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About The Weston leader. (Weston, Umatilla County, Or.) 189?-1946 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1920)
' 1 -r"Tzrzz.'Z -rw f-tr ww "t HERE WK AR1S at your command for quick service and the best o mechanical skill. Our me-. chanics are first-class in both the Gar age and Blacksmith Shop. All we ask is that you give us a trial and once vou come always you stay. e also have the agency for the DODGK CAR and DODGE TON TRUCK. THE FARMER'S FRIEND one of the best cars and one of the best trucks made for the money. And don't forget that we handle the FORD TRACTOR and also all the implements that go with it for good farming. We handle the AJAX and the GOODRICH tires two of the best tires on the market. OILS, GASOLINE and a good stock of CAR PARTS. Weston Garage 1 1 ALL. GREER, Proprietors (Successors to R. G. Saling.) BREVITIES FACTS CF INTEREST TO THE INCOME TAX PAYER All person desiring me t figure thoir income Ux for them thl year would do well to note the following! If you are a single person and also are not actintr a head of family, if your gros income i UMH) you must make m return, regardles ef what your net income is. If you are a married H'ro or if you n acting a head of family, if your gross income i $2tHH you must make n return, regard"' of what your net income I. If you made a return hot year you no doubt will have ent you Form 1040 A, providing your net income was less than 5tMH, ami Form 1040 if your nt income was above $5000. If your net income is over $3000 thg year you need Form 1040; if le.- than $5000, you need Form I040A. The ruling rvtmirv nil farmer or farm owner renting their farm out on share to till out Farm Schedule 1040F. All farmer or farm owner will please send for two of the form 1040F. The department further require thin year that you lilt out Form I0l9 for every person to whom you have paid $1000 or more during the year, whether this be paid in cash, plain rent or other thine; of value. You need us many of these form a them an- persons to whom you have paid the uhi of f 1000 or more during the year. You need one other form known as Form 1010-in the event you have paid $1000 or more to any . one person. Every farmer or farm owner would A large part of the mountain po- gcm, Rt t(J MilUm A. Mll. tato crop has been dug and market- Collector of Internal Revenue, eit. However, a icw koi9 u v not yet disposed of their crops, FOR SALE. Three hundred and teven acre heavy black loam aoll, boated In Co lumbia county, Yah., elirhl mile from Wiiitaburic and right at ft email gallon oil the O.-Ws 1010 er averaged 42 bimhcl per acre; 113 acre now In winter wheat. Improve, mont are 0-room modern bungalow, barn fir 2S head of stock ami "0 ton of hav; kiih ry and sheds. With the place toe 12 head work horxcH, ome younit stuck, romplcto hi t of implement and machinery and alt rroo If sold before March 1st. Price i $130 per acre. KOSS I. I.ASII1.KY, munatier Or-cgon-Washington Ranches t'o., I'. O. IUx 513, Phono 1010, l'endleton, Or. SUMMONS In tho Circuit Court of tho rHl uf Oregon for Umatilla County, Klido Klla llelxhtf, I'lalntiir, v. Gran, vtlle I'. Ilclhhc, Defendant. To lirunvllle l llclshe, defendant above immcd: In tIIk Namk ok tiik Statk or Ok KiioN. You aro hereby reiiulred to ap. -...I .it.u.ir III,, putiili nlllt of til .daiiitiif filed against you in thoaboy entitled milt within ix week of the date of tho first publication of this Summon, to wit : en or before tho tilh dy of February, 1SI-.11; and you will take nulieo that if you full to appear and answer aid cotiidiiint or other wio plead thereto within said time, the plainllir, for want thereof, will ap ply to the Court for tho relief prayed for in complaint, to-wit: for a de cree of the Court diMolving thu bondx of matrimony existing between plain tiff and defendant and for othor tqult. "''ThUHumnion U published P"""" to an order made by Hon. . W, 1'heli. Judge of tha Sixth Judlcla District, 8tt of Oregon, on Urn 1UU day of iWilwr. iUiU. 1I ftr.1 pub lication of thl Summon will b n;d on Friday, th Btitlh "y'.f,K'"n,V' ItH'J, and th last publication on rrl dsr. tho !! th lay of Fobmary, " Dated Mt thu day of December, ,Ultt' rKTKIWON, IHHIIOr- " Attorney for I'laintlff. Residence and I', t). mklresa: ronilluiou, ureiiuo. Nutter Wrap orders prompt ly filled at tho Leader shop. i.vi..n,i nr.M-.iM fn- two formn . vaiasi( w.p. OHO a irtf- j f j fit en (final 1040F. 4tltHtMMIIIIII Utttt leadinir prower is n'portcl to , , orn,..) All have around 000 sacks. E. M. Jones L..inw , m-,e return 0 , 4 , v , ns nve acres i.u farmers, merchants and professional For Sale-Wall telephone. In- acres yet to djff cn uMton moun- who M ,0 n,,y or quire at this office. uin, while I. C. nnd Robert Hopkins co tion $1000 pr morc-should Miss Mapgie Fuson has recovered are also sai.1 to have some tuK-rs fvr two fornls ma m from from an atUck of influenra. still in the pround. Anton the Reed t fMf fyrm8 lQ0,x Jake Narkaus was down from the and llawtcy mountain farmers who (..mrtment is rather alow in mountain Saturday to make a tew still nave potatoes .o ubb .v is said, are Koy neuauen, nauer Cilmore. Alex McCorkell, Selmer Thompson anl Fred Heath. J. E. McDaniel, Walter O'Harra and Charley Pierce clubbed topcther . -. .L.. T 1... .n. a ...... i. were visitors ana niaueu irtv ia-uui-i "iv v'- iimiv,, m the amiutil mid-winter number of the or before local business calls. C. O. Pederscn was in Fortland last week for a few days, attending to matters of business. Mr. and Mrs. w ill 1'ayne ana air and Mrs. Claud Winn Monday in Pendleton. Mrs. Julia O'Harra of Newport. Wash., is a guest at the home of her sister-in-law, Mrs. J. M. O'Harra. Dan Hopkins was here on a visit the first of the week from St. Johns, Wash., where he is engaged in farm ing. Mrs. Zclla McThcrrin of Athena was a guest Saturday at thu home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Gould. Mrs. Leon Lundell has been visit ing in Milton the past week as the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Beamcr. aending out the forms thl year, so thut it is advisable to send at once for these. The dvuirtment requires Forms lil!C nr.d lO'.'H to be at Wash inpton, D. C, on or before March 15, 1!'20. Your income return arc re- be at Portland, Orcpmi, on March 15. Los Anpeles Times. It is in ten parts, and contains 252 pages teem ing with such enthusiastic descrip tion of the Golden State that if the boys will only elub . together apain and send us the nriee of a railway ticket, we may be tempted to join them. The season of bright-huel seed and flower catalogues has arrived. The fascinating descriptions of roses and all the other summer floral glories contained therein are a great delight Athena, Oregon, Feb. 6, l'.0. HOMER I. WATTS. Death Claims Mrs. A. W. Lundell Much to the sorrow of all who knew her, Mrs. A. W. Lundell wa called by death Monday at the fam ily home in this city from heart trouble, following an attack of influ enza. The remains were hid to rest Wedneday morning in I. 0. 0. F. cemetery, where services were con ducted by Rev. A. J. Starmer and ap propriate hymns were sung by a tributes were til Sit?, i cjCj B i i wmw . - .p to many Weston homemakers. Much reading soon causes the pampnieis to ,lllart,.ltt,. The floral lose the gloss of their new coats and ,.. ,,,i i-.tir.il. J. D. Miller and family were among acnuire the comfortable look, of obi v; ...,: it friends in every-day clothes. House for rent. Furniture for sale A. W. Lundell, Weston, Or. the recent grippe victims, but are rapidly regaining their usual health and strength. Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Driskell nrc suffering with influenza at their home in Dayton, Wash., it is learned by relatives here. Rev and Mrs. Mark A- Phinncy are HEMSTITCHING DEPARTMENT A. M. JENSEN CO. Hemstitching, Pecot, Chain Stitch- boine- congratulated unon the birth of wg Lmbroidery, Braiding, a little son who entered the family circle the evening of February 3. I. C. and Robert Hopkins and Roy Carlson spent last week in the Elgin country, where they bargained for 200 acres of land at $15 per acre. Mrs. John Bonewitz, who has been seriously ill for several weeks at the home of her daughter, Mrs. E. E. Tucker, is reported to have slightly improved. Owing to the health situation, the meeting of the Saturday Afternoon club scheduled for February 7 at the home of Mrs. Joseph Hodgson, has been cancelled. J. H. Williams returned Tuesday from a business visit to Spokane, where he bought goods from the rep resentatives of eastern houses for the Weston Mercantile Co. Mrs. Ernest Ross has received the sad news of the recent death at Pen dleton of her sister, Mrs. Cora Bill ings, and that of her brother-in-law, Elmer Picard. Both were victims of influenza. At the earnest solicitation of Ray Gordon, mail carrier on Reed and Hawley mountain, five enterprising mountaineer recently donated a day's work to the improvement of Pine creek road. D. W. Dcmaris of the Milton Gar age motored to Wcslon Monday and placed some advertising with the Leader for Fordson tractors. Hal) & Greer have taken the local agency for the Fordson. Mr. and Mrs, John DuPuis arc en tertaining their daughter, Mrs. Wil ma Minnick and two children, who came up from Oregon City last week to look upon the tender sprouting of young grain and breathe our invigor ating mountain air. Pluin Stitching, Button Holes and Buttons Covered, Pleating. MRS. C. E. FERGUSON Phone a:JC, Walla Walla, Wash. I I at once Second -Hand Sad dles. We will trade new saddles for old ones. Harness Oiled for $1.00 per set. Whitman's Harness Store (Phone 122) Milton ' Oregon Lundell wait born March 25, 1H74. mar Leon, Iowa. When about six ycats old she came with her parents to Oregon, where they settled in Morrow county. She was married November 1, lHSMi, to August W. Lundell. They were the parents of three sons and one daughterLeon W., Virgil E., Frank Harvey and Eva Leonora Lundell all of whom survive to mourn the loss of a kind and loving mother In HMO she was baptized and unit ed with the First Christian church of lone, Oregon, in Ivhich she was a willing worker. Coining to Wcton in 1915, she identified herself with the M. E. Church, South, and became n member of the Missionary society of that church. She was also a mem ber of the Rebekah lodge of this city. Mrs. Lundell had been in precari ous health for many year and death was neither feared nor unexpected by her. On January 2!) she was stricken with the fatal illness which took her from the home circle despite all that could be done by skillful and loving hands. Her husband pays her this tribute: "She was a lovable character; a good friend and neighbor, always ready to do her bit; a most loving wife and mother. Peace to her ashes." Lincoln's Birthday OUR BELOVED LINCOLN Born February 12, 1800 Cm Pi clubs to be organized in Spok ane county, Washington, will receive 100 sows this year. Boy and girls participating will not be called on for a penny but will be asked to follow the instructions of club leaders in caring for sows and their litters. The prizes include n $175 trip to the International show nt Chicago. Ar mour & Co. are behind the move ment in cooperation with the exten sion department of Washington state college. Exhibits will be made at the Spokane Interstate fair in the fall. Automohilist say that the road to Walla Walla is good as 'far a Mil ton, but that the Washington road is in very bad condition. The majurity of people drive to Milton and com plete the trip by trolley. (From Lincoln's speech given at Washington July 10, 1818:) "The way for a young man to rise is to improve himself every way he can. never suspecting that anybody wishes to hinder liim. Allow me to as sure you that suspicion and jealousy never did licit) any man in any situa tion. There "may sometimes be un generous attempts to keep a young man down; and they will succeed, too, if he allows his mind to be diverted from its true channel to brood over the attempted injury. Cast about, and see if this feeling has not iniured ev ery person you nave ever known to fall into it' 3