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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 3, 1925)
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1925 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM. OREGON PAGE THREE Stayton News Stayton, Or., Dec. 2. Mr. and Mrs, Louie Anderson ol Coburg 01ont Thanksgiving with Mrs. An derson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Speer, returning home Sunday night. Miss Wava Drown ol Klamath Falls, who is.aUeud.ng the Uni verjliy ot Oregon, epent Thanks giving holidays with lior aunt, Mrs. C. H. Brewer. Dr. C. Ward spent the Thanks giving holidays in Portland visit ing with his brother. Edwin Keecu and Leo Brown, botih students at the University o Oregon epent the Thanksgiving holidays with their parents here. George Brown, local speciul agent for the Standard Oil com pany, has been transferred to Sheridan. It is not known ai pres ent who will succeed him here. Jack Frost, former Bpecial agent here, who has been representing the Standard Oil in St. Helens. Or., for the past year, has been sent to Tillamook. Mre. Ruth Wood, who had a tooth extruded in Salem during the latter part of the week, suf fered a hemorrhage from the ex traction Friday afternoon and was rushed to Salem. Her condition Is reported to be improving. . A five-day chaulauqua under the direction of Elligon-Whltc was concluded here Wcdnesdny night with a musical program. The Chautauqua was well patronized and the local committee deserves a great deal of credit for their untir ing efforts in making the affair a success. The largest attendance was probably Monday night woen the play "Cappy Hicks was given. Mr. and Mrs. Lesley motored to Jefferson, Thursday afternoon, where they visited with friends. In tho evening thc-y attended the services at the Christian church, which concluded the rally which the liev. Mr. Hay of this city has been conducting there. Mr. and Mrs. Jog Sestak spent Thunksgiving in Portland visiting at the homes of four of their chil dren who live there. - Mies Susie Kearns, who has been in Portland nursing her nephew, Louis Kearns, who has been ill with pneumonia,, hos returned to Stayton. Mr. and Mrs. D. Hoke motored to Portland, Wednesday afternoon, to spend Thanksgiving .with their daughter, May Yoke, Clarence Benuchamp, Jack Jones and Walter Miller left Friday morning for Klamath Falls, where they will engage in a duck hunt. Tho Ladies Aid of the Christian church will hold a cooked food sale Saturday, December 5, in the Mutthieu building on Third street. Mrs. Frances Parry left Thurs day night to vilst her children in Portland and In Kelso, Wash. Mrs, Lau will be gone for several weeks. A party consisting of Ambrose Dozler, Henry and Harry Mu teen ier and Herman and John Hassler left Tuesday for Klamath Fa lie to hunt ducks. They returned to Stayton, Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Seible of Shaw have gone to California for the winter. The change was necessi tated by Mr, Seihle's health. Miss Dora Murphy, who was op erated on for appendicitis recent ly at a Salem hospital, returned to her home here Wednesday. The Catholic Order of Foresters held joint installation of officers Sunday at Sublimity. The Stayton, Jordan and Sublimity organiza tions were represented. Jefferson News LIBERTY Liberty, Dec. 2. Mra. Fay Cof fee has motored to Pendleton to attend the funeral of her grand mother, Mrs. McBride. Mrs. Jack Ponlng la recovering from an attack of pneumonia. Mrs. A. F. Marcus la now able to be about after suffering with a paralytic stroke several weeks ago. Mr Edward Dencer la repairing his prune drier that waa partly de molished by the tornado that pass ed through this section on Armis tice day. The Liberty Cooking Club has completed the work and most of the members have received the achievement pins. Mr. and Mra. Ft. L. Wright and family spent Thanksgiving In Port. land. The attendance at school has been good, the average attendance for the entire school being 98.3 per cent for the past month. Mr. Frank Judd made a biisl ncss trip to Portland Saturday. He will be away several days. Mr. John Kuebler on his way .home from Seattle,' spent a few days In Tacoma at the W. H. Math eson home. Mrs. Hoag's mother returned to her home in Monmouth last Wed nesday evening, where she is slow ly recovering from the recent op eration which she underwent at j the Salem hospital, : Mrs. A. B. Browning and small: daughter spent Thanksgiving In Seattle with her mother and father. The pupils who rustled the most- Items in their respective grades during the post month are as fol lows: 6th, Marie Mur hammer; 7th, Dorothy Browning; 8th, Magdalena Schmidt and Louis Jory; 9th, Sa- blna Schmidt, Mr. ana Mrs Herbert Rae re. I cently became the parents of a son who hns been named Herbert Ol ney, Jr. Mrs. Rae was formerly1 Miss Ellen Berg of Liberty. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Doud and family, Mrs. Kisiah Hoffman, and Oris and Violet Hoffman, visited at the home of Mr. and Mra. Phil ip Miller of Aurora last Sunduy. Mr, Ted Hrubetz spent Thanks giving In Los Angeles with a friend Miss Marlon Holder, who is at tending a missionary school In Port land spent Thanksgiving here with her mother, Mrs. Kate Holder. Mrs. Vester Hubbard, the Inter mediate teacher, spent the week end with her parents at Jefferson. A birthday dinner was recently held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Coffey In honor of Mrs. O. G. Coffey. Several relatives were the guests. Mr. O. W. Hoffman has Just re turned home from a hospital where he hna been 111 with an attack of pneumonia. Mrs. Rt D. Gibson's mother, Mrs. Moore, died Sunday, a victim of pneumonia. Mrs. Gibson has the sympathy of the community in her berevement. BROADACRES Broadacrcfl, Or., Dec. 3. J. H Friend, who has been employed in a Salem barber shop for several weeks, Is now working in the Fry & M alone shop in Hubbard. Marjorie Friend, who has been ill for a few days, Is again in school. Mrs. T. J. Hunt and daughter, Norene, epent the week-end In Disturbance in a Local Theatre The patrons ot a local enow holies' were very much disturbed and annoyed by the continuous coughing of a person in the au dience. Don't be a nuisance be cause you have a cough or cold, A few doses of FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR COMPOUND taken promptly will bring speedy relief from coughs, colds and hoarse- nees. Mre. W. T. Clary, White Plains, Va., writes. "We have used FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR COMPOUND for colda and bad coughs with splendid results.' Adv. Portland with Mrs. Hunt's parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Wolfcr. Carl Line of Eatacada and nop how, Albert Kroner at Mil- waukle, were guests of Mr. and Mra. A. C. Whitney, Sunday. 'Tape's Cold Compound" Breaks a Cold Right Up Take two tab lets every thret hour j until three doses are taken rhe first dose a ways gives reliei The second ana third doses com pletely break up the cold. Pleas mt and safe to take. Contains no qui: ,e or opl a t e s. Millions use "Pane's Cold Compound." Price, cents. Druggists Adv. A permit to operate In Oregon has been issued to the Washington Iron Works of Seattle, capitalized t $500,000. G. F. Aston ot Port land le attorney-in-fact for Ores gon. I II II I ll 1 TtoVk-lnl I With our new wonder He SHAMMY B I II I II II VvCl I I FYLE remarkable new lilk weave wmw AfH I I wear wonderfully, keeps Its , J l fit x fell 1 I shape and comes In a fine variety of lfV JJy(tox?WP I daihingly attractive patterns. lfl&MtlSH I SHAMMY FYLB, (priced tt $1.50) outwean wLs&im i yl I Mveril ordinary .ilk tit: Othcn t 1 .00 to dfl) JR s tt X I 92.50, t all good habcrduhen, and bfl Hire IPPl OfVAVATS. iVVcS5'l e I ' IDS I . Modely 4"iV2v. ., , f3 Scho.nl.I4 XfcXJ Sadtfacdon NewYoi. yT me Vital "v- , 1 p ' 1 thirty guarantee Jefferson, Or., Dec. 2. C. M. Smith and family spent Thanks giving at the John Palmer home near Corvallis. Mr. and Mrs. William Bilyeu have returned home after spending several mouths at Sheridan. Mrs. Helen Edwards of Corvallis spent Thanksgiving with Mr, and Mrs. D. L. Spragg. Mies Marguerite Boyer of The Da ilea epent tho Thanksgiving holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Boyer. Roland Wall of Portland visited hie parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wall, Sunday. Harry Wall, Billie Skelton and Bill Main left Saturday to visit Ed Lyr.es, who is in the Kelso hos pital. They were accompanied as far as Portland by Frank Wall and Charles Lyneo. Mrs. George. Witherite and Georgia Witherite have returned from Portland, where they spent Thanksgiving. Mr. and Mrs. F. Dillon and Mrs. Hawk of Itockaway visited Mrs. W. E. Smith and Mrs. B. F. Loon ey, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Verl Case and chil dren have returned from Silverton, where they recently moved. Mr. and Mrs. G. Rear of Tllla mook wero recent guests of Mayor and Mrs, J. O, Fontaine. Helen Kins was home from near Sclo, where she teaches, over the Thanksgiving holidays. D. P. Mason and Miss Flora Ma son were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. (J. U. Mason. Mr. and Mrs. Sulivan stopped in Jefferson to visit Mr. and Mrs George Gentry, Saturday. They were enroute from Canada to Phoenix, Ariz. D. C. Thorns of Scio was In Jef ferson, Monday. Miss Atkinson and brother Frank, spent the week-end in New berg. Ed Holms was home from Port land to visit his family Sunday. J. D. Hayes of Portland was in Jeflerson the first of the week. Marion Allen, who teaches at Astoria, and Elsie Allen, .who teaches at Adams, spent the Thanksgiving holidays at the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Allen. They returned to their schools on Sunday. Mrs. H. Sims spent the week end in Portland. Mies Gladys Gentry of Moro vis ited Mrs. George Gentry, Satur day. Mrs. D. D. Mars, Verna McKee, Marlon Sima and Gamolt- Whed beo sold Red Cross Christmas seals Saturday. Nearly $20 was taken in B. J. Moritz is ill at his home on the Marion road. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Armantrout have returned to their home in Everett, Wash., after visiting Mrs. Eva Kacy,. Mrs . Arniautrout's mother. Mr. and Mrs, Ed .Tones and Mrs. Frank Miller spent Sunday visit ing relatives in Kelso, Wash. Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Owens visit ed Mr. Owen's mother, Mre. II. Sims, Sunday. Mrs. Mary Garrison is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lao Zellar. Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Moritz and son and Mr. and Mrs. John Moritz of Salem viisted Mr. and Mrs. B. J, Moritz, Sunday. Charlie Goode and A. L. Ulrich have returned from a trip tc Bill ings, Mont. Mrs. John Callahan has return ed from Portland, where ehe un derwent anoperation. Mrs. Agnes Brown spent Thanks giving with her parents at Shedd. Virtus Scchale of Canby has been visiting his grandmother, Mrs. Mary Meeker. Virginia and Martha Mason were home from Mill City over the week-end. - Mr. and Mrs. Norman Garrison of Salem and Herman Zellar spent Thanksgiving with their Bister, Mre. Fred Shearer at Silverton. MT Clean Child's Bowels with "California Fig Syrup" Hurry mother! Even a bilious, constipated, feverish child loves the pleasant taste of "California Fig Syrup" and it never falls to cleanse the bowels and sweeten the stomach. A teaspoonful today may prevent a sick child tomor row Ask your druggist for genuine "California Fig Syrup" which has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Motherl You must say 'California1 or you may get an imitation tig syrup. AGV. The Old Days The Bold Days The 'X rTjL Days of Courage S of Thrill; of Adven- J fatfoK ture will be here jjjfalk OREGON J By Kenneth L.Roberts In. 1925, two-and-a-half million seekers after sunshine, and color, and warmth and wealth poured into a state whose normal popula tion has been only about a million. So tremendous an influx of settlers and tourists has cre ated such vast demands for everything from real estate to sandwiches, from a night's lodging to a palace that our old standards of busi ness judgment totter. But the man who buys real estate blindly will be burned just as surely in Florida as else where. Read Mr. Roberts' articles beginning in the Christmas Post; Now On Sale, five cents! mm mm mm With or Without By Fanny Heaslip Lea For seven years the Devlins had lived, and loved, and squabbled, about like other married couples and then, just at the top of a bouncing fine row, they found that they never had been legally married! What did they do ... . well, what would you do yourself under equally devastating circumstances? 25 Splendid Stories,& Articies Make Jhis The Best Christmas Post Ever Published Here are Just a few of them. The Last of the Hoopwells, by John P. Maruand; the first of a new Plwpy Shute geries, by Henry A. Shute; a most timely and authoritative article by Captain Conrad Westervelt, on Flyers and Storms. DeWolf Hopper writes on How Not to Act; and Sousa's Keeping Time has all the dash and spirit of one of his own marches. And then you'll enjoy Endurance VUe, by Octavus Roy Cohen The Moto Car, by Stewart Edward White; Good Old Grandpa, by William Hailett Upson; Bohemians De Luxe, by Maude Parker Child; and sixteen other stories and articles-twenty-five b all, In the best of Christmas Posts. Now on sale aQ for five cents 1 5 the Copy AOO22 Christmas PresentU 1. Last year there appeared in The Post: 21 Full Length Novels 11 Shorter Novels 339 Short Stories . 413 Articles 784 Features in All 1. Next year there will be even more. 3. Last year 39 books were pub lished which had previously appeared in The Post 4. These 39 books retailed for $97.00. 5. These 39 books contained less than half the total ma terial that appeared in The Post. Here's your chance to make wonderful Christmas present a $200 Christmas present to somebody; perhaps to yourself. Just slip $2 in an envelope with the name and address to which you wish The Post sent, and mail it to The Saturday Evening Post, Independence Square, Philadelphia, Pa. Then, in the Christmas mail, the friend you have remembered will receive a charming announce ment of the gift subscription In your name a beautiful repro duction in full color, 7x1 1 inches, cardboard protected, suitable for framing, of an original oil paint ing by Maxficld Parrish, entitled "A Florentine Fete." And, there after, every week throughout the year, your friend will recall your kind thoughtfulness. What other (wuiMc gif can compare to a yutt of The Vottfor only two dollar,? So tary, no shopping In crowded sforei; o padutga to wrap and tend. 1 the recipient of one of your gift eubtcrlp kant fhould happen lo be already a nhxriber, we will extend the rubscrip. tlon a year. THE SATURDAY EVKN1NO POST, 976 Independence Square, Philadelphia, Pa. Pkua eend THE SATURDAY EVENING POST for OM ! year to each of thoea whose namee and addreeiet are given in the attached Ilet X cnelcae Two Dollar! for each. Mail rmrr ChrUtmae Gift Announcement is my name. WMWINQ IPO $2 the Year AN AMERICAN INSTTrUTION'' You can subscribe through any newsdealer or authorized agent, or send your order direct to THE SATURDAY EVENING POST, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania