Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The Boardman mirror. (Boardman, Or.) 1921-1925 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1922)
I (h fi- Warner j iioanmiau, uregon Real Estate and Insurance AUTO LIVERY Will go Anywhere Anytime indicating that the Plerce-for-Oov- ernor eampaincn will he carried dir ect to the people before the rapidly oncoming election day, an advertise ment is appearing simultamous this week in the newspapers of the state making a pie for dollar subscrip tions, on the basis that, this cand:- VOTB ON WORLD FAIR ' PURELY TECHNICAL QUESTION miMiiinnnimmn f DR. C. SEVERINSEN DENTIST Office in Bank Building BOARDMAN IHIIHIIIMIIMH M Drs. McKenzie & Lieuallen Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Offce: Rooms 1, 2, and 3, Inland Empire Bank Building (Over new Inland Empire Ban'K) I'KNULHiTUM - - OIUSOON BUMiETIN OF BOARDMAN COMMUNITY CHURCH SEHVICJ Every Sunday Sunday School 10:30 a. ta. Church Service 11:30 a. m. Christian Endeavor 7:30 p. m All are welcome. E. Benson, Pastor Technical legal reaso.is r.inl.c it neee-sary for the peopie of 'he sia'e le vote on the question of the l25 exposition, according io IT1 ep.is u tiOiviesuHd by the exyMtLlou iimiit- date Is one of the people and dopen- tee. While the measj-- a r'vr ..i clont upon the Met of the people to!1;? a tax of $3,00't O iO will 1. i n "'net him. The issue seems to dwe" ! '1 Itfilot In Portia.; i; ' he i U paricularly upon reduced tav and no hint is given or claim made of party or partisan affiliations, but a clear cut delineation of government for the people and by the people. In the matter of campaign expenses It is pointed out that Mr. Pierce him self Is hardly able to bear the brum of placing bis cause before the voters of Oregon, and, unsupported b) wealthy and influential corporations, it has been necessary to depend upon the small contributions of those who may have both a dollar and a vote. A clean campaign is pledged throughout. When a tnan is so cheap he won't buy a pair of glasses he makes a spec tacle of himself. The fellow who watches the clock can hardly expect to be anything but one of the hands. The skirts won't be much longer as long as they have two good reasons for wearing 'em short. A bald man would make a poor king, for then there would be no heir apparent. Arlington Cesh Market Pat Mooney, Prop. Fresh and Cured Meat Green Groceries and Fruits Arlington, Oregon mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.-. imiiiimium R. N. Stanfteld, President Ralph A. Holte, Cashier Frank Sloan, 1st Vice-Preaident M. H. Ding, 2nd Vice-President Bank of Stanfield Capital Stock and Surplus $37,500.00 RMUt Lt -: - Four Per Cent Interest Paid on Time Certificates i of Deposit. i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii:i:iiiiii!i!iiiiiiiiiiiiiii!!iiiiim MMtMMMMMIIIIimttMt vHH ARLINGTON ATIONAL " HANK CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $73,000.00 x- OFFICERS A. Wheelhouse, Pres. E. J. Clough, Vice Pres. H. M. Cox, Cashier Chas. T. Story, Assistant Cashier x ARLINGTON - - OREGON Th? Highway Inn O. H WARNER, Proprietor Boardman, Oregon Wholesome Home Cooking Best place to eat between The Dalles and Pendleton ire o.' tlw ballot in the rev. if h" v'ate will be on to authorize Portland to overcome the state tax limitation law w hich otherwise would prohibit Port land from levying the tax . No tax is provided outside of Portland. "Before Portland can levy a tax within Portland, it is necessary to have the approval of t be rotors Ot the entire State, " says the committee t -port. "This is due to the 6 per cent tax limitation law which reads in pari as follows: "Unless specifically au thorized by a majority of the legal voter:; .voting upon the question, nei ther the state nor any municipality, district or body to which the power to levy a ta shall have been delega ted, shall In any year so exercise that power to raise a greater amount of revenue for purposes other than the payment of bonded indebtedness or interest thereon than the total sum levied by it in the year immediately prcceedlng for purposes other than the payment of bonded indebtedness oi interest thereon, plus six per centum thereof ". The six per cent limit applies in the proposal by Portland to finance the exposition in order for the city to ex ceed that limit, which the $:!,00,000 tax would do, the constitution must be amended and this cannot be done excepting at a state wide election and with the approval of large. the voters a Dumb Dan: He's so stupid he thinks: A single tree is one that has never been married; That anesthetic is the name of a girl; That a Dodge Brothers bill board means a danger ous curve ahead: That celluliod il Harold Lloyd's brother; That Eskimo pie is baked in Iceland; That a dumb bell is made t oring; And Sing Sing is a voice culture studio. He tried to cross the track fiefore the rushing train. They put all pieces in a sack Hut could not find the brain. S. P. Hulletin Conductor Pardon me madam but your girl seemsi more than twelve. Her mother -Conductor! Would you take me for the mother of a girl of that age? Conductor Lady, don't tell me you're her grandmother. Sydney Pullet in. (ietting Him (ioing Father tfrom upstairs) - H-bn, it is time for the young man to go bovt Young Man our fat nor is a ian Father t overh tur n,;) Wl, when you don't have i relf-xur -r a cjmk comes in mix i'v handy. NOVICE FOR PUBLICATION Department f the Interior U. S. Land Olllce at The Dalles. Oregon, September IX, 1022 Notice is hereby given that Mich tel Fllckinger, of lioardman, Ore gon, who on January II, i9ix, made homestead entry No. 019470, for SUM NBtt (being Unit "D" Umatilla Project), Section 10, Township 4,N., Pang 25, E., Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make final proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before C. O. i?iayde,i. United States Commissioner ai Boardman, Oregon, on thj lb;h day of i ( tober, 1922 Claimant names as witnesses: Joseph T Healy, W. O. King, am H lioardman, and J C Hallenger, all of .lioardman, Oregon J. W. Donnelly, :! :i-3 7 Register NOTICK FOB PUBLICATION Department of the Interior Now is the time to Subscribe for the Boardman Mirror U. S. LAND OFFICE at The Dallea, Oregon. September 1, 1922. Notice is hereby given that Melvin B. Situs, of i'oardman, Oregon, who on September 24, 1919, made Home stead h'ntry No. 020992, for NWVi SF'i Unit I), Umatilla Project) Sec tion X, Township 4 North, Range 22 Baat, Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of Intention to make three year proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before C. G. Blayden, United States Comiiiinsioner at Boardman, Oregon, on the 27th day or October. 1922. Claimant names as witnesses. Nlek Faler, Paul M. Smith, O. H. Warn it, and Sam H Hour d man all of Itoaidman, Oregon. J. W. Donnelly, Ho-:J4 . Register OREGON NEWS NOTES OF GENERAL INTEREST Principal Events f thb Wro Briefly Sketched for Infor mation of Our Reader. Teachers from all sections of Marion county gathered at Salem Friday in annual convention. The Oregon eaves In Josephine county were visited during the last sea-i ji by more than 10.000 tourists. A movement is being launched at Ashland to beautify, the Pacific high, way by planting roses along the. fences. Due to recent legislation by con gress the state of Oregon will receive for the years 1923-24-25 federal road aid to the amount of 12,995,89!. The run of cliinook salmon in the TJmpqua river, which is now prac tically at an end, wiis very light this season and very few silversides have been caught. Led by the city planning commis (ion, all forces in Pendleton are work ing toward a union depot for the Union and Northern Pacific ruilroai' in that city. An annual prize of $25 in gold has been offered to the student at Oregon Agricultural college excelling in forensic work for the year, by Jacob Rcichurt of CoTvallls. Report! received at Salem from rural districts indicate that the re cent rains have not injured the prunes, and that picking has been continued without interruption. Discontinuance of the dual election board system, whereby ballets arc counted while polls still are open, was recommended by the Multnomah coun ty grand jury in a report. Ruby Dollar, an 18-year-old high school girl, was shot and almost in stantly killed at Ashland by Larl Barn ard, one year her junior, while play ing with a loaded revolver. An incipient cyclone in the vicinity of Irving, north of Eugene, tore down Farm fences, blew limbs off trees and overturned the station building at Ross, on the Oregon Mectric line. Girl students at the Klamuth county high school must hereafter wear the uniform dress adopted by the student body last year or present a satisfactory excuse for non-compliance. 111? grand jury at Klamath Falls indicted .1. W. Siemens and John Sie mens Jr.. his son, for alleged fraud In connection with failure of the First State and Savings bank, which closed last January. William von der Hellen, of Medford and Eagle Point, was awarded the con tract for construction of the Eagle I'oint irrigation district canal between Big Butte creek and Eagle Point on a bid of $140,000. Vaughan & Bester, who own and operate a sawmill at Acme, on the lower Slualaw river, soon will build a logging railway several miles long up Hadsell creek, to bring fir logs down to their plant. Evergreen blackberries, which grow wild in great profusion in most parts of Clatsop county, are now in their prime and hundreds of persons a; gaged in packing them both lor sale and for domestic use. The largest tax remittance to be re ceived at the office of the I n county tax collector covering I. lue on the second half of the year was turn ed over by the Weyerhauser Timber company. The amount was $11,215.32. Hy a vote of 35 to 27, with 21 of the delegates absent, the Oregon state federation of labor. In session at Salem, adopted a resolution urging amendment of the Volstead act so as to permit of the manufacture and sale of light wines and beer. Marguerite Stark, 13-year-old Port land girl, was proclaimed winner of the silver loving cup offered by the Oregon Farmer for the hoy or girl scoring the highest number of points on any project at the state ralr at Salem. Miss Stark scored 100 points in canning The secretary of state has tinned over to the stale treasurer (07,9!l.O2, representing the net receipt! of auto mobile regit-trations for the six months ending September IS, The money will be used in paying a part of $784,000 In interest due on highway bonds October 1 The Oregon pear crop consider., 1,1 1 exceeded the earlier estimates, reports F. L. Kent of the department of agrl culture The heavy spring drop did not prove to be an serious as intlcipat ed. Indications ate that the total 1922 pear shipments will amount to about 1650 carloads Seining for salmo:: Is the lubjei I 01 dlacuaeion on the lower OoqntUle rive, where it Is held the practice i not approved by the sporting element believe the river eventually will be come a poor fishing district If la allowed. Kisheimen ami cannery men who profit by oiaing salmon hold M opposite view and the question is likely to be aettlftd by the state leg Utatureat mil wlji yr s session. F. W. RICHARDSON j 'wiiim 'ROFESSION AL CARDS jmimA S. E. NOTSON A T TO it N K V - I - L A W Oflice iu Court House IKPI'XEK - - . OREGON Friend W. Richardson, who defeatec Gov. W. D. Stephens for the repub Mean nomination for governor in th( California primaries. NORTHWEST STATES GET FOREST MONEY Portland, Or. Oregon and Washing ton have just received $179,418.85 frotr the federal government for roads anr schools Oreion, second on the list draws $110,015.21, while Washingtoi receives $09, 303. 54. The above amount! go to the counties of the two states It: Which there are national forest areas The governors of 28 states have just been notified that 25 per cent of tin 8,4S 1 ,6 ' I received from timber sales grazing permits and other sources ol national forest revenue for the past fiscal year will be distributed by th forest service, United States depart inent of agriculture. These moneys art returned to states in which national forests are located for expenditure up on schools and roads. An additional 10 per cent of the to t:il receipts is transferred to the forest service for the construction of roads and trails within the forests, and this sum for the present year amounts tc $:!3S,576. JAMES D. ZURCHETt .Utorney-nt-l nv -TAN MELD Will oe ai the K nesday of ea-, h Ml V. Osteopathic PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Phone Res. 711 Ollice 551 iflice over Bank Pldg., Hcrmiston. Calls answered at all hours. DR. F. V. PRIME D E S T I S T R V Dental -iav ami Diagnosis HBItiWSTON, oltK. Bank Building Phones: Oflice 93. Residence 751. WOODSON & SWEEK ATTOKNEY8-AT-LAW .Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon. Dr. W. T. Tiller, Dentist Arlington, Oregon BARTHOLOMEW'S ORCHESTRA PHONE 4 1 Stanfield, Oregon Plays the latest dunce lits BRIEF GENERAL NEWS An order opening to settlement on October 27, 10,000 acres of title lands under the Klamath irrigation project in Klamath county, Oregon, was form ally signed by Secretary of the In terior Fall. The island of Naushon in Huzzards bay, owned by W ameron Forbes ol Huston, has been selected by tieneral John J. Pershing us the place where he will write his memoirs of the WOrld war. A total of at least 50 million bushelt of wheat to be marketed operative ly In the United States this year is estimated by Oeorge C. Jcwctti gen eral manager of the Nortbw i st Wheal Growers Assoc listed, With New York's two clubs wearing the diamond crowns for the second year in succession--the flrat time In baseball history that one city has held such a monopoly on pennants the Giants and Yankees reiuwud their world's series rivalry In the opening game Wednesday. Secretary of State Hughes has an Bounced the appointment of John Ba sett Moore as the American member of the international commission ol jurlslH which meets at The Hague December 10 to consider changes in international law as applied to new agencies of warfare, DR. FR ( IS i PHYSICIAN AND snti I HERMI8TON, OR! Hank Bldg. 'Phones: Residence 59a Oflice Hours 9-12. ;i Q Calls Answered Day or Nij DR. RAY W. LOGAiN PHYSICIAN & SURG BO N Calls answered at all hours promptly Edwards Building UMATll.l.A - . OREGON In Irrigon on Wednesdays. In Boardman Tuesdays & Thursdays Dr. A. H. Johnston Pliyscian ami Surgeon Calls answered at all hours In Boardman Wednesday and P day mornings Office phone M 161 Res. M 332 Arlington, Oregon. HIII!lllli!il!llNlllllM I The Only Restaurant in p Pendleton Employing full crew of white THE F R E f RESTAUR 1 HOHHAOH BROS., PROPS, KloKitnt. h'iirnlslied Hooiiim in Oonnootlon, Woman Appointed to U. S. Senate. Atlanta, Oa. Mrs. W. II Felton, 87 years old, oi' Ourtersvlllti, Ou., became the first woman member of the United States senate when she was appointed by Governor Thomas W. Hardwlck tc fill the race caused by the deatb Of Senator .nomas K. Watson until the people elect a ccessor in Novem ber. Rear-Admiral Clark Dies. Long Beach, Cal. I . Admiral I'harles B. Clark, who, tien a cap tain, commanded the battle p Ore gun on its famous voyage Iron "m Francisco to Key West anil Ifl r In the battle of Santiago, July 3, 1X9' In the Spanish-American war, died .i the home of his daughter here late Sunday. He was 79 yeara old. 1 ALFALFA FARMS Diversified Tracts Small Acreage Town Property Onlnmproved Land with WhU City In lioardniat Town Lots in New Town Ml COLD SPRINGS Farms and Flty Properly In all pints of Oregon, Wiishingloii and Idaho fob tOXCHANGJI i E. P. Dodd, HermW teeeeete t ii I Sell : Insurance Idaho Indian Lands Taxable. finise. Idaho. Frank H Dietrlck. federal judge, holds In opinion made of record here that Indian MM4l in Idaho are subject to tu' on. The case originated In Kootenai and Dene wall counties, and revolved . ut the Coeur d'Alene Indian lands. f J. C. Ballenger X Boardman Oregon i Watches Democrats Nominate A I 8mith. Syracuse. N Y. The democratic tat convention nominated AI Hmith for governor and I)r, Itoyal ri Cope Und fur Failed States senator. am (vo'ially iik-IiiJ at this time ol Die year. Come and let me fi you up from IHI.50 up, GBJffg IIIAT I, AST WM a . (x; DEN I tarts that I,ant. Heriiiinton - - Orogon