Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The Boardman mirror. (Boardman, Or.) 1921-1925 | View Entire Issue (May 25, 1923)
PORTLAND OFFERS A MARKET FOR YOUR PRODUCE NORTONIA HOTEL You Will Feel Right at Home Here SAFE AND CENTRAL REASONABLE RATES Excellent Cafe Special Weekly Itutes Hus Meets All Trains 11th and Stark, Portland, Ore. Portland. Oregon VAUDEVILLE PHOTO-PLAYS Complete Change Saturday. Adults, Matinee, 20c: Evenings, 3'Jc. Continuuua 1 to 11 p. m. Children 10 cents all times. BAB'S RESTAURANT A good place to Eat and Live Wall. Remarkable 40c luncheon at noon. Open 7 a. m. to 2 a. m., 364 Yamhill St PORTLAND HIDE & WOOL CO. 109 UNION 1VENUE NORTH, PORTLAND, OREGON. Write for Prices and Shipping Tags We Pay Highest Prices for H1DKS. PELTS, WOOL. MOHAIR, CASCARA BARK. Addrefai Department B THE COMMON HEART 1 RITZ HOTEL Right Down Town Park and Morrison Sts Portland, Ore Cheerful Large Lobby. Well furnished rooms with all modern conveniences. Prices 41.00 up. You will cortainly feel at home here. W. J. Sofield, Manager. PATENT ATTORNEY MECHANICAL F.NCINFKrt Protect that Idea with a United States Patent. Others have made fortunes out of Patents. Why not vou? Thomas Bllyeu, 202 Stevens Bldg., Portland, Ore. MONUMENTS E. 3d and Pine St. Otto Schumann Granite & Marble Work. INFORMATION DEPARTMENT PLEATING SPECIAL 85 cents Cut, seam, hem and machine pleat siu rid ready fur band. Hemstitching, picoting and tucking. EASTERN NOVELTY MFo. CO. 8BW Fifth St. Portland. Or i iimilWTi hi HE positively and oerma- nemly eured of your Ptlea by a highly .pecialiied phyil cian. My method is non-iurg-ical, painless and GUARAN TEED to cure you. Send for FREE Illustrated book. CKAS. J. DEAN 2ND AND MORRISON PORTLAND, OREGON MNTi;Qfsl TH 15 PAPtB WHEN WRITING ATTENTION LADIES Sanitary Beauty Parlors We fix you up, we make all kinds of Hair Goods of your combings. Join our School of Heauty Culture. 400 to 414 Dekum Bldg., Phone Broadway6902, Portland, Oregon. BRAZING, WELDING A CUTTING" Northwest Welding tk SupplyCo. be 1st St CUT FLOWERS H FLORAL DESIGNS Clarke Bros., Florists, 287 Morrison St. FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORKS Commercial Iron Works, 7th & Madison. FOOT CORRECTIONIST" Featherweight Arch Supports made to order. J. E. Tryzelaar, 618 Pittock Block, Portland, Ore. MOI.ER IMKBEIt COLLEGE Teaches trade in 8 weeks. Some pay while learn ing:. Positions secured. Write for catalogue. 234 Burnside street, Portland, Ore. PERSONAL Marry if Lonely; most successful "Home Maker"; hundreds rich; confidential; reliable; years experience; descriptions free. "The Successful Club," Mrs. Nash, Box 55, Oakland, California. Wedding Bouquets and Funeral Pieces Lubliner Florists, 341 Morrison 8L INDIA CORDS 30x31, Full 32x3i Fulf 31x4 Full 32x4 Full 33x4 Full 34x4 Full 32x4i Fulf 33x412 Full 34x4i2 Full 35x412 Full 36x4i Fulf Full 34x5 size 35x5 Full 37x5 Full 3Gx6 Full 38x7 Full 40x8 Full Non-Skid Cord, Oversize. . .$12.75 Non-Skid Cord, Oversize. . .$16.40 Non-Skid Cord, Oversize. . .$19.95 Non-Skid Cord, Oversize. . .$22.05 Non-Skid Cord, Oversize. . .$22.70 Non-Skid Cord, Oversize. . .$23.40 Non-Skid Cord, Oversize. . .$29.50 Non-Skid Cord, Oversize. . .$30.15 Non-Skid Cord, Oversize. . .$30.90 Non-Skid Cord, Oversize. . .$31.70 Non-Skid Cord, Oversize. . .$32.85 Non-Skid Cord, Oversize. . .$36.45 Special Over- .$38.15 Money-Saving Sale, 10,000-Mile Guarantee i By DOUGLAS MALLOCH j i 4 Hp HE Lord has made us much alike, And made us all akin : Three meals a day, and work and play, And night to slumber In. We're high and low, we're rich and poor, And think we are apart ; But, in our pain, our joy again, We have the common heart. The Lord has made us much alike. However else It seems ; The poorest man has still his plan. His visions and his dreams. And, if humanity shall rise. Together we must start, The high and low together, so We have the common heart. The Lord has made us much alike And made us like to Him. Build not so high the shadows lie Another's path to dim. All you can suffer He can feel, And tears of sorow smart The eyes of all, as hotly fall Upon the common heart. The Lord has made us much alike Think not of clan nor class. But understand and shape the land Remembering the muss. Grant rich or poor the rightly his, There lies the statesman's art With justice thrilled, the nation build Upon the common heart ! i ; by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) o Uncommon CT A TC TVTT7TT Td X AX J. JLi ii xi W IN BRIEF. Non-Skid Oversize. Non-Skid Oversize . Non-Skid Oversize. Non-Skid Oversize. Non-Skid Oversize. Cord, , .$37.10 Cord, . .$39.85 Cord, , .$55.75 Cord, , .$77.80 Cord, . .$99.75 Every Tire Backed Up With Cassidy's 100 per Cent. Service. CASSIDY TIRE CO. Tire Merchants. Established 1914 Broadway and Oak Sts. Portland, Oregon Extra Special 30x3 Non-Skid Fabric. .$8.50 Two Phones BRoadway 2300 BRoadway 0180 Trail Marker Planned. Union, Or. A monument commem orating the crossing of the first wagon train on the Old Oregon Trail 80 years ago will be erected at the top of the . Blue mountains, the site selected for the July 4 pageant, according to an nouncement made by W. E. Meacham, president of the trail committee, when representatives of the various cities of eastern Oregon met in La Grande. The monument will be a huge stone with a bronze inscription plate attest ing the memory of the pioneer days and respect for the men who first made the perilous trip. Top o' Blue Mountains is at the summit of the Blue mountains, where one of the flnt homestead of eastern Oregon was settled. Chehalis. Because he was unable, properly to digest a quantity of nails, pieces of baling wire and other such, Mona Loa of Waikiki, one of the beat purebred Jersey bulls owned in south west Washington owned by Anton Adolphsen of route 2, Chehalis, died Wednesday morning of peritonitis. Mona Loa was purchased by Mr. Adolphsen at the Pacific International three years ago and waa valued at 11500. Recommendations to be placed be fore congress relative to renewal of the rehabilitation act which expires June 30, 1924, were discussed in Wash ington. D. C Tuesday, by state civi lian vocational rehabilitation directors and social welfare workers at a con ference called by the federal board for vocational education. Hole in Bead Saves Tot From Choking to Death Atlantic City, N. .1 Howard, the three-vear-o'.d son of Daniel Watson, owes his life to his ability to breathe through the small hole in a glass bead lodged In his throat. A few weeks ago the child waa seized with a nt of coughing. The family physician, unable to discover the cause, advised an X-ray photo graph. The photograph Is said to have fulled to show any obstructions. He was seized with another coughing spell just as his parents were about to take him to a Philadelphia specialist. The coughing dislodged the glass bead. For tunately the bead hail lodged cross wise In his throat and the little fel low was able to get his breath through the hole Sense By JOHN BLAKE DON'T BE SCARED T9BAR has done more harm in the world than drunkenness which is saying a good deal. The sooner you eliminate fear from your make-up, the sooner you will get where you are trying to go. The man who has the best chance In the world Is the man who is afraid to be scared who has learned to fear fear. The fear that saps a man's purpose and leaves him trembling and helpless on the threshold of life has many forms. There Is the fear of the rich and powerful too common, even In this day when the rich and powerful can do little harm to their fellows. There Is the fear of poverty a real fear, and one which is harder to shake off than all the others. There is the fear of what other peo ple will say, the fear of being ridi culed the commonest and perhaps the most mischievous form. Get them all out of your system. Remember that the rich and the powerful, of whose greatness you stand in awe, are only human beings, and that they have little reason for wanting to injure you, even If it were possible. Get rid of the fear of poverty by thrift and frugality, which Will enable you if necessary to live on little, and give you a reserve to tide you over if the loss of a job temporarily strands you on the beach. As to the fear of ridicule, forget It altogether. The opinion of other peo ple Is more negligible than you sup pose. And those who would ridicule you because you are working hard and with a purpose are moved more by jealousy than any other motive. As soon as you discover that other people can be afraid of you, you will cease to be afraid of them. Then your fears gradually will subside. Fear Is instinctive In most of us. It Is one of the results of the desire for self-preservution that is as old as the race. But It Is always a handicap. The thing that you should be most afraid of Is fear the fear that makes you a weak paltry creature, with your facul ties paralyzed, and all the elements of progress that are in you terrified into Inaction. (Copyright by John Blake.) o Progressive. A better tomorrow is born of a good today. Boston Transcript. -O- Has Anyone Laughed : At You l : Because ITTHEL R. PBYSBR Humility Is the eloest bom of virtu You pack your trunk at the last minute? Why not? You haven't asked anyone else to pack It for you. You value your vacations, you enjoy them so much you don't want to infuse them with work. If you are on a business trip you want no Interruptions either. You know the folks who begin to pack a week before they leave. They never can do anything yon ask them to do because "I must pack." "I must throw those things In my hat trunk, etc., etc." You on the contrary, pack when there Is nothing else to do but pack. You save time ami pack when you have to only and don't spoil your days with It. SO Your get-away hers It: You never let business interfere with pleasure. S by MoClure Nwppr Sy. lot. t J Bend. Annual round-up of cattle will be started this week by high des ert stockmen. The round-up is one of the largest of the old-time cowboy events of the kind in Oregon. Baker. The country is being scour ed to get the worst possible bucking horses, and wild cattle are being brought in from the range for the Haines stampede May 31, June 1 and 0 Salem. Governor Pierce has receiv ed from the Building Material Deal ers' Credit association, with headquar ters In Portland, a lengthy resolution protesting against the sale of prison made brick in the open market. Salem. Members of the state board of control will meet here Tuesday and decide upon a site for the new state training school for boys. Forty sites have been offered, all of which were inspected by the board this week. Albany. New features for this year's fair announced after a meeting of the fair board Friday afternoon, will include a wedding and the offer ing of three automobiles, one to be given away on each day of the fair. Salom. Appointment of a state high way commissioner to succeed Robert A. Booth of Eugene probably will be announced by Governor Pierce this week, according to a statement made by attaches of the executive depart ment. Salem. Work of paving the six-mile section of the west side Pacific higl way between RIckreall and Holmes Gap in Polk county will start Wednes day, the Oregon Contracting company announced. The work will be rushed and the road should be opened to traf fic late in the summer. Cottage Grove. Clay England, em ploye at the J. H. Chambers mill, was killed instantly Saturday morning when he became entangled with a shafting while he and several others were making repairs to the sawdust carrier. Evidently his jumper caught and lashed him to the machinery. Salem. John G. Wright, pioneer resident of Salem, and steward at the Oregon state hospital for 30 years, died here Sunday night, in the early '60s Mr. Wright was in the mercantile busi ness in Salem and carried supplies to the Snake river country during the gold mining activity. Ho was a vet eran of the Indian wars. Salem. It was reported here Friday night that a suit will be filed in the Marion county circuit court within the next few days to restrain the state, county and municipal officials from eti- forceing a law enacted at the last ses sion of the legislature providing that all persons engaged in public work must be citizens of the United States Heppner. Six clips, aggregating 2, 400,000 pounds of wool, were sold by growers here Friday for an uverage price of 44 cents a pound, or a total of approximately S1,05C,000. The clips were bought by George Colby and Ed ward Cox, representing the American Woolen company. The highest prlci obtained for fleeces was 45 cents a pound. Salem. Salaries in connection with the conduct of the various state activi ties under the governor and board of control for the month of April, 1983, ag gregated $102,729 as compared with $198,614 for the month of November 1922, according to a statement pre pared by the executive department here. The comparative monthly re duction in salaries was $30,235. Klamath Falls. The serviceable blue serge skirt, plain middy blouse and sturdy low-heeled shoes worn for the past year by Klamath county high school girls will be worn next term only at the wearer's preference. Last year by the majority vote of the girls the plain uniform was adopted. Fri day they voted 52 to 45 to discard the plain things and return to more sophis ticated dress. Salem. As a result of a collision be tween an automobile driven by C. M. La Porte of Eugene and a Portland Salem stage manned by Earl A. Hat field, the latter Saturday filed suit in the Marion county circuit court to col lect damages In the amount of $1S40 from La Porte. The plaintiff alleges that La Porte was on the wrong side of the road, and that the accident was due to his carelessness. Albany. Louis J. Hill has bought 61,000 acres of land in Linn county from the Oregon & Western Coloniza tion company for a consideration of nearly $1,500,000, according to a deed which was filed at the office of the county clerk. The land was originally granted to the Willamette Valley & Cascade Mountain Road company by the government with the stipulation that the company build a road from the Idaho line to Albany. A JOB WITH A FUTURE WE use men between aes of 18 and 50. pay 40c per hour as minimun wage, give best of meals at 35c each, supply beds for 25c, 30c and 40c. have rKbh hot and cold water baths. advance employees rapidly. give positions FREE on application. have Employment offices at West Linn, Oregon, Camas, Washington, and 209 Commonwealth building, Sixth and Burnside, Portland, Oregon. Crown Willamette Paper Co. i After Every Meal WRKUEYS I n work o r play, it gives the poise and steadiness that mean success. It belps digestion, allays Iblrst, keep ing the mouth cool and moist, the throat muscles relaxed and pliant and the nerves at ease. WrippereXPjJ A LULLS Pompey's Pillar. Pompey'fl Pillar Is a beautiful red granite Corinthian column in Alex andria. Tho inscriptions show it was erected in 302 A. D., in honor of the Emperor Diocletian. No one knows how it came to be called Pompey's, except that he was assassinated In Alexandria 350 years before tho date of the column. Shave With Cuticura Soap And double your razor efficiency as well us promote skin purity, skin com fort and skin health. No mug, no slimy soap, no germs, no waste, no irritation even when shaved twice daily. One soap for all uses shaving, bathing and shampooing. Adv. Worth Remembering. Just before going to si ep a bit of Imagination regarding achievement possibilities of tho morrow will stead ily and increasingly bear fruit, par ticularly if all ideals of difficulty, worry or fear are resolutely ruled out and replaced by those of accomplish ment and smiling courage. Dr. Fred erick Pierce. Between Girls. Bluebelle and Maybelle were talking things over. "All men," quoth Blue belle, "are liars." "Well, do you want them to tell you the truth about your looks" Louisville Courier-Journal, Lincoln vs. You Lincoln belongs to the apes, lie was a man among men and alt the world today recognizes his genius of character. Lincoln was self-taught. Instead of waiting for someone to pound knowledge Into him, he would walk miles to secure a book that he might pursue the quest of knowledge which was a snprme passion with htm throughout his life. Lincoln instinctively knew that knowl edge was the key that unlocks the door to fame and fortune, or any success that man desires. He went directly after knowledge to prepare himself so that when his chance came he would be ready. You may look handsomei than Lincoln; you may have more native treiwth Li ;i Lincoln; you may have an intellect tti.it could easily be developed; but If you have not the burning desire to dev- . . p yourself, you are certain to stick in the mud-sock class. Knowledge is distinctly a matter of in clination. If you do not secure knowledge you are just as certain to suffer for your luck of development in a mental way as you would certainly deteriorate physically If you laid in bed all the time and would neglect to develop your muscles. Lazi ness leads to pain and failure. If you In sist on being lazy, the law of compensa tion will force you to pay compound In terest for your idleness. You will be whipped ami scourged and made to do the meanest work of the world. The hard laws of necessity are sure to overtake you. You must eat and people will insist that you earn what you eat. The whip of necessity will beat your bleeding back and the sharp tongue of a neartless world will tear to shreds your sensibilities. When you are stretched on the cross of neces sity, people of this world will crown you with thorns and drive Into your flesh, nails expressing their scorn. Lincoln knew thai (ho world will never forgive failure. Logically he cipilpped himself to succeed ami he did succeed. You, too, can succeed, but you must pre pare yourself for the battle of life. The greatest asset in life Is a strong character and the ability to express your self, if you are dumb as a dog you will receive the reward of a dog, the crumbs from some rich man's table, who under stands the way to express himself. The great mass of men have made no effort to develop themselves. Nearly all are capable of Infinite developments but they do not realize It. They are paralyzed by the thought that they are Inferior when in reality the only difference be tween a successful man and themselves is development They could easily grow if they would fe1 busy nnd develop themselves as Lin coln and other great men have done. You do not have to be a super-man or a giant of Intellect, but you do have to he just a little better than the average to be selected to occupy a seat of hOtlOf and ease where you will work less ami get more. If you simply develop the stiff back of a Jack-ass and the physical strength of a mule you will naturally be paid for brute strength and nothing more, because, that Is all your equipment will enable you to render In doing the work of the world. Lincoln wisely learned to talk convinc ingly. We are offering Pr. Frederick Honk Law's course on "Mastery of Speech," which will quickly develop your ability to express yourself effectively. The good talker, you have noticed, Is the fellow who gets in the lead every time. I r. Frederick llouk Law, of Ox ford Aeitilerny, A mherst College, and lirow n -lag University, holding the degrees of A. It., A. M., and Ph. I, has prepared a course entitled "Mastery of Speech," that Is not only simple but exceedingly Inter esting, lly following the Instructions he gives, It Is possible for anybody to be come a convincing talker. Probably not a I M-mostheries, but a rattling fcfood, en tertaining speaker. Io not delay. Put off this coupon today anil send It In without any money, and we will send you this OOUrM for $3. fid. Settle with the postman when he delivers It. Appreciated Earnings. That which we acquire with the most difficulty wo retain tho longest; as thoso who have earned a fortune are usually moro careful of It than those who have inherited one. Colton. Speed of Hares. Tho rabbit runs faBter than a hare for tho first 35 yards. A motor car at 40 miles an hour will overtake and pass a hare, but up to that speed the animal will usually hold his own. Mrs. Fred Anderson AMERICAN NEWSPAPER ASSN. of Portland, Ore. 41C-19-20 U. S. National Bank Bldg. Gentlemen : PlejiHH mall me Dr. Thaw's course, "Mastery of Speech." I will pay the post man $;t ftO on delivery, which completes the transaction and pays for the course In full. Thereafter the course Is mine absolutely. Na rue City State Sparkling Eyes Follow good Health Salem, Orr-K- "For several years I suffered with liver trouble and stomach disorder. I was constipated and had a gassy condition of the stomach. I doctored, hut could not get rid of thee condition! until I began taking Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets, and since I took these 'Pel lets' I have not had any more troul le with my liver or stomach. "1 can highly recommend Doctor Picri'-'s I'li.i nit Pellets to anyone suffering with stomach or liver ills." Mrs. Fred Anderson, 90S S. 21st Street. Constipation is at the root of many ailments. You can avoid manv of the ills in life hv obtaining Dr. Pierce'-. Pleasant Pellets from your druKK'st. Send 10c lor tri:il pkff or write for free advice !-. Pierce's in valid..' Hotel in Butl-I , N. Y. fritl Plainly. Electors Broken Up by Napoleon. An elector waa once a prince who had a vote In the election of Urn em peror of (lennany until Napoleon broke up the obi (icrman empire and eoiiKequenlly destroyed t li c; college of electors. One Thing That Can Be Helped. You cannot help the kind of brains you are born with, but you can help tho kind you go through life with. Ami that's what counts.--H. 0. Forbes. it the flneat product of it kind in the world. livery woman who hus ued It know! this statement to he true. 1 Girls! Girls!! Clear Your Skin With Cuticura ' Sampl firh tomp. fMnrinrnt, Tmlrum) of CutUiT Are You Satisfied? g&wc ts th btssest, most pirfctly juls4 Biin'rmss Training Hrbool In th North wst. Kit youmtlf for a higher soaltloa with more money. I'ermanenl pualUoaa assured our (lradusti-a Write tor aUJof FonrU and TaaUIU, Portland. P. N. U. No. 21, 1923