Image provided by: Santiam Historical Society; Stayton, OR
About The Stayton mail. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 6, 1919)
Sampson SIEVE GRIP STOWAWAT MIKE TJUTTS SAILING THE DEEP Tractor School Notes 13 MayscI Montgomery EDITOR Tt.e high echool atudenta are trerjr busy Helling tlcketa fo r the Lycenu which la to be given at the high echool auditorium thla winter. Th® Lyceum course consists o f four big shows, the first o f which Is to he December 1. This constats of musi cal and comedy sketches by the Chi cago Recital Company. Mike Ollhooley I* • champion— the champion atowaway of the world. He la a Belgian boy. 16 yenrs old. and fire flmee he crossed the Atlantic trying to get Into the U 8 He bma been admitted and la to become a eltlaen of the United 8tatea. being adopted by Mr* Mar- Inn Ollhooley Carry, wife of nn Importer It le thought bli name had something to do with bis adoption. He fought In three battles dur ing war. The New Model 30-X ASKS WAR MOTHERS TO SPONSOR PARDONS 0 Sampson Sieve-Grip Tractors 3re doing all kinds A CHAMPION RUNS FOR COUNCIL No Antiquated type o f fraction on the Sampson. The Wonderful Sieve-Grip Wheels easily maintain tin- leod OUT all others. N<. |i:vkin* o f the soil where Sieve-Grips are used. T* r i^r * * ■** T r oñ p r‘ r h ir* ^ f V- cl ^ 1 » c ard by n - — ’ non powder was observed dents Me day. c'y cs class at- n-u meeting on -■'c tend ^ * r»?w Tu " •’ - 1» C » "non Miss Ruby •• g»vo he? po- the nr’ _ «*■»; ^n(j ajr l pi’ s ». V V: t ♦** ’ --c> -t fourth grades. Mrs John F. Llnsco'.t. presi This is Johnny Ktlbane chan, dent of the Pinella Fla.. War plon featherweight boxer of the ar»’ !.» » - *,:«s Holden The Mothers’ Chapter, wants her na world. He Is riot showing > roo— w " *'rM,,et'M” decorated with tional organisation to sponsor a blow* that he uses in <:• .• n <1 •: corn ste.’ t-v and n -n »r decorations o f resolution asking pardon for bl* title by "knocking t op;. erery U. 8 soldier now serving n nents" cold, ixo Indeeo Ktn.ar pumpkin? witches, cats, and owls courtmartlai sentence tn European is running for council '■ which the children had made. The prison* or at home Sbe bad four land— and if «lerleo ■* room made dark by drawing the cur sons In tbe war. She now wears never fight ugaia tut ••••• undefeated one gold star. tains and tack-o-lan’ orns were light ed. Several different games w ers played, and last o f all was a search for peanuts and spples which had been hidden in various places of tbe MERICA is Just now em barklD g upon a great career as a maritime nation. It Is spending billions for ships and bidding for men to enter the merchant room. The grades are very busy practic marine. One o f the first duties of every maritime nation la to furnish mari ners with such data as will enable ing for an excellent program which them to navigate the waters under Ita . . will be given Nov. 21 at the high Jurisdiction with the greatest possible _ -w^ MjvT* school auditorium. «afety. The obllgutlon has not been , ^ j Last month there were seventeen discharged by the United States. pupils in the fifth and sixth grades, Many lives and property worth mil- — - Vo who were neither absent nor tardy, lions o f dollars are lost annually he- y / and tbe per cent o f attendance in enuae the task of charting the coastal ■» J§t\ * > waters of the United States and Its j&S- JVky these roms was 67 1-10. possessions has never been completed. v • A V ’P T -’ The fifth and sixth grade rooms are Now that the war Is over, the fin- planning to decorate their rooms Ishlng o f this Job Is one o f the most - -S>—N with large growing house plants. pressing necessities which the nation Miss Maze, the seventh and eighth faces. Just before we entered the war the coast and geodetic survey cele brated Its one hundredth anniversary and went through some other motion? grade teacher, spent the week end at designed to nttrnct the public attention to Itself and to the need for an ex her home in Salem. tension of Its work. Rut with the declaration of war against Germany all this came to an end. Five out o f the dozen or so small boats which the survey possesses were taken over by the navy for use as patrols, and more than half Night and Morning. of the officers and men went with them, while those who remained were busy H oc* Chan, Haatlhy £>«•. If they Tire, Itch, making special maps and surveys for the army and navy. , Smart or Bum. if Sore, Now that the war la over the coast and geodetic survey Is going hack to Its proper work with energy. Its largest and liest boat, the Survey, Is now on her way to Alaska via tbe Panama canal, and others are beir.g repaired often. Soothns. R e fr e s h e s . Safe for Infant or Adult At all Druggists. Write for and refitted fttr work on the Pacific coast. Free Eye Book. Nsttat tjt K««t, C... r ( Distributors for Marion and Polk Counties 444 Ferry Street » d"1 from these entertain- i, ; to diminish the ^he ud'ence is assur- • —'1 ’ .«ve a high class « - m -i-o w 'll help the 1 n’ x *o nay o ff the a The New Model 30-X Sampson Sieve-Grip Tractor and the Liberal f Sates Policy, have reduced the question of which tractor, to “How | soon can you get your Sampson?" Prevent possible dissappoint- ment by placing your order now. Roach & Trover The third will be sometime dur ing February and thla w ill be an Il lustrated chalk talk lecture by H ob . Frank S. Regan, entitled, " The Fool Taxpayer." The last, which will be sometime In Mere* '* by the Ricketts Gleo Glob. of Farm and Orchard work economically and to good advantage for their owners. Many Sampsons have been steadily working on the same ranch during the past three or four years, proving the great durability of Sieve-Grip Tractors. I! Tho second «how, which w ill be January 1, will be by the Kathm- rene Carroll Smith Concert Company. This will be an enteTtalnmest o f mualcal »elections, characteristic work and costume sketches. Salem, Oregon Dangers of the Uncharted Seas Move Uncle Sam Our Advertisers Are Satisfied Get in Line With Them A Mm EVES o S S t iS X C Coal Miners Firm in Stand on Right of Strike Judge Your Tractor by the Work it Does The right standard by which to judge a tractor is not the number of plows it pulls, nor its price, nor its size- The only thing you want to know is how MUCH WORK will it do, how M A N Y K IN D S of work it will do, and whether it will K E E P ON doing that work R IG H T—day after day and month after month. Because it travels on its own tracks, like the battle tanks. Cletrac nets more work out of the power of its engine than any other tractor—and it does this work over plowed ground, and over bogs and swamgs r.nd ditches, as well as over firm sod. Because it travels much faster than horses it will accomplish as much work per day as t h r e e t h r e e - h o r s e t e a m s . And, so far as plowing is concerned, it dees a better job because it pulverizes the siil more thoroughly, saving labor and making a better seed bed. More work and more kinds of work more days in the year that’s what vou get from the CLET If not. order from your grocer today. Golden Rod Oat* are made from the choicest Oat* obtainable • T A N K -T Y P E T R A C T O R Ask the Users Distributers W. H. PATTERSON & CO. 121 South Commercial Street Phone 378 Distributers Salem, Oregon "T h e die is cast; the strike must go on,” says John L. Lewis, president, and Secretary Green o f the United Mine Workers o f America Despite government e f forts. Including a direct appetl from President Wilson from his sick bed. miner leaders *av ih e hour is past when even a compro mise can be considered. The) say coal operators have not acted it» good »faith. The bone o ' conten tion 1* n big wage Increase, the war time agreement having been fu lfilled, claim the miners Here are typical scene.t In the coal field. The great structural steel head- frame. bln* and trestles where thousands of men work hundreds o f feet below A miner and his family, typical of the workers.