAYTON M a il . V It. J. Kusy and wife were the guests ot the lattars parents in Marion Sunday. well 2 acres partly cleared inside city lim 3 acres in town of Stayton, for 30 it . price $150 jwr acre cash. days only, 112.7 i>or acre. Cush. Two 5 acre tructa inside city limits 15 acres inside corjairate limits of o f Stayton. Price, $800 each. Stayton, all cleared. Price $2100,Terms. ( bxxl 5 room house on First street 1 also have a small well improved Stayton, u snap at $1000. Terms. farm near Sublimity for sale. Terms. Joseph Gassner and wife left Tuesday for a few day's visit at Seaside. Robert Darby and Miss Grace Crabtree visited at Plinny Crab tree's Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Titus at tended church in Stayton Sun day. 25 acres unimproved, partly cleared, :: :! a< res, 6 miles from town, will improved, price $45 per nere. Terms, i from town, river bottom. Price, Vilas Philippi hauled $1025, Terms. j hojjs to town Monday. Beautiful Home in Ashland, Oregon, 120 acres, 1 mile from town and Ry. to trad*1 f o r Stayton property. A Byron Robertson and Well improved. Price $85 per acre. good opportunity. spent Sunday at Stayton. Terms. 40 acre farm, well improved, J mile from market and Ry. Price, $3200. Terms, $1000 down, bal. ft yrs. 235 acre farm, 3 mi from town and Ry. Well improved. Price $55. *>er ». Terms. s ome wi f e Mike Gassner took sonic hogs to market Tuesday. ti acre tract, only a short distance from main street Stayton, well improv 33 acres, & mile from railroad, m ar Only a few Ions of land plaster left. ed tine for sulxlivisnn, go*si buildings. ket and school, tloodt! room house a m i1 See W. A. Weddle, 3 acres improved, 6 room house,bam. outbu“dln«*- , v '" ' * ° ° ° '1Vmi** VV. R. Urban fli.ishe 1 the concrete orvlianl. etc. Close in, and in city 65 Here farm, one half mile from walk in front of Wm. Nendol’s Livery limits of Stayton. Price $2ii0*l. Terms, town and R y., well improved. Price, Barn this week. it room mmlern house, 4 big lots, all, l>1'’ *' 1 mB' 8) down, bal. .> well improved, only 4 blocks from post 80 acres, i '. a mil*a from town, office in city of Stayton. A bargain a t ( building, orchard, over half $2 n ni, one half down. cultivation, n gnml buy at the ,,f it® per acre terms, For Sale 97 aeree 3A miti s south Stayton, MI aen - under nltlvation, dock and fan n toola compiete goes with t h è place. Well improvcd, running water. Price $8600. Terms, g ì. al liuildings, Imy, grain, One full block in Stayton, improved and situated in the center of the town, , iiargnm a- it can be cut into kignt lots and t h c money doubled. Pnce, $4000. yrs. Chicken Pie Dinner at the I. O. O. F. good Mall on Horse Show Dny by the Rebek- under ah Lodge of Stayton, Come. price. 1 L . M. Sturgis, R. R. and Earl Fox left Monday morning for Eugene where they will stay for some time. Special — Nah It Quick—140 acres 6 Wanted- About 2ft or ¡JO h e a d of mi. from town, on It. F . D. and Cream horses or cattle for pasture at $1.50 Routes, & mi. to school, well improved, per head. P. P. Crabtree, Kingston, tf .good buildings, fine orchard, running Mrs. Mary Hallman an i daughters w h i c r ’ H n °P*to^ * to fnrm- would ask le tte r than 7100 per a t c . I Our prie* only ?H5 per acre. Terms Price include* Stock ami Farm Mactiir.- I ery. S. H. HELTZEL, Agent who have been visiting here this win ter left for their home in Philadelphia, P a., Monday. Lee Brown gave a party in honor of I his eighth birthday yesterday after- j noon. About ten of his boy friends were present. Refreshments were I served at about six o ’clock. O dd In c n J.n t T h a t P ro v e d th* P o p u la r it y of D u m a s. OREGON WOOLEN M ILL C LO TH ES Ill "At) Autobiography" Mine. Ju - •I 11 It. tin- great French nctreaa. write* of Alexander luiniaa the elder: "I'lil- gInnt of a mulatto, with Ilia big. bln* k. morkliig eye*, Ida wide no* trdx. Ibl I. II|ix. heavy chin. Ida crixply ■ urllug luilr mid Ida forehead with Ita Mirniige bump«, like that of some un ruly i Idol who lx always lighting with 11 :x lomnidex. wax truly a represents- II* e per-oiiage. a type reflecting all the I uxxlnn of the romanticists. There would IniVe Ix-eu aoiuethlug wanting to hi- lime If lldx grnndaon o f a n-grexa lutd nut been xren atrldlng along the I’nrixl.in Ixudevardx, If Ids laugh had not Ix-eu lieurd oil the tcrrncoa o f the cm Tea or tf lie bud not ap|>ear<-d playing Id - part with naive self satisfaction tn ■ -llb l.il i eremoulex and at the Tullerteo ball nr walking about behind tbe ocenex at the tlu-nter with bis arm on'iind llie wnlxt o f some actre**, or eating and drinking enough for four In llie merry xupia-rx ot which author* and artlxt* need to meet. ‘'Ilia popularity wn* limply Unerjnal- itl There win* a atory current In my time of n singular wager made by Mery of Marseilles. Walking one day In some public garden with a friend, lie suddenly xnld to him: ‘Do you see Hint Mg. rldbxilou* looking fellow? I bet you 100 souk that If I kick btm, no matter where. Instead of flying Into a rage he will make me a polite bow.* "The bet was taken, and Mery, creep ing stealthily up behind M. Prud- homme. gave him n tremendous kick in the small of his back The man turned red with Indignation, but Mery cried: •Oli. I beg your pardon, *tr; I took you for Alexander Dumas, with whom I have nil account to settle.* •‘Ills victim, only too proud to be taken for such n grent man, at once re lented and. taking off hts bat In the most nmlable manner, he said, with a how. ‘There Is no harm done, mon sieur.' The hundred * oub were won.” ANSON stand hard usage and rough wear be cause they are made of the right kind of material— wool from our own state— No shoddy in them, there can not be-Oregon don’t use it. SUITS TO fr o m $12.50 to $22.50 Guaranteed to be all Oregon grown pare wool. You couldn’t get better at any price. YO U TH S’ AND BOYS’ Suits ranging in price from $ 3.00 to $ 7 . 00 . A pair of pants free with every boy’s suit. YOUR INSPECTION SCORED LAST. Is invited on all of these g o o d s They will stand the test. Th* Old Chicago Captain Mad* Two Play* to Dahian's Or,*. Tim flurat, the Tetcrnn umpire, told tlila one ou Mill Dnblcn when BUI was a youtb tolling under Cap Anaon In Chicago. Said lie: “Anson called Dahlen good and hard In a game 1 was umpiring In Chicago. Dnhlen took It without saying a word, but a few minutes later BUI remarked to me, ‘Watch me bark that old fel low'* k UI u s ‘ ‘An*’ wn* not as agile then a* he was In bis younger days, and be stooped with much effo rt All through that game Bill made great stops, only to throw the ball a few feet In front of the bag. and It was up to Anson to stop tt with bis shins. “ However, that was not the end of I t A few days Inter the W hite Stocking* had to make a trip to S t Louts, and Anson told Dahlen he would not be taken on the trip. Bill had been told that several times and he thought ‘An*’ was fooling The train left Chicago nliout midnight and Dahlen was with the rest of the team. 1 “When the train was about twenty- live miles out of Chicago the conductor told Anson there were sixteen men In the party and be had received only fifteen tickets Anson said there were only fifteen men and named the berth* they occupied. •* ‘The man In berth No. 17 says he is a member of tbe Chicago team ,’ said the conductor, who was referring to Dnhlen ‘He's stringing you,’ replied Anson. Voor Bill was asked to cough up and couldn't The train was »top ped, and Dahlen was put off the train nl>out thirty miles from Chicago. HoW lie got back to Chicago only B ill him self knows, but he would not talk to anybody for n week." FISHER & RICHARDSON With The Sarnie Make o f Gun one nation destroys another. It is how to man age the gun that secures success: therefore, it is not the gun alone but the knowing how to manipulate it. N o man succeeds in business with his back to wards his business. He must face the problem with determination and tact. He must select the goods people w ant. He must determine first that values are the objects sought, and prices m u s t be in unison with s u c h m e r c h a n d i s e . Under these conditions and considerations Gardner & Hobson Nothing to W orry Over. "1 heard something the other day that greatly surprised me. and I have lieen worried about It ever since." "W hat was It?” "I don't know whether 1 ought to mention It to you or not, but I was told that your daughter's husband wn* n fret- thinker. She’s such a lovely girl! 1 hope It Isn't true.” "O f course It Isn't, or If It Is It won’t make any difference. Lnnrn takes a ft er me., and my husband was a free thinker, too, when I married him. Now he never thinks.” — Chicago Record- Hern Id have selected their spring stock of merchandise, which is now arriving daily. T h e stock consists of D R Y G O O D S, L A D IE S ' W E A R , G R O C E R IE S , and in fact everything kept in a F I R S T C L A S S M E R C H A N D IS E S T O R E . Inspiration and S ittin g T igh t. (leorge Eliot trelieved that her novel* were the product of Inspiration or gen ius Anthony Trollope thought hts wns the result of "cobbler's wax, madam," or the faculty of sitting tight In his chair and turning out 250 words every fifteen minutes for two or three hour* before breakfast. The method suc ceeded s o far as to bring him a return of $37o iKin and the rending public a set of novels which nre being more appre ciated every (lav.—Pall Mali Gazette. 1¡1 H I 11 'll Ü ;\ vx A [H [j I Hammering a Board into Place won’t keep it there if the lumber is not thoroughly seasoned. For when it dries out, it will surely n warp out of place again. | | |l| t V * l Get our perfect|y sea soned and the boards will stay where you put them without warping or buckling. Such lumber is easier to work up too. Try it this time and you’ll know it forever. Not So V ery Much. "Y ou’ve got nothing on me." Bald the cook The mistress looked her over care fully. “Only one hat, one skirt and two hunches of puffs," she retorted, “and you’ll take ’em all o(T before you leave too Pittsburgh Post. A Tale of Tw o Cities. "1 thought your minister was to have n cnll in Minneapolis.” "H e di*l expect It. but he went up then* In preach n frlnl sermon and took j hlx text from St Paul, so It’s all off.”— Chicago Record Herald. Take care of your thonghts and yonr wonlx and deeds will take care of themselves surf JOSEPH PETZBL Subscribe for the Mail 1