The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current, April 04, 1935, Page 6, Image 6

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    Page
H IL L S B O R O
S ix
W o r ld ’s T ra d e
ARGU S,
Uncle Sam Studies South’s Great Problem,
Plight of Broken Sharecroppers
H a s I n flu e n c e
H IL L S B O R O ,
O ren co G roup
N a m e s L eaders
R ev .
I P rosperity Here D ependent
on T hat E ltew h ere
lA u tb a n lie l U t r m f n t b , Roxar W . B .bao .1
cient.
D uncan E ngaged
Y ear as Pastor
illy
BABSON PARK. Florida. M aich
29—European politics have once
more tlamed into danger signals
set against world peace. In order
to understand the real significance
of the startling a n d contacting
headlines lroni every capital m
Europe, we must tu rn to the less
sensational but more important,
evidence offered by the trade re ­
ports of the world’s leading n a­
tions. Hence, to equip you to u n ­
derstand wnat lies behind these
sensational political events. I want
to give you in this article bnet
snap-shot reviews of trade a n d
business conditions throughout the
entire wor.d.
GREAT BRITAIN has made great
strides tow ard recovery since nud-
1932. Basically' a trading nation,
fu rth er progress now depends up­
on a revival in world trade. Ja p ­
anese competition is ruining tne
texUle industry at Lancashire. Un­
certainty over stability of the "gold
bloc" currencies has currently in ­
terrupted England's revival.
IRISH FREE STATE has adopted ,
a strong protectionist policy, p ar­
ticularly against British goods. New |
industries, both sound and un- ,
sound, are mushrooming up every- I
where. However, ioreign trade is
falling; unemployment is rising;
and larni buying power is drop- ,
ping. Ireland's tuture is cloudy as ;
long as she tries to be self-suffi­
OREGON
M r«.
for
Hugh B urdett«)
ORENCO At the anim al busi­
ness meet lug of the comnuinity
ehureh T hursday night the Rev T
C Duncan was engaged as staled
supplv for another year. Mrs.
S. 1..
,,
C arlyle and Frank Coniiell were
re-elected elders and J 1*. Rogers
trustee
Mrs S . L. C arlyle was
elected treasurer and Mrs. J. W
Enchede. superintendent of Sunday
school.
n il.« « * «
at
th e
C* I> ll.w b lr U -s.sr.»
GUtSth a.
the
l 1 I t u k hom<
Sunday w eie Mr. and Mrs o w
Layson anil George J. Beck of
Portland.
M i vs B ernards Hostess
...
.
.
.
.
.
Thursday, April 4, 1986
Tctichera* association will be held
in the school lunch room at 2.30
P in April II.
('a lte rs Move Here
Mi and Mis 1, C a rte r of H ills
boro inoven into the Louie Madden
house Saturday
Franz, O lse n
C lash T o n ig h t
Sailor R uffian B eats H all
on C oulter Mat Card
Hiliii Honor Roll
Given by Barnes
Sailor F it nr. San Diego mat ru f­
fian. and lleinie Olsen, popular
Portland heavyweight, are Minted
for the mu«n event on Prom oter
C oulter's wrestling card tonight
(Thursday) at the V F W hall.
Vie Pottei of Klntonica will clash
II. 1 .» E u .l.» , E ih.1 llu r iy
Kaleb
with the sp«'i‘dy Fred Kurtz of
Mc»". Mi Kirsit K rah n w r, l.m iv r
I . uh»
W illiM in Mv.tr«. Miltlitfxi
J van P e r- Sellwood in the semi-windup, while
M argaret Kuevker, J«>*v|<hitiv Stro»- “Squeek"
Clevenger o f Portland
tler. T t» h laugaw a. Helvit W alter«
Sopbumore«
Kira nor llr in lk r ,
I . urtile and Dewey VanLoo of Gaston ere
matched for the curtain-raiser.
C«rl«*ut.
I. nt«
s.n
M ' C
r a ran
m i d m all.
i,
r huithvi
e tr iv i
r KlIttHI,
.llltH I
Maryt»«i F lin t. Helen G ra f. Father lla r t y
Sailor Franz defeated Bill Hall
Dixie Lee M ad»..w ell, Dorothea tbhau»
!•*»«»»«* 8h«rmaw. Tom Stretcher. Irm u l of Aberdeen in the short but snap­
py main event of last Thursday’s
£ r ik b .
r k w w ia . » . . .
wrestling c u d . The grupplers were
Junior« K illy Alliaon,
Helen
lle v k rt.
in the ring only 15 minutes, hut
Ilolcom b Himeo.
Dorothy Jackaon, M ar-
okl Meyer. M a rjo ri» M ontgom ery, t'h ri« enough firew orks took place to fill
t,n« Kobb. Dorothy Steinke. David Torbet a full hour's bout.
h Ä " . . K »"!? h . i . u " h .'.
Hall grabbed the first fall in eight
..üüb
' w«",i«‘ I'irk.' iifi'r',, minutes with a body press and
then
the fleet moved in Franz
S fb n ii.li, Edith w . u . r . .
F ive S u h -e ft. : Sophomore. K eith llu .f h , took on both Hall and the referee.
ii.n .i, Grace Kingston. Kenneth l.a
riant..
. hold;
i.hrw »enior«. Krane««
»rw hm .ii. K it. Heli.-
L a ir ,
Kat hiven
MrAlaar. I i . l . n N . i ., .„ . N . . .. .. . It.U r n ..
Sanford W ill.
1 *—I Gradual..
B lanch* McCorm ick.
Hillsboro muon high school hon­
or roll for the first six weeks of
the second sem ester w as announced
W ednesday by S uperintendent 11
W Hanies' us follows.
. braab , m .il J i s i i i i i . Abla, ll,.l...rt A lll.-n
John lilock, G l.iu ii. c . r l a o . . Kami Co*—
51 iss A rlene Bernards entertain-
I'd with a party March 26 at her
home Those present w ere H attie
and Dorothy Warren, Virginia and
Lois Robson, Rodney Gibson, tra
Rogers. Barbara Burdette. Doris
Rogers, Joy Hoague. Elvu and Nor-
man Bradley. Louie Bella. Dorothy
Parks. Ju n io r Curlngton. Evelyn
..
and Ruber* B ernards and Misa Me-
Kinnis The evening was spent
i,l i. i.,,. games
playing
Schulntvnch
Mr and Mrs O F. Anderson and
children visited their son. Eugene
Anderson, and family in Portland
Sunday.
Mrs. Sidney Franklin entertained
Mrs. J. P Rogers visited relatives
Sunday with a birthday dinner
in P ortland Tuesday
honoring Mr. Franklin. John und
WHY!
Helvetia
A farm er who owns no Ionia, no I! rew o rk and no land. H rre. from th e “doorw ay" of hia tiny
tum bledow n shark, a ahareeropper, bereft of borna and Job because of th e drop in cotton pro­
duction, gares o ut hopelessly on a bleak fu tu re.
, M»r .M ndH M rH
I^ h .
n*Ch.iandi a n d . ^ rS.HE arL DKt.l?,n
of Portland visited their daughter
and cousin Mrs. H E. Scheldt, and
family Saturday.
Mr and Mrs L. T. Woodward
and K enneth visited friends in
Portland Sunday afternoon and eve-
ning.
Miss M aty bell Flint of Scholls
was a w eek-end guest of Miss Jean
Ann Connell.
Alex Bella spent the week-end
w ith Mr and Mrs. Antone Bella of
Portland
C lair G allup of near Hillsboro
visited friends here Sunday
Mr and Mrs. Ted Edwards and
son Bobby of St. Johns visited
Mrs. Edw ards parents, Mr. and Mrs.
N athaniel Rose. Sunday.
Mr and Mrs. Tom Ireton of P o rt­
land visited at the F. J. Meihoff
home Sunday.
Mrs. Jack Hamel spent last week
w ith relatives in Portland.
Miss H elm Baughman was an
over-night guest Friday night of
Miss Elma G ottlieb near Hillsboro
Mr and Mrs Harry W arren and
children of Portland visited his
brother. F ran k Warren, and family
Sunday.
i'e lrb ra te B irthday
Mrs. S. L. Carlyle, Mrs. Mary
Beach and the Misses Mary and
Estella L iw rto n and Mr. and Mrs.
George G a i’-att and family of P ort­
land spent Saturday in Forest
Grove, h el' ing celebrate Mrs. H.
| N. Robinson's birthday. Mrs. Beach
| rem ained for a few days' visit.
April m eeting of the Parent-
AUSTRALIA has had a trem en­
dous recovery from the depression
Efforts to unionise the cotton
ducted all that had been spent
HE Agricultural Adjustment
low in ltku. Her budget is ap­
i dministration la bip-deep
workers have met with bitter
for food, clothing, medical atten­
A
proaching oalance and unemplvy- In efforts to solve a problem tbat
protests by planters, who believe
tion, etc.
ment h a s dropped considerably. |
that nothing good can come of
The result was that, at the
However, taxes are still heavy and affects the welfare of the entire
organising the sharecroppers,
season’s end. the cropper seldom
the drop in wool prices in the last south— the beart-rendlug plight
most of whom tbelr bosses char­
actually got any money. He owed
year has given her a sharp set- of the “sharecroppers."
acterise as shiftless and Indif­
so much to the planter that his
back. F uture recovery depends up
Throughout Dixie, thousands
fe re n t
profits had vanished.
on the price trend of this w orld of these erstwhile cotton farm­
The tenant farmer— who sup­
commodity.
Nevertheless, the work of
ers with their families, are
plied h it own equipment, and
NEW ZEALAND'S domestic te- adrift without homes or Jobe,
building the Southern Tenant
received
two-thirde
of
the
crop
covery is a line exam ple of the and with a bleak future tn
Farmers’ Union, (hough perhaps
— fared little better. Debts ate
result o f conservative read ju st­ ■tore. And they are only a part
retarded by local opposition to
all his earnings, too, onlesa the
ments in public finance Industry of 8.000.000 Americans In the
“outside agitators,” goes stead­
is reviving and her budget is n ear­ south whose living conditions are
price of cotton was high.
ily on.
ing a balance. From here on, fu ­
The miserable croppers look
tu re recovery of the island de­ worse than those of low-paid
fpo many of the distressed
with hope to tbelr champion.
pends on world dairy and wool Europeans.
sharecroppers, the New Deal
Alabama's Senator John H Bank-
T h e sharecropper problem
prices.
has proved an unlucky one.
head. Very wealthy. Independ­
SOUTH AFRICA has made the goes back to post-CIvil War
Thousands have been evicted
ent of the great cotton Interests,
greatest pregress tow ard recovery days. The south then was des­
from their squalid homes be­
Senator Bankhead has fought
oí any nation due to the boom in titu te : nobody had money. T here
cause planters withdrew great
gold prices and mining. Two hun- was on]y one thing of value—
for federal loans to the southern
areas of land from production.
dred new mining companies have jand on wtilcb to grow cotton,
“ peons'* which would enable
In compliance with requirements
been formed; trade with England;
them, on an easy Installment
of the AAA cotton crop reduc­
is on the increase; all industry is
So planters made a bargain
plan, to own their own small
tion program.
picking up The budget shows a with stranded farm ers: each
plots of land.
This, even though a clause of
surplus; taxes are being reduced; sharecropper would be provided
And results of Investigations
the federal contract demande
and the public debt is being paid -with land, tools, food, shelter,
recently concluded by AAA may
off!
| clothing, and any oth er needed
that no cropper be evicted with­
bring s o m e
forward-looking
out cause.
Planters contend
WEST INDIES: Progress has been supplies.
In return for his
measures for relief of this great,
that good cause, and not re­
made in all West Indian colomes work, he would receive half the
tattered army of southern work­
in recent months. Prices of cocoa- value of the crop at market
placement by cheaper Negro la-
nuts and bananas are higher but time, after the planter had de-
ers.
bor. lies behind every eviction.
quotations on most other products
are still low.
the trem endous spread between tinue low. however, and u n sa tis-;
T - T p lr f fr v p
INDIA; Economic conditions in the price the Magyar farm er pays factory foreign exchange is still t r t r i v
I I tlU l 1 U l
India are more hopeful now than and the price he receives.
j handicapping recovery o n t h e
at any tim e in the last five years.
AUSTRIA- The past y ear i n I Amazon.
W
ith the
of ju
te man- A ustria has been filled w ith pol-
-----
— exception
-
industries
CHILE has enjoyed considerable
I By Mr«. John Gate« J r .)
ufacture and coal. ® .. .. n \ ' nan ! itical agitation and change. But, recovery in the past y ear and both
C ounty lU p r r x rn ta tiv e
LEISYVILLE—Mrs. E inar Berg-
are in a healthie
,
as jn Hungary, th e trend at pres- her export and im port trade has
for
last spring. Both
‘ ent appears to be upw ard. T h e , increased sharply.
F u rth er pro- gren was hostess at a dinner Sun- ]
n a tm n ,
budget deficit and public credit gress depends almost entirely on day
«ay in
m henor
ucnor of
o. the
tne ninth
m m n birthday
oirtnaay j
ELECTRO LU X
FRANCE. Of the maj
. . ¡n Austria, as in m o s t countries. Is revival of world trade and re-
!!?e*r *wln boys. Harold ®” d
C tatner and Air Purifier
France has shown the
. . the biggest issue today.
storation of world m arkets for her Howard. Present w ere their class-
covery
to
date.
F
ran
ces
trou
b
les,
.
...
u
chief
n
r
o
d
e
c
t
s
__
n i t r a t e o f s o d a a n d mates,
race and
Elsie Lorenz.
W AYNE EM M O TT
like those at most of Europe arise I CZECHOSLOVAKIA, like h e r chief p ro d u c ts-n .tra te of soda and Wesley G Gates
Leland
Phone 2143 for appointm ents
from th e almost complete shut-1 C entral European neighbors, tnade
. . .
j -
Fishback. Edward May. and th e i r !
down of Germ an trade. Prosperity noticeable progress late in 1934 ,
In studying conditions in these , eacher Mrs Ford and aunts Miss
in Europe is tied up very closely I Her im provem ent is due principal-
nations I w as struck by four fac- M
G rand and
Mrs
w ith im provem ent in the Reich ! ly to devaluation of the crown tors which w ere apparent
in neaily w hitehead, and the host and host-
R ieht now gold uncertainties are i about a year ago. H er exports have | every nation, namely; il) cheap
provoking an economic crisis
increased sharply but unemploy- money rates. 12. havoc w rought by
P ra n re r In HosplUl
P « S P A IN
I n SDite of strikes and ment is still a m ajor proglem.
higher tariff barriers and depie-
rra n g c r in iiospnai
r e v o lu tio n s in 1934 business i s
RUSSIA is m aking steady pro- ciated currencies; i3) unbalanced
Frank Pranger was operated on
Q iioh ilv b e tte r than last year While gress tow ard recovery. Her indus-i budgets; and (4) flooding of the for an infected hand
Monday at
Everything In Insurance
most of the world suffered from trial production increased s u b - world w ith cheap Japanese prod- the Jones hospital.
Dr Wiley oper-
drought in 1934 Spain had bumper stantially despite a poor farm year ucts. Because business is below ating. He will be home in three or
Ph«
liti
IU2 W ashington
crops of w heat barley and beets. | in 1934 Growth of her gold mining normal here < nineteen per cent four days
—
♦
John Gates and Emmott Roth
but poor yields of olive oil In- industry and h er excess of exports this week) we are too apt to over-
relief rolls and rising liv- over im ports are the features of emphasize our own troubles and spent Sunday at G overnm ent camp.
Mr and Mrs. G ranville Everest
................
: to forget th at the depression is
ing costs are Spain's
big issues at - her progress.
SWEDEN, along w i t h Canada world-wide Remem ber our own of Chehalem Mountain visited Mr
present.
and
Mrs. E E Rowton Thursday,
and
South
Africa,
probably
has
j
prosperity
depends
upon
the
pros-
PORTUG.VL: Under the regime
Phone 953
: Hillsboro
of a very competent finance m in­ shown the greatest recovery in in- perity of every nation.
State Capitol News L e tte r—G iv­
Copyright m s
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
ister, Portugal, for six years in J dustry and trade of all
. nations. Her j
P ublisher*' Fin an cial Bureau
ing the highlights of official ac­
succession, has paid her bills and big problem is reducing relief and
and
tivity at Salem.—Every week in
LICENSED EMRALMERS
had a surplus at the end of the
i
fi s r v r
,
the
Argus.
tf
year Portugal has her problems.
5 ^ , ^ b y ^ sU ^ k S c h o l l s
W om an S
but her trade is increasing and her a u ring isos, as snown Dy stock
recovery seems real and sound
?rlC5 i, ° n !he ? sI° Bourse Higher
f ^ I i i L X /T o o f
ITALY is fighting desperately to freight rates have pressed two-
v ^ lU D
X U C SQ 3V
balance her budget and stay on
X
lu ^ N oiw ay ^Ut? o t b to ^ r e ^ i r t ' SC H O L L S-Scholls Ladies’ club
gold. Mussolini says taxation has
7?• *’ ”*" “z a irouoies a re u e a
...
T ucc H uv at <h* choch
reached its lim it and the public
UP w lt£ th« P°»r " e d i t of G e r - T u e s d a y at the church
deficit m ust be met by economies.
her biggest w hale oil cus-
Program wiU d ial with
s p X ^ d
eO o^T nt ^s m
D - M A R K ’S industrial recovery, ^ h o lls history The roll call will
k
due to protective U riffs. has come
som ething of the past abou
creased in
moderately.
; alo
.¡„ ne
„ o mllch
Scholls.
A pol
pot lu
luck
luncheon
will
creascu
o u e ra ieiy.
m u c h f a s t e r t h a n N n rw a v '«
scnons. A
c k lu
i
SW ITZERLAND Is f a c i n g a J
J « ' " J 1” ? ^ T w a y s,
eniwed
j o-clock
domestic crisis. Unemployment is ment in ‘ .0“ d S b e tte rS' a iid ^ e Y e
Mr and Mrs
G
eor*
Mrs. George Fry of
»-iciniy xA/hilo
u e in o c c is
ic at
a t th
i» ds»-
iil
U OTICI D U t te r
and
G
_ __ ______ 1 .__ 1 _
rising
while h business
the
de-
e g g g g B urns _
were
w eek-end guests at the
pression low. By staying on gold, p rC/p 2 w S
iarm e!’s Jess Snyder home.
she has h u rt one of her biggest in-
The blg factor i° her
Orlo Jensen left Monday for
dustries—the tourist trade Hotel- ^ ' rVe^ , ous, ex Pa'lsl°o > *n ‘ndus- Minot,
N. D., for an indefinite stay.
keepers are forced to offer big .
iu tIVay ln r" ent 7®?rs bas
Messrs, and Mesdames L. A. and
concessions to tourists.
R^strictin depreclatlon oi th e yen. W. B. Flint entertained w ith a d in ­
HOLLAND'S g u i l d e r s e e m s ^ * t7 ± ^ , ipl„aced. ‘,n her products ner party at the A. B. Flint home
strongest of the "gold bloc" cur- y
evening of March 27, honoring
rencies and the Dutch have held
tiy slowed down her exports the
Robert McCauley of San
their own for about two years “ d
is now suffering over- Mrs.
Francisco.
Cal. Covers w ere laid
Dutch efforts to bring back re- ?5r°d " f ‘*°n ' ” er budget- unbalanced for 25.
When you get bia price reductions on
covery by dropping expenses and ,
J
s, -s a very serious prob-
Mrs. A B Flint and daughter
Fuller Paints, th a t’s a real opportunity.
costs, rathei than through jug- Cr*«TwA
M argaret attended a surprise pot
Check up on your needs — and come in
gling the currency, are typical of
luck dinner Monday at the Ernest
that conservative people.
lh
5.
u?l g h S llv e ,r, Pnces Just
Liverm ore home n ear Beaverton.
and buy your paint now — get highest*
BELGIUM: Another of the "gold h
i v
i ? h suffering from The
occasion was Mrs. Liverm ore’s
q u a lity products a t "sale” prices. This
bloc" c o u n trle s-is in the depths ^ g h g o d
la*?" C° ma birthday.
sale is for tw o weeks only, and w ill not
of depression. The num ber on dole dornM»ir
rico P ^ ?» ^ “d 'ly a n d
is rising, prices are sinking, trade rMUit
r i.r'P Iv P r6 fa ¿'ng a? 3
be repeated this year.
We specialize in quality com-
is declining. It is doubtful if pub-
vM '
- purchase P0 * '^
lie clam our to go off gold can
Nearly evcry barom eter m ercial printing.—Argus.
at. Improvement in busi-
be resisted
' ness conditions along t h e Nile. D o n ’t G et U p N ights
problem
her GERMANY'S
poor credit great
abroad.
Her e x - i î K ? i
• j eadj" g |
THIS 25c TEST FREE
&
a r iT
‘ - « o n  m ; „ t thparnoïra ° o u r
If It Fails.
m aking it m ore and more diffi- :
cult for the Fatherland to buy and i is d u f ?o T iz o ^ a rtX lPn î rfrecovery
Une this b<adder lax a tiv e to d rive out
!m porl thost' ra * m ^ e r i a l s ^ i t a l j Î L ^ V 0 ^ 0 ^ " " a n d
im p urities and excees aeida which caune
Fuller Pure Prepared
Stands hard outside
to her economic life Nazi economic «hört ernn« nf la«t’
tu
the irre ffu la rk y th a t waken you up. Get
experim entation has missed t h e
M the finest "hwi»e"
use. Has a glossy fin­
core of G erm any’s Droblem tn nanVe\ are imPr °ving and Argen- ^ h u leave«, ju n ip e r oil, etc., in l i t t l .
“ L m i . .
“ n a s bonds have made a strong i Kl-een t tab
a b let*
. « , r railed
.l,« t B
b * , „„
ish. Can he washed re*
paint made. B a o k e d
B U
U -K
-K E
E T
T S
S . . W
W o e rk
on
re-establish her foreign trade
comeback
the bladder «im ila r to caator oil on the
p e a t e d ly . D o e s n ’ t
by 86 years' experi­
L
ull
«!
HUNGRY: Sentim ent in B uda­
business depends up­ bowel». Poorly acting bladder can cauae
PfljÑTS
ahow water marks.
pest Is better than in most Europe­ on BRAZIL’S
ence. Il la.it»!
the coffee industry whose sta­ scanty flow , freriuent desire, burning or
an capitals today. Hungary has tistical
position has been vastly bachache. In four days if not pleaHed,
made modest progress tow ard re ­ improved by the burning of m il­ a n y druggist w ill refund your 26c. Get
QUART
QUART
covery. H er problem is to narrow lions of bags. Coffee prices con- your regular sleep and feel " fu ll of pep.”
D e lta D ru g store.
Paid adv.
T
Berggren Twins
..pet ILg ?atlonsu have re"
APRIL
1 - “13-
t
,‘3 ^Le™',g trnm defla;
C/nc)
«
SP€CiflL
ReducedPriced
HOUSE PAINT
special price
89'
G allo n .... »2.89
ÍO R C O R R E C T
PORCH PAINT
Lester Ire la n d & Co.
McFall Jersey Dairy
Phone 2 KM
Williams S. I. K Form ula a d s
i H the stomach. <21 liver, (3)
liver. und <4> quickly helps tn
correct faulty elimination. If you
■utter from stomach
liver, m
kidney disorders, see t h e Della
D rug store -Ailv.
on
HILLSBORO, OREOOS
as of
March 4th, 1QÎ5
RESO U RC ES
Cash on hand and due from hanks
$239,526.40
United States bonds and Government
guaranteed bonds
233,200.00
Municipal and other bonds
388,524.72
...........
Municipal Warrants ................... .........
I
100,749.27
Stock in Federal Reserve Bank .....
3,200.00
Stock in the Federal Deposit Insur. Corp.
2,241.34
Bank building and furniture and fixtures
38,550.00
Loans and Discounts................................. 401,640.41
Other Real E sta te .....................................
10,313.50
T otal................................................. $1,323,945.64
L IA B IL IT IE S
Capital........................................................ $ 75,000.00
Surplus........................................................
15,000.00
Undivided Profits and Reserves .............
5,709.11
Circulation........................
30,950.00
Deposits..................................................... 1,191,280.53
Total
$1,323,945.64
89'
Gallon
»2.89
Half-Gallon
»1.66
SCREEN ENAMEL
Fullerspar ia the finest
niialitv spar varnish—
lor eitherr inside or ont
aide use. Resists heat,
water, weather, wear.
F re s h e n up y o u r
screens, prevent them
from ru s tin g aw ay,
w ith M ark D e r o r e t
Screen Enamel. Green
is slightly higher.
P IN T
38'
special price
Pint .
Fishing Season Opens April 5th
10c
In explaining Ills condition, Mr
J. II O’Daniel. Corydon. la . (U te .
”1 have suffered with stomach
trouble for over 10 years and with
kidney trouble almost that long
It got so bad that I couldn't eat
w ithout suffering afterw ards
I
felt bloated, had bud breath, lit­
tle uppeUte. My blood pressure
made me d tu y . I was advised to
try your medicine lly now It has
»topped those aw ful spells amt my
blond pressure la down I now
have u g o o d appetite and am gain­
ing weight
special price I
P in t. . . . 53c
SPAR VARNISH
QUART
special price
Quart
Has Fourni W onderful Re
lief in W illiams S. L. K.
Formula.
The Commercial National
Bank of Hillsboro
Donelson ÔC Sewell
P A IN T
SALA
Lunch m7de
High Blood Pressure
Mide Him Dizzy
Condensed Report
RUSHLOW
FULL€R
M«
,he W rthday cake Present were
Mr and Mrs Jphn Ibach
,y
Tommy and Dugan Ibach. Mrs
John Ibach S r. Mr and Mrs. John
Lullch and Johnny and Lorraine,
Mrs Ella I,add, Mr. and Mrs George
Schneider and Howard and Idly,
Mr and Mrs Albert Schmidt, Frank
Schm idt and the host and hostess j
Mr. and Mrs William G rau of
New York spent the week-end w ith
her parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. H !
Meyer. They are m aking their
home in Portland at present.
There are a hundred rea­
sons why you should drink
Milk — all of them good
reasons! More Milk means
better health. Drink at least
a q u art a day.
put the aih itrato r out of cotnm h
ston and then evened the match
in four minutes with a vicious
surfboard hold When In ►still tic* i<
mimed. the sailor made short work
of llall. taking the winning full hi
three minutes with u double toe
hold
Herb Ilurgeson of Portland drew
down the Ire of the crowd in Ins
sem i-w indup bout with Joe Gru
denier, who substituted for J.iHt
Kiser Herb w restled the first 15
minutes, taking the first fall with
a Stockholm special From that
point on he resorted to choking
tactics that cost him the m atch
and earned a volley of booa from
the fans G ardenler took the see
ond fall on a foul und then won
the bout with a body press.
Jack Huger of Eugene defeated
Dewey VunLoo of Gaston ia the
curtain rui er. taking the only fail
of the match in 22 m inutes with a
laxly press
Q u a rt. .
64c
Deposits as of March 4, 1935
$1,191,286.53
Deposits as of March 5, 1934.................. —$843,922.40
In crease in O ne Y ear
$347,364.13
EDWARD RCHULMERICH, Prc«ident
E. I. KURA TLI, V ice-President
W. C. CHRIST ENSEN, Vice-President
Pool-Gardner Lumber Co.
"For E veryth in g in B u ild in g M aterials”
C. JACK Jr., A ssistant Cashier
Owned and operated by home folk«
Phone 2891
151
W.
B aseline
ALF O. JOHNSON, Cashier
W. V. BERGEN, A ssistant Cashier
HL