Image provided by: The Oregonian; Portland, OR
About The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 27, 1923)
IL LS BO RO voi xxx. HILLSBORO, OREGON, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1923 TURKEY GOES TO WINNER TO OPEN BASKET SEASON ■I Guoaafag Contest to be Conduetod by American I-eg ion HEI Pin NOMINATE Wll-SON pound turkey will hr give.« at the American IxgioH Will Make Another Effort to nc»t Sunday at Hie Old Secure Signer» Ground« on the liluliwnv ninny potimi' CHAMBER OPPOSES BRIDGE He Wa» Pr.immaet in Pytluanian. „„I Wa» Past «.rand Chan- , rllo« of Orrgon J. D. Mickle Here to Urge Poul try Producers to Join State Association Wsa Fon«*» May* «4 Hdlsbcw.i For Two Terms J.ihn M Wall, former mayor oil The winner must he j llillf,,r two terms ami I *«'I >hr lirin th« contest clos« , . i .... 11..« "I Hu O r I i I IS tIna» ••( • ’" - "‘III......... mmittre fa charge til' •tall hospital nt M I i, rliglbL I" eater du Monday, following an Ulne" I pti„n of the commit I. to «serai months Wall, *h"llirre. uf .1.1, Mi born fa I a s' W all ' „lull his parents wer« »I« JCITY LEVY FOR 1924 l lu family resided in APPROVED BY COUNCIL fling there ami lie came lo Oregon Indiana. 33 year» ago. the majority of this Amount Rrquirrd to Operata i ,.. nt in Hillsboro Hillsboro ia $34.578. Park Delegate in 1912 ARGUS In Self-Supporting I list <llftl< lllly Ills lie« n I lu nlll, tered in securing signatures to the union high |M-titions in the vicinity of Rccdvillc and that on account of this the work of the committee w a« l><mg held up, was tin announcement mad< by ('. E. Wells of the committci at the mrrting of tlir Hillslxiro ehamlwr LLOYD COMEDIES NO! of commerce Thursday night, MADE TO PATTERN Another endeavor will lx made to Krt signers to the petitions in Each Distinctive in Type. “Why that vicinity. Worry” is Pure Farce Oppose Bridge |{. ««' one of th«- live Oregon delegates to Hie Democratic lia ti.ui'l convention ill 191«, when \t i.idrow Wilson and Thoma« N Mar'liall were nominateli to tirad Wall nt udirai the government lax in Hu' olTlce iif the late S B llu'ton and practiced law In Hillslxiro for mane year« He was an active mem lier of Hu knights of Pythias liwige of this «lit f»r many years, and not unii did Io go through Hie chaira in llu local liulgc, lint tie was elected t<> Hie hlgliest honors in thi grand lodge II« xa» a faithful public sei vaut and was always held in high esteem bv all who luir» him. rs priialh f<>r Ins k |dlv tri aiment and Lo i uf his family lb i irruil Mi" Alta Lamkin June «8. IMI. Hi' wifr Mr» Alta !.. Wall an-* four i liildren survive him Th« daughter. Miss Evelyn, Is a «tu drnt at Oregon Agricultural col lrg> and Hu three sons are Ei! ward of Portland, Howard, a stu ilmt in Hillslxiro high school. and Mian at lionu in Portland Hr I» also'tir< iv< d bv Hirer sisters anti four brothers Mrs Emily |><iwn ing of California; Mrs Roar Sutherland and Mrs Franerà St Ganard of Portland; Frank W all of Portland. William Wall of California «nd \lb.rt Wall of T -r. Haute. Indiana, an.l Fil X in Wall of Chariest on. South Cai He wan a bm m bta of Mr > 1 M • . I ( ' I a in kin of till' ritv. 1 he construction of a bridge I Dir total levy for Hillslxiro of between Ixrnogvirw, Wash., and I $3 1,433 for 1924 lias been ap Rainier was not viewed with fa nrovrd by tlir lai commission and vor by the chamber, ami a résolu Itile «Iti Council passed an ordi lion was passed »'king the fed lanci Mgixlay night providing rral authorities to refus |ierniis (or the levy It is estimated that slon to build the bridge. bridge This tlir city will receive $10,048 from follow« the action taken bv other olhrr sources than (anation ami chambers in the state. tills will bring the (■■tai amount The fruit growers from C erne- for carrying on the work of the liu« nn<l Hillsboro will meet in [city up to $34,87» committer room of the chamlwr Tlx budget allows for $4,417 Saturday night and it is thought for I lie payment uf intrrr»t on that the Cornelius growers will bonds The street department la join tlir Washington county asso «How rd $4300 ami thia Is taken elation at thia time. Effort» are «are of by a county road district rx|wctr<| to lx- maiic later t<» Ira y There ia no levy for the bring tlir Scholl' ami oilier «Ile park aa It Is takrn care of frotu triet' into the association tlir receipts of tlir dances. Mickle Here The legal department la al Tlir chamlicr of commerce Im* lowed $500 and the recorder Is Iwen asked by J D Mickle, stat allowed $1850 for salary and rs dairy and ( ihh I commissioner. to oensr-s. The treasurer is allowed urge the poultry producers to $250 and $7«trt8 I« levied for p<- join the poultry association. Mr lice protretiin. Mickle, who was a chamber vis The fire department itor M onday, savs that mrmhrrs «II« for #150o and of lili» are 'till needed to secure thr *8300 I' paid out for number of eggs nrcessarv to car rentals The emergency In ry on rffretive work Mr. Mickle riven $1938. was here as a representative of the agricultural committee of the GORDON BIACKS LEAVE Portland chamlrr of rommrrer and was endeavoring to get the Gonion Blnrk unti family left to bankers* association, tin* chant da) for Salem to make thrlr |WI- her of commerce and other organ m itimi rrUilrhiv Mr. Black will isations to sup|mrt thr drive for l»r rolilirt trd * Ith Groppe F mrmlwrs in the |H>ultry asaocia- Xllrn, formerly of thia city and t loll m»w in the hardware bu«itirw« in Mr. Mickle will be asked to thr rn pital cltv. The Black» s|M-ak before thr cliatnlwr some have operated « confectionery time in January. »tor* in Hillslxiro for a number of years and have made many MEASLES EPIDEMIC ABATES ■Services Held Tosta y friends who regret their depart * I ...... blu ,1 to tile state lire. During thrir stay in Hill« !" o tal in the early part of the boro they have taken an active Only One Case Reported From Hillsboro in Two Days »<ar following an extended ill part in church and social affaire »es« which affrrtril his mind. The measles epidemic is abating, s,rvi. .. were held at Finley'' HOLD WATCH PARTY un.lrH ,k ,i,« parlors in Portland according to an announcement tin, nu.rt ng and interment wa' \ Watch Party" will lie held at made by Dr. I.. W. Hyde, county the K of P. hail New Year’s evr health officer and acting city in Ihr liill'boro cemetery. and the committee in charge are health officer. Hi- says that there «aid lo have arranged a program has only been one case of measles TRIES TO CASH CHECK of real interest, including danc- reported to him in the last two All days from Hillsbi >m. and refreshment». Jake Weil Frustrates Attempt ing }l ll'boro has bad the worst of and Pythian«. their famille» of Alleged Forger it in m isb .. says th«' doctor. friends are invited. Forest Grove seems to be rela ' That J ike Weil should be sent to lively f ec of tin epidemic anil MRS. GODFRED LOSLI Paris nest year as a «printer on Gaston, Tigard, Sherwood and •I" Vnu rican Olympic Irani I« Tualatin have only a few scat- eontrndrd by many who «aw him Mrs Godfred l.osli of Quatama died at tlir Dr. E. II Smith hos tering cases. ! running down tin- «tree* after an , unknown person who I« said to pital December «2. following an Elnu F.. Nukcrscn of Bunks i operation for appendicitis. h«Vr irk,I l(, B for|t,.(| Mr«, l.osli was born December and Oliv. M. Deakins of Port I "n tlir Weil Department Store IS. IMPS, al Elmonica ami wa» land were married in Portland { I riilav night. the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. yesterday. I lie alleged forger was unable Fran!, Doolier of Minneapolis, ( Jacob Traclisel. " rriuembi r his own name when Minnesota, is in Hillsboro visiting ' She was married October 7, •'M bv Mr Weil, who was sns friends and relatives. He has 1928, to Godfred l.osli of Quata I’" ¡011' of the unknown*« actions. been visiting bls uncle T. J. Me •'" "„me „f J„|ln Walters was ma, who survives. She is survived by her mother, Parland of Ruxton for several u'" I on llu check and it was pay Mr. Doolier Ims charge to John Fulton The sheriff five sisters and two brotlf^a The weeks. of a department in one of the sisters are Mrs. Jacob Schmidt of notified, but was unable tn Laurel, Mrs. John Marty of largest department store* in the ln<"tr the alleged forger. Bethany, Mrs. Peter Redwig of middle wast. He is well k now n near Hillsboro, Cecilia am! Laura here where he attended school M r. nll(| M r, K| IJw o n<>|1„,.)| Trachsel uf Elmonica. The two more than ten years ago. limber are visiting with Mrs. brothers are Jacob ami F.mil I ""••»H’., parent«, Mr. and Mr«. Trachsel of Elmonica. PUBLIC SALE ' Rushlow, during thr holi- She w as a mcinber of the Con nays. gregational church of • edar Twelve Head of Fine Dairy Cows Mills, of which she was a Sunday school teacher. She was of a I will sell at public auction at my kind and lo^jpg nature and was place at Moffatt station, one half mile east of Hillsboro, beginning admired by a host of friends. Funeral services were held at at 1 o’clock p. m.. on SATURDAY. JANUARY 5 tin- Congregational church at Cellar Mills on Monday. The Twelve head of cows 3 Guern services were conducted by the seys, springing:! Holstein heifer, Reverend Schentsc of Beaver fresh; I Jersey heifer, fresh; 1 Creek and the Reverend Graf of Jersey, fresh day of sale; 1 Jer Bethany. Undertaker Bell was sey, fresh In February; 1 Swiss heifer, fresh date of sale; 1 Jcr in charge of the arrangements. sey, fresh date of sale; 2 Jerseys I. W. House of Hillsboro say» to freshen soon; 1 Holstein to that he is soon to be a farmer, frehen soon. Oldest cow Is 7 'ns hr has purchased a tract of years of age. Tuberculin tested. Terms of Sale Bankable note. Hand near Ashland on the high way. Mr. and Mrs. House re « months* time, at R per cent In cently returned from a trip Into terest. A. F. Vanbishler. Owner. southern Oregon. He Is quite J. W. Hughes, Auctioneer. enthusiastic over the future of ths southern part of th» »tat*. Ili» 1924 basketball season will be opi ned in the u< w high school gymnasium Friday night, when tlir local quintet locks horns with < <ia< li Mike'* M< Isler’s five from Beaverton. The girls' teams will also play. The new gymnasium enables the high school to lake care of larger crowds at Hie basketball gninc» and it ia ho]wd that the townspeople give the team the same support in basketball that they gave in football. Prospects arc bright for a winning team and < oach "Goody" Goodman is out to rnakr a record in basketball. W. V, Bergen, Clerk. Motion picture star» frequently fail into the rut, ix-causr they per sist« utly follow tin- aame line of story, anil the same ty;w of char ai t< rization. They never devi ate Iwcause they feci that thr public demands them in a certain typ«- of picture. Harold Lloyd ha» proven the fallacy of this belief. Lloyd has gone ahead all the time because lie has never established himself in any certain ty|»e of picture. Be cause his audience* never know w hat to expect from him, and don't worry liecause they know lie always give» them something that is worth while. In "Why Worry?” his latest Path« comedy entry in the race for popular plaudits, and the feature attraction at th«- Liberty Theater January 2, 3 and 4, Lloyd again pursues his own theory that to mix them up is to serve the pub lic best. Because one likes roast beef is no reason why it should be served him for every meal. And for the same motive, there is no reason why a star should enact a certain type of picture contin uously because lie happened to achieve a great success in one of them. "Why Worry ?" is as unlike any pi<-turc Harold I.lloyd has made In-fore, as any two things could I m -. It is a South American story, strong in farce but with an ever present vein of satire that should prove dcliithtful to the American audience w liich does not like its entertainment too serious. It ia the biggest picture in Lloyd's category, from the point of production. Big sets, huge crowds, and much fighting a/d to its production values. Yet above all these stands out the character of Lloyd, as the boy who has naught to w orry him but imagin ary ills. Another outstanding figure is John Aascn. Eight feet, nine and a quarter inches of Aascn stands out on the screen. He is th«- world's biggest man. Offered in conjunction with ' Why Worrv,” William Duncan, in the much heralded Universal chapter-play, "The Steel Trail,” adds on«- of the biggest triumphs of his career to his long line of suc«-es«es when the new picture opens at thr Liberty Theater Jan- u.iry 2. 3 and 4. The play is one of the greatest stories Duncan has ever had; a virile story of ultra modern day», with a con struction engineer battling man- made plots and the elements to push his line of steel rails into the wilderness. Spectacular phases of the con struction of a great railroad form the basis of the thrilling play. Plot and counterplot, narrow es capes and other thrills mark ei" ry exciting foot of the rapidly- moving story. It is unique among chapter Hjpys in^bat every angle of the story is mmtern—the prob lem« of the engineer of today, the methods of the builders of today, and the financial influence behind the day arc all mirrored in this «•pic of the railroad. Tin- cast is ideal, including such well known players as Harry Carter, Ralph Fee McCullough, Mabel Randall, John Cossar, Frank Whitson, Harrv Woods and Cathlcen Calhoun. EYESIGHT IS PRICELESS Consult a specialist at the irat •dtrn«. of defective vision and save yottr eyes. See Dr. I.uaatler at Anderson’s Jewelry Store, Satur days. 88-tf Mr. and Mr». William Hnnte- man anti Henry Mohr of Bend are visiting home folks during the holiday». Mr. Mohr report» ev erything lively at Band. PflAlT SENTENCED IN CIRCUIT COURT Graiff Paroled, But Must Make Restitution LIQUOR MANY C.B. BUCHÍNAN & CO ( Incorporated > CASES UP Plea» of Not Guilty Entered by lo When Brought Before Judge Bagley Thia Week I'homai Pratt, who with Rudolph Graiff, was arrested several weeks ago, accused of stealing au to accessories, was sentenced to three months each on eight indict ments and to six months on the indictment «barging him with lewd and lascivious cohabitation, hy Judge George Bagley yester day. Rudolph Graiff, the 1 8 year old boy in the larceny case with Pratt, was sentenced to 24 months in the county jail or three months each on tiie eight indictments to which he pleaded guilty. He was pa roled on good behavior on the condition that he make restituticr for thr articles stolen an<! that he pay all costs. DEALERS IN Grain, Feed, Flour Hay and Potatoes MANUFACTURERS OF Beaver Brand Feeds Telephones; 511 and 11 HILLSBORO, OREGON Branches—Cornelius, North Plains, McMinnville Pleads Not Guilty Sidney J. Crawford pleaded n«it guilty to a charge of being drunk on the highway, and others to plead not guilty were Charlc» Barron, F. E. Bushnell, E. G. Brown, J. F. Casper, John Hollen beck, Robert Levick, Gregory Menth, Frank Stroud. Peter H. Vandchey, John Wagner, Henry Zurfiuh. All of these were ar raigned for violating liquor laws, and Daisy Menth was arraigned on charge of lieing intoxicated in a public place. John A. Erickson wa» ordered t<» appear Decrmber 29 for sentence. Guitippe Lorenxini withdrew his plea of not guilty and Judge Bagley fined him $3000 on indict ment number one and a year in the county jail. He was also given $3000 on the second indictment and the same jail sentence. If he pays $1000 of his fine on the first indict went he will be paroled on indictment nnniber two and the jail sentences. Others to plead not guilty were Elmo Dcbanro, “John Doe,” alias Long Jim. Fred C. Brinegham an«l A. E. Edwards, all ou liquor charges. I Jap is Fined Asajiro Naganuma was fined H1000 and giveu one year in jail on one indictment and $500 and six months on another. On pay- met of $500 on the first and $300 on the second he will lie paroled. In the case of C. G. Kinsel versus J. N. Hoffman, the jury returned a verdict for the plain tiff and be was given judgment for $168.75. Joseph Panmenka was parole«! on condition that h«- report every month to the court. In the case- of the State versus A. Wallaei he was paroled on good behav ior. Those against William W. Muir, John H. Thomas, William G. Clark and Mabel Nelson wen dismissed. Divorce granted—F.lmer L. Abbott against Esther L. Abbott. Mr. and Mrs. Gail Wells and son, Bobby, of Newberg, spent Christmas with Mrs. Wells’ par ent». Mr. and Mr». L. A. Long. INCOME TAX IN A NUTSHELL WHO? Single persons who had net income of $1,000 or more or gross income of $5,000 or more, and mar ried couples who had net income of $2.000 or more or gross income of $5.000 or more must file returns. WHEN? The filing period is from January 1 to March 15, 1924. WHERE? Collector of in- ternal revenue for the dis- triet in which the person lives or has hi» principal place of business. HOW? Instructions on Form 1040A and Form 1040; also the law and regula tions. WHAT? Four per cent normal tax on the first $4 ,000 of net income in excess of the personal ex emption and credits it* dependents. Eight per cent normal tax on bal- ance of net income. Snr- tax from 1 per cent to 50 per cent on net incomes over $8,000 for the year iota. I THREE HUNDRED AND SIXTY FIVE DAYS OF PEACE, PLENTY AND HAPPINESS TO EACH OF YOU THE NEW YEAR S WISH OF THE SHUTE SAVINGS BANK LARGEST AND OLDEST BANK IN WASHINGTON COUNTY WHY WORRY? SAVE NOW