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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (July 26, 1918)
PACE FOUR LINCOLN COUNTY LEADER, TOLEDO, OREGON. FRIDAY. JULY SSth, 1918 Portland Seed Company SEEDS! ! A Complete Line Onion Sets at 18 Cents per Pound Toledo Drug Co. Tl P. HAWKINS.' Prop. -r fHWWWHWH I 1 1 1 1 1 l I L. R. BATEMAN E. R. BATEMAN BATEMAN & BATEMAN COMPLETE HOME FURNISHER UNDERTAKING SUPPLIES 'We Buy, Sell and Exchange New and Second Hand Furniture Tr TtTtTtTTTTTtTTtTTTTi ANOTHER REASON WHY Frederick's QUALITY STORE Has become the most popular STORE in the County is the positive guarantee, that the mer chandise you get here is of the Best Quality. We want you to know that every article you buy at this Store must be satisfactory or your money is refunded. We make a specialty of good things to eat, and if its in tho market you are reasonably sure to find it at Frederick's Quality Store Yaquina Bay Ry & Lbr. Co. Electric Light and Power ELEVEN YEARS AGO Mr. and Mrs. ' C. f! Avprv nf Portland who have been visiting tne iornwr s brother, Ed and family, went to Newport Mon day evening returning to their home Tuesday. H. E. Collins left Tuesday morning for a visit with relatives at Portland Ore. and Washoueral i .Wash, Mrs. Geo. Umbaugh of Kelso Washington, arrived Saturday evenine for a visit with hpr hm. thers Messrs. Warren and Walter Hall of Siletz. iwr. a id Mrs. Joe Tumidie of Portland arrived Monday even ing for a visit with relatives. Married. Saturdav evening I July 20th 1907 at the Commer XiCial Hot 4 in Toledo Oreg., Miss (Kate Williams to Mr. Henry Wil son, uev. v. ii. Ellsworth of ficiating. Uncle Charlie Williams nf X Newport had business in' the city Tuesday. A "tent ttheatr romnmv J played to good audiences In To- iUUKUity, unci Tuesday nights. Buy W. S. C TWENTY-ONE YEARS AGO Mrs. Thos. Whitehorn nf fnr. vallis, and Miss B lswell, of Col fax, Wash, are visiting Miss Eifie Crosno this week. A. 0. Krocstad arrived In thia place last night, having returned uui a iew aays ago from an ex tended visit to Minnesota nml other eastern places. Tl O - . i .j c ii leys came up irom Potland Tuesd.1V. hnvliiir e.-min $ business before the Circuit 'Court I here. . Aiessrs. Clark Cnnpl t F. M. Stanton have been putting Dumi piling mis weeK lor the :Fischer building. Boi i To the family of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Altree, near this place, on Sunday, July L'Oth 1897 a son. Edwin Stanton, who has been .up in Washing lor the past two or th;.i! months, ''firn.-J last Monday evening. Ed Is the newly u pcinh'd iosim:;.sior, and .will fieri out the mail to the pat rons of thi3 oflic; as soon as the necessary papers lnve hew made out and approved. ! Messrs. W. V. Craves and L. k. urooks. with their lumi!!.. ,, -.vent to Newvort this c:L. where thev will ramn rnt rm.I at tend the Sumiinr School. Elk CitV ItPlll? Ilnnioi- Mr-. rison is tho lording merchant of noncer now, having puu-hac. ;1 the stock of II. LjuLj at that place. Suy W. S. a DID YOU LOOK I MArUE IT'S HERE? FOR SALE OH TRADE 40 acres Improved irrigated farm. ELGIN BRACELET WATCHES 31 MAKE AN IDEAL GIFT FOB THE GIRL GRADUATE OR THE JUNE BRIDE DROP IN AND SEE OUR COMPLETE 8TOCK OF WATCHES, CLOCKL AND JEWELRY TOLEDO JEWELRY CO., . H. E PETERSON, Manager and Watchmaker MANY GOOD POSITIONS Can be had by any ambitious young man or woman In tho field of railway or commercl.il telegraphy. We want a number of young men and women to prepare for the telegraph serv ice to fill vacancies caused by unusual drafting of young men for Signal Corps. Prepare to lelp your country. Write today for full particulars. THE UAH. WAY TELIXJRAPIl INSTITUTE of Portland, Oregon. o- NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the County Court of the 6tata ol Oregon for Llnooln County. N'otlce In hereby given that the uu aVralKiH'd ha been appointed admin iHtrator of the estate of Andrew Alln- iter, deceased, by the County Court of be State of Oregon for Lincoln County, end has qualified. All person! having claims against Mid estate are hereby loUflad to preaent the same duly verl fits! as by law required, to the under filmed at TafL Oregon, within six months from Uie date hereof. Dated and first published June 14th, 311 &. Abe Abramt, Junior, Administrator, Taft, Or, ?! GIRL WANTED For seneral I (housework. Apnly at this of fice. BERT M. HOWE, Prop . r. Joaee, Attorney, Newport, Oregon fcMMM 1 1 1 1 1 1 .. FOUND A large black hound dog came to my place Mondav .1 evening Julv 15th. Own SANITARY ihave 8am by paying for this no- .W .a, JL.Hp. fln.l rnlini, n .v -no,l,w, A 0 Hv "J ' V. 4JIV V, V.G J one mile west of Chiiwood. A. H. Dwlnell. Barber Shop J LAUNCH For Sale Chean. i 1 A 1 condition. See Elmer Lud- An up-to-date place In every I wick, Toledo Oregon thing that constitutes a X I WANTED Several furnished First Clast Barber Shop tToonis for light housekeeping. AuurcsB uox iiu, uare Laiier. Our Bath Room la always Clean and Neat. Try It- Agency for the uasKet goes twice a week, Tuesdays and Fridays . II 1 1 TO TRADE Four room houso witb. basement and fiv lots at l yMbany, to trade for acreage In T l Itinnln ...... i.uiiiv.um vuuillj, UUrUHB UOX -iiu, luirau wil-dll. IAKGISTERED STOCK For ALBANY STEAM LAUNDRY 11, , 8even cow8. thro heirers . .. l and bull, all registered Jers-eys. see id. A. llulbert, on Jay Dunu I place. X PX)R SALE Two Cows, both giving milk. Sed R. A. Miller, X Wlnant. MONEY I have State money X to loan on Improved farms at per cent, oara crarien, Toledo, Oregon. THE WAR, THE FARM AND THE FARMER By Herbert Quick Member Federal Farm Loan Board The farmer everywhere loves peace. The American farmer espe cially loves peace. Since the dawn of history, the farmer has been the man who suffered most from war. All that he possesses lies out of doors In plain Bight and Is spoil of war his house, his grain, his livestock. The flames that light the skies In the rear of every invading army are consuming the things that yesterday represented his life work, and the life labors of past generations of farmers. ! Everywhere the farmer Is a warrior jwhen war is the only thing which will make and keep htm free. He cannot rally to the colors as quickly as can the dwellers In the cities, because It takes longer to send to the farms the call to arms. It takes longer to call the farmers from the fields than the city dwellers from the shops. Many do not hear the first blast of the trumpet Others do not at first under stand Its meaning because they have Hot had the time to talk the matter over with their acquaintances. Instead bt reading half a dozen extras a day, the farmer may read weekly papers only. He must have more time In a ! Hidden emergency to make up his nlnd. It Is Impossible to set the fanners if the United States on fire by means of any sudden spark of rumor. But when they do Ignite, they burn with a slow, hot fire wbloh nothing can put out. They are sometimes the last to heat up; but they stay hot. In a low? Petit they are always found sturdily carrying the battle across No-Man's Land In the last grim struggle. The American farmer will give all that he nas and all that he Is to win this Igreat war against war. ' This war was at first hard to under stand. No armed foe had Invaded the jL'nltod States. The night skies were pot reddened by burning ricks and farm housos. - No raiding parties robbed us of our ca ttle or horses. No Fabcr-ratllers Insulted our women. It seemed to many of us that we were rot at war the thing was so far off. We did not reulizo what a giant war had become a monstor with a .thou sand arms thut could reach across the seiu nnd take from us three-fourths of white man has no"er been able to ao evirythiug we grew. Cut finally we c'opt slavery. He has never yet beta ta-.v that it as so. I successfully enslaved. There rises up If the Imperial German povornir.cTit in him analnst servitude a resrntuitnt ha-.l made? and enforced an ordar that ' bo terrible that death always Is pref ro American farmer should leave his , crable. (This Is tl'.e frst M three articles. The sscond to bs published next week.) own land, haul grain or drive stock to town, it would have done only a little more than it accomplished by its Interdict against the freedom of the sea. What was the order against which we rebelled when we went in to this warT Look at the condiUon of the Amerloan fanner in the lacter part of 1914 and the first half of ltlS and see. When the war broke out, through surprise and panic we partially gar up for a while the use of the sea as a highway. And ,the farmers o America faced ruin. I know an lewa farmer who sold hts 1914 crop of 85,. 000 bushels of wheat for seventy cents a bushel; Farmers In the south sold their cotton for half the cost of p-. duclng it All this time those por tions of the world whose porta wera open were resdy to pay almost any price for our products. When finally we set our ships In motion once more, prosperity returned to the farms. But It never returned for the farmers of those nations which remained cut off from ocean traffic. Take the case of Australia. There three crops have remained unsold on the farms. No ships could be spared to make the long voyage to Australia. Bo In spite or the efforts of the Gov ernment to save the farmers from ruin, grain has rotted in the open. Millions of tons have been lost for lack of a market. Bueh conditions spell Irretrievable disaster. Such conditions would have prevailed In this country from the out break of the. war until now If our Government had not first resisted wltk every diplomatic . weapon, and flnalhr drawn the sword. Why did we draw the sword T To keep up the price of wheat and cot ton, and to protect trade only? It someone should order you to remala on yoar farm, and not to use the pub lic highways, would, your resistance bo based only on the fear of loss ta profits from failure to market your crops? Ity no means! You would fight to the last gasp! Not to make money, but to be free! When a man Is enslaved, all be loses In money Is his wages. But the NOTICE TO FILE CLAIMS In the County Court of the 8tate of Oregon for the County of Lincoln In t!u matter nf the Kstata of Mario ( Lnu'se Held, Peceasi'd. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has bren, by order of the County Court of Lincoln County, Ore gon, duly appointed E.xcit'.or of the nstnta nf M.irie ionise Held, deceased. AH persons havlnc claims arcalnst said estate ure hereby nouiied to present the same, duly verified and with pro-, nor vnnehera 09 hv law renulred. to ma at my office at Toledo, Oregon, within six months of the date or this notice. Dated at Toledo. Oregon, this 10th, day of July, 1918. C- E. Hawkins, Executor, of the estate of Marie Louise Iteld, deceased. of SUMMONS miles lroni Bend Orec. For particulars wiit j to, J. T. Newbeuy, H. D. 1 Bond, 1 Oregon. roil SALE .House and two lots, In Toledo, fruit tre.s, gar- dc:i,gojd well. Mrs. Julia A. Parker. KOK SALE A fnTShorN horn tocifer calf, month old. from a good milk strain cow and bull, tj Carl Tangen, Toledo Oregon. ;; FOR SALE ton Republic . . truck. Almost new. ! ; ' A. 11. Hughes, G39 Irving Ave. Astoria Oi-ciun. U. S. Loans To Farmers Now Nearly $50,000,000 Nearly twelve million dollars was loaned out to farmers of the t'nltud States by the Federal land banks during the month of Jan uary last. On Tehruary 1 the total amount loaned out to farmers by these banks since they were established was nearly $50,000,000, tho num ber of loans closed being 24,000. The amount applied for at thut date was $200,000,000. representing over 100,000 applicants. The tot'il loans made by the va rious banks were as follows: St. Paul Hiioliane Wichita Uoikeley Oni.tha .. ....$S.7fi0.4OO 8.830.075 g,ci:t.:no 2,GuC,G00 3.210.100 Houston T.,124.412 New Orleans Louir.vll'e St Louis Hulll mure S.02S.235 2.927.900 2.IM.4SO 2.114.200 1.614.6C5 8lrlnpnc1J Columbia 1.469.055 What are you farmers going to do for the Government now that It la asking for the Third Liberty Loan? FOR YOUR INFORMATION Here are eonie of the things your Liberty Bond money loaned to tbe Government will buy for our boys "Over There": A $50 Liberty Bend will supply lour months' sustenance In the fluid tor one of our soldiers. A $1C0 Liberty Bond will supply 200 pounds of smokeless powder for one of the big guns. A $200 Liberty Bond will equip and uniform four of our bluejackets. A $500 Liberty Bond will supply 180 of our boys with gas masks, In which to face one of the dead- . liest menaces of the trenches. A $1,000 Liberty Bond will buy gaso line enough to drlvn one of our submarines 2,000 miles In our campaign against tbe undcrseas , raiders of the Kaiser. A $2,000 Liberty Bond will supply 620 thirteen-pound shells to slak German submarines. Every Liberty Dond you buy helps actively to shorten and win the War. in th- Circuit CoJrt of the S'.3t Oregon tor the County .if Lincoln. Western fctate Bunk, PH'iirif:. v... Mar iu Rutchman. AilTi!niv:r.itiix of the estate of Lowell W Taft, do ceased, William Edwin Taft, Nel lie Hocking nnd Mary 15. i'.uehman, as heirs at law of Lowell W. Taft, .deceased. Defendants, j To Mary K. Uuclnuaii, Administra trix of the estate of I.ov.ell W. Tatt, deceased, Williaai Edwin Taft, Nellie Ilockiug, and Mary K. i.tlui.a aa heirs at luw of Lowell V. Taft, de ceased, the above na-rnl defendants: 'In the name of the State cf Oregon! You aro hereby required to appear 'tnd answer ilia conipW. nl iilod against 'you In the abjve entitled suit, by the ilrst day of the next term ot the above entitled Court, folluwiiii; the expira tion of the time prescribed In t'ia order for publication of this iiinuuions, which I first day will be the 2d I;iy of August, 1918, and if you fall to ko appear and answer, for want thereof p'.a'ntlff will apply to the said Court Pir the relief demanded In said com pin nt. The re lief, demanded is the forclosure of a certain mortage executed and de livered by Mary K. U.uclimau, one ot 'the defendants herein, ..dxlnistra- trix of the estate of Lowell W. Taft, kceased, which said niortjaKC was ex ecuted nnd delivered on or about the 10th day of May, 1916, and was plveu to secure the payment ef a eertalu promissory note of tho p-ild adinints- i tratrlx, In the sum of 1 425, payable on or before 2 years after dute, with interest at the rate of i per cent per annum, and which said ti:or;!;u';e con veyed unto plaintiff t..- t;;;u purposa .lie following describi '1 n ..1 property situate In Ltnolu Cut.:;-, i-tuto of Oregon, to wlt: l'-ii:.. n -iiiu at tho southwest roriir.' of ii! .,. k Fifty, of ltV.se & llayley's Scci:il Addition to tlie City oi Newport, l. ;i olsi County. ligon, thence nlon Ki;:!i ttrt nnd the southern line oi i.li.ck Kifty in an cuntc-ly dineti.n a distaii'-o of jlifiy feet, tiiciicu in u H iil.i ily direc tion on tiie line het.v;:n hits ona K.i-l two of sjid Mock a dislanee of Isi.uy f"ct, them e In u v.- criy direr Ufon nr.d parallel wit'.i i . lii street to 'llulbert i.tre. t a dis'.iinic of lifty feet, .llir. mo al'.ms liulbrrt s;n-ei in a V'Uiherly directs ;i lix'.y .'eet to thd place of bes'r.iiiu;;, heir." tl-o mutheru sixty feet of Lot One. of llloc k Kifty, .of Case & r.uyle'.! tl'ion.l Addition lio the City of Newport, Lincoln County !tregua, nnd a further :t u barring 'and fun-losing you, Cie said defend ants and each of you cT . .1 from any or all interest, ri.;!:t ah 1 title in or to said real property mil every part lliereor. This summons Is put IHl-.rd by order of the Hon. It. 11. M;11t. County Judgo of Lincoln Counlv, Oregon. mado and entered the 201h day of June, litis. Hawkins A M-Ciunkcy, .atom,", s for IMuiutlff. PostofTlce addresi, T.'U-.! i, Oregon. "Protection the Allies afford ua may weaken our sanse of duty." Taft, Fab. , 1917. Have you weakened? ' Da your dirtyl Buy Liberty Bonds. NEWPORT FL0.1I3T Cut Flowers p.nc! dotted Plants; Funeral Designs A Secialty. Phono 2651, Box 204 Newport, Or . -Buy W. C. THE BALANCE 0E POWER NOTICE OF PARTNERSHIP DISSOLUTION The partnership of COLLINS MCCONAIIY LUMHEIl COM PANY, has been dissolved under an arrangem-cU thereby the un derslBned is to collect all out standing accounts nnd Rnttl nil debts of said partnership, with in tnirty uays. Call or write me at Siletz, Oregon. Dated July 12th 1918. C. D. McConahy. Retiring Partner. R. D. BURGESS PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Toledo, Oregon Office In Andrews Dulldlnn. Offlcaj nows: 10 to iz a. m.; 2 to 4 and 7 to p. m. Emergent? calls a. any time. G. L. PERKINS OVER THE TOP Shoemaker and Harness Repairer Shop on Hill Street TOLEDO. OREGON Buy W. S. 8. THIS PAPER REPRESCNTCO POR FOREIGN ADVERTIS1N3 DY THE otNrrtAL Cfmrr NEW YORK AND CHICAGO BRANCHES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CI7IC4