lAGE 2 THE BOARDMAN MTRROR FRIDAY NOVEMBER 14, 194 WILLOWS NEWS 'them to Pendleton and returning on Shnrrard J. and F. White and J. F. Sunday evening. I Peterson and Mrs. Farley, those ben- Repairing Irrigation Dam 56 Votes ' Mrs. -Moore and son and daughter efiting from this ditch. are Cast Birthday Tarty Zeunett Logan of Boardman was a caller on Willow Crook Saturday, en route to Leon Logans al Cecil. A pleasant lltle surprise was given at the Pert Bennett home on Satur day, the occassioa being the birthday in law were callers at the Peterson's Dick Logan of Cecil halted a few Ion Thursday night. Mrs. Moore form- minutes iii his uncles' M. V. Logan erly resided at Heppner but was en- on Tuesday while enroute to Board route from Idaho to the Willamette man on business. valley. Oscar Lundell spent a day or two in Arlington this week. Election came and went quietly in J, F. DeoB lias been having a tu-jsel with the grippe 'he past, few days but was getting the best of the lxut at ins! reports. of Mrs. Bennett. Cake and coffee was this precinct. The school house was served at the close of the social even ing and those ulending report a good time. CECIL NEWS used f r a polling place at Rhea with 0, I, Lundell chairman and George En,al.ging w-rft FlowStuck nniiii-hM'ji, ivsner .uoiuugue ami air. Mrs. M. Farley was a business visit Bpillman and J. F. Deos on the board, or at Pendleton .Saturday and Sunday. 11 TOtes were polled, so Mr. Lundell Mr. and Mrs. Pat Council of Hep- stated, pnet were guests al the Farley home Repairs are being made to the dam Saturday, Mrs. Farley accompanying on the LogaB place by Messrs. Ellis in Sand With Car Are Dinner Guests See Show OREGON NEWS ITEMS OF SPECIAL INTEREST Brief Resume of Happenings of the Week Collected for Our Readers. The port of Astoria budget for 1925 has been fixnd at $682,644. The Silverton Gun club will hold its annual turkey shoot at Silverton Sun day. James W. Fidler, 78, for 60 years a resident of Oregon, died at his home Succeeds Haughton The jEL Prosperity When you make it a habit to pass a part of your earning through the Re ceiving w indow of this Bank each paj day you are looking through the Window of Prosperity. Almost without exception the great fortunes of today had their foundation in small sums saved in this manner, and there is no reason in the world why you should not start the same way. The opportunities to bcccir. wealthy today are more plentiful Hum i vi i- before, but jou must make a start by Saving. NATIONAL BANK :immmmm:i::uttmtymmt:m:mt:mn:;mtt:r ODnVr ilmtr Ij0lt1.au Gkffthtg Claris Nam Properly Imprinted With Your Name And Special Knvelopes To Match Prices Range from as low as $1.75 for the first dozen and 75c for each additional dozen To as high as $4,76 for (lie first dozen and 3.75 for each additional dozen Excellent Assortment To Choose From Mke Your Selection Knrly Special Designs Suitable 1 or Personal, Professional & I'uainess Use W Ituvp various uraiU's of cards uini u'ladc fur uiiidc llto.v ate of be! it quality vliilt our prices arc approximately JtOfl under the usuiil list. You will save money buying from our regular stock. Special hi ilcrs may be placed nt the usual prkect after our stock is told out. Come In Soon and Look Them Over If You Lik Beautiful Things, You Will Like Them Orders Taken Now Will HeDelivered About Dec, 1, Unless Desired Earlier ORDER NOW AND GET Better Selection Safe Delivery Reduced Prices Real Satisfaction Mrs. George Krebs accompanied Mrs L. L. Funk to lone on Saturday where near Jefferson. they visited friends a few hours. There were 81 persons arrested In Mr. and .Mis. II. V. Tyler of Ithea Astoria during October and fines col- Sfdlng were in the Dalles for a day or 'ected amounted to $1595. two during the week and had some Coos county cheese won first and dental Work done before they returned second honors at the Pacific Interna- home, lional Stock Show In Portland. Mr. and Mis. Jack Hynd of Butter- The Congregational and Presbyter fly flats were the dinner guests of Mr. ian churches of Corvallis have decid and Mrs. George Krebs at The Last ed to make an effort toward federa- jjljjj MBI camp ranch on Sunday. Ous Davis arrived from Pendleton Oh Sunday and spent a day or tivo with friends in and around Cecil lie fore leaving for The Dalles. Miss lthoda Deck teacher at the Ce cil school spent (lie week end with friends in Eight Mile. Miss Crystal Robert! of Condon was colling al Karl Farnsworths at Ithea. Miss Josh- P dro of F.wing return ed home on Tuesday after spending a few days with friend. tTC Pendleton. tion. The Pacific Telephone & Telegraph company has started work at Oregon City on estimates that will exceed $30,000. Mrs. Laura D. Harlow, wife of Lou A. Harlow of Troutdale, was elected mayor of that city as a result of the recent election. The postoffice of Tumalo, Deschutes county, has been discontinued and mail to the district served by it will be sent to Bend. .Mrs. Eric Waldo and children left lor their home in Eugene on Tuesday After being mistaken by officers for after spending their vacation with a robber, Neilis Zimmerman, Albany friends in Morrow county. high school student, 16, was shot in Mr. and Mrs. Bufus Fnrrens and tne head at Albany. Children of lone accompanied by Miss( Two hundred and fifty Elks from Violet Hynd teacher near lone, spent Portland will be guests of the Albany Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hynd ledge Saturday at a banquet, program nt the Butterfly flat ranch. Miss Annie and initiation ceremonies. C. Hynd returned to lone with her sis ter and will visit friends in that lo cnlity for a few days. Iv ..,1,1 r,... r r ni.. , .i.. .... .... .,. ... v huiir mm urn t0 the secretary of state at Salem coniiren ami .rtmir Turner or Hood River this year has the dis tinction of being the first county in Oregon to send its election returns i the Cuckoo flats, were Calling on Mrs. H. .1. Streeter on Sunday. R. E. Duncan of Busy Bee ranch was delivering a truck load of honey In lone on Thursday. Miss Gladys Medlook of Morgan was visiting at Roekcllffe on Tlmrsdny. Mis. Boy Slender and infant dnugl The American Medical association has placed Oregon Agricultural col lege on its approved list of institu tions offering standard pre-medical instruction. Powdery mildew, a new disease of red clovery has made its appearance in Benton county. It first appeared in ter of Beldornseen ranch accompanied Just,uoine coumy, wnere nearly a nun by Mi- Annie s-ender and also Mrs. dred flelda have been rained. J. K. Crflbtree of Cookoo flats were Report of a rich gold strike come visiting .Mrs. I.. I,. Funk nt Cecil on from Salmon creek, In Baker county. Thursday of this week. A man named DicklnBon exhibited in W. , Hynd of Band Hollow, T. H. Baker last week samples of the ore I.owe of Cec il and W. T. Palmnteer of that will assay $6000 to the ton. Morgan left en the local on Thursday A successor to John S. Coke, United f ir Portland where thej were to take States district attorney, with head in the big stock show, quarters In Portland, probably will "Wirt" Palmateer of Wlndynook was not be appointed until after January a business mjie, nt tne c.,mntT S(lnt ,, x accordlng t0 Senator McNary. i nursuay ami rnaay. Mr. and Mrs. George Krebs of the Last Camp were doing business in Ar lington on Tlmrsdny. Mrs Dell Ward of lone accompanied her sister Mrs Karl Fnrnsworth nnd daughter Helen of Rhea to Monument Friday where they will visit friends for a few days. Mrs. .1. E. O'Neal returned to her borne a- Bwlng on Friday after spend ing several weeks with friends at Hood Liver mid Portland. Roy Sandstrom, 13-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Axel Sandstrom, of Ban don, was killed instantly when he caru'e In contact with an electric wire which was hanging from a pole. The city of Klamath Falls author ized a $60,000 bond Issue for the build ing of a public library and public women's rest room by a vote of 1C22 to 1141 at the election last week. Albert Wilton was killed Instantly at the Culp creek camp near Cottage A bond Issue of $JtK.000 for the completion of the isaker-l'uity and Hakw-Coruucoi'ia roads which was submitted to the vow is of Baker coun ty received ou unofficial returns 3051 voles iu (aor and l;'05 against the proposal. The state tax ou gasoline and dis tillate sales for September. 1924, ag gregated $277.17:?. ft. according to a stateuieut prepared by the secretary of state. The tax was based on 8, 998.510 gallons of gasoliue and 286, 706 gallons of distillate. The state laud board has no legal authority to loan irreducible school funds of the state ou a water ditch, according to a legal opinion handed down by the attorney-general. The opinion was requested by an irriga tion district in eastern Oregon. Thirty assessors of the 36 in the state attended the annual convention of the Oregon County Assessors' asso ciation in Portland last week, heard addresses, re-elected their old officers J "' Paul 0. Withington, close friend and selected Dallas as the meeting ,f "u lllte Haughton, hns been place for the next convention. 'PPointod head coach of the Columbia iniversity football team. Withington The Cottage Grove cannery die- s aQ ,ulo coach and is well schooled tributed more than $14,000 during the n the "Haughton system," for he has 1924 season, largely in the packing of ilnyed and coached under the tutelage products that otherwise would have f w." been a waste. The amount paid for produce was $6,594.76 and $7815.29 was 1 paid for labor, cans and boxes. In an effort to check goiter among the children of the Lincoln school of Eugene the health clinic operated by the Lincoln Parent-Teacher associa tion has started a weekly distribution of iodine tablets among the children of the third grade and upwards. Oregon pensions have been granted as follows: Willis Snook, Portland, $15; Carl Ritterspacher, Portland, $12; Edith M. Gill, Klamath Falls, $20; Sanny B. Vesey, Portland, $18; minors of Frank E. Coqulllette, Independence, $20; Christopher C. Marsh, Myrtle Creek, $18. By a vote of 3611 to 1384 Klamath county voters approved a special $125, 000 road bond issue for completion of The Dalles-California highway to the Deschutes county line and also com pletion of the west shore highway ex tending about 50 miles around upper Klamath lake. Following a violent storm last week, a large buck deer sauntered into the city of Lakeview, wandered down Main street past the courthouse, turn ed into one of the principal business thoroughfares and walked out of town through alleys and the back yards of residents of the city. Edward Hoik, 48, was killed in stantly and Joe Smite seriously in jured at Astoria, when a slingload of lumber being hoisted from the Ham mond Lumber company schooner Trin idad at the port dock broke from its fastening and crashed down on a crew of longshoremen. Complete returns from all precincts show that George L. Baker was elect ed mayor of Portland on a plurality of 16,833 votes; that John M. Mann had been elected commissioner on his 58, 515 first choico votes, and A. L. m W M Lieut. Gen. Damaso Berengucr, for mer Spanish minister of war and senior officer of the army, who has been sent to Jail for six months by Dictator Prlmo de Bivera because he atrended a political meeting of promi nent men who seek to overthrow the dictatorship. "Sliorl Sharer hns quite recover- Orov of tne Anderson & Middleton 'd i'r..m his hunting trip and is once Lumber company when caught be more Bl work for Walter Pope at the tween a '6 and a stump and crushed. Hillside i eh drilling the well a few Changes in the state game laws more feet, , jjoort supply of water mailing open seasons uniform through- ' '" ! ' i; bur Walter wishes n out the state, were recommended In better supply before he calls halt. meeting of the Umatilla County Melville Logan of The Willows, the future sheriff rf Gilliam county, was In Civil on Thursday on hli wny to Four Mil- Al Henrikscti of Pendleton while de livering livestock on Willow Creek on Monday night, inn till car Into the """ ; ' - 'l!'-'i In spite of all in the second degree. an enon ponlfl ii"t get back on the highway again till nun and Q0rM from the Pedro ranch to wed him out Mrs Dwight Mistier of Daybreak'' NtMh near Cecil left on Monday to visit friends in Portland Flgh and Game Protective associa tion' at Pendleton. Fred Parazoo. who recently shot and killed his stepfather, James Snid er, trapper and hunter, residing at Peel, was indicted by the grand jury at Roseburg on a charge of murder REDUCTION IN COST OF GOVERNMENT AIM Washington, D. C. The cost of run ning the federal government In the fiscal year beginning next July may fall below three billion dollars, or half a billion dollars less than the estimat ed expenditures for the current fiscal year. On the basis of estimates prepar ed by the budget bureau and on which Barbur on a plurality of 12,563 on all its conferences with the spending de three choices as the result of the partments of the government practi clty election last week. cally have been completed, the anti- The board of directors of the Ana cipated appropriations for the year river irrigation project at the north beginning next July 1 stood at $2,- end of Summer lake have requested 980,000,000, exclusive of the postoffice Rhea Luper, state engineer, to make department, the receipts of which are an investigation of the possibility of expected to balance the expenses, the development of the land in the Officials of the budget still have dry bed of Silver lake by a system work to do on the budget for 1926, of deep wells and electric power to be which will be submitted by the presi- developed at the irrigation dam. dent to the forthcoming short session Edward H. Edmundson of Salem of cnsress. nut tney nave gone so thoroughly into every estimate, great and small, submitted to them by the several W M Approximately $2,276,000 of second half state taxes have beei received at the state treasury department. About $390,000 Is outstanding. Out of 36 counties in the state only six have not completed their payments. In the absence of other employes & robber entered the Multnomah Com mercial & Savings bank at Multnomah station, near Portland, forced the tell er into the vault and escaped with J1720.45 in cash and $6050 In bonds. Total resources of the Oregon banks Do It Now and Have It Done! Gllff Arluutfiut HJuUrtm Personal Stationery & Social Printing; itr.mmmmtii:::ii:min: :t::ini::itti::t!:tn:::i::m:mtmmmmtmmtmmmmm Thankfulness and Hope Thanksgiving Is not, at Its best, what nnybody says or does, but rather whHt he feels. And so It Is, that all of us, equal members In free de a' tn 0,01,6 of business on October 1.0 BJOCracy, art privileged to draw our were 160,743, 454.12, as against $318. Inventories together, to total up the 991. 712197 on June 30. acccrding to a credit side of our ledger of life as one statement issued at Salem by Frank united people and to join together in Bramwell, state superintendent of n lestlval of good cheer and beam banK8 thanks for what the past has yielded ,',,, u k to face the future with a mutual hop' Colonel J. J. Harbaugh, ,8-year-old fulness in what It holds In store -. Lane county Juvenile officer, was ser- Farm and ltancb. loualy injtirad when a Southern Pa cific freight engine struck his auto mobile at the Spore's crossing on the Mohawk branch 10 miles northeast ot Eugene. J. L. Schnavely and N. E. Benyon. engineer and fireman on a steam shovel belonging to the J. F. Shaa Hiipaay. are though to have been killed when the shovel was carried across the road and 50 feet of level ground, down an embankment of 75 Certainly Have Men haven't destroyed oivlllmtlon but they have hurt Its reputation like thunder -Dulutb Herald King of Mountains Mount Everest Is nearly us htjrh as the combined height of Mount Cook (the highest mountain In New Zea land). Fuji Yatna (the highest In .T pan) and Hen Nevis (the highest In (Mt- d Pluaged Into the Bull Run me British isles). river. has received highest honors at the Annapolis naval academy, according to a lettpr received in Snleni He Is a son of Mrs. Alice E. Edmundson. His '"ches of the government, that they recent award makes him a "five- feel angea t0 b de he striper," the highest honor that can a"er w111 e in tne nature ' thous be bestowed upon a naval cadet, and ands rather than in millions ot dollars, an honor granted to only one man. Shipments of broccoli from Douglas FLORIDA BANS TWO TAXES county jumped from 175 carloads in 1928 to 400 In 1924, according to Constitution Amended to Prevent Foster Butner, manager of the Ump Income, Inheritance Levies, qua Broccoli Exchange. Mr. Butner Tallahassee, Fla. Florida In the said that this year an even greater general election adopted by a vote of acreage had been planted but that due approximately five to one a constitu to the dry summer the crop to be tional amendment forever prohibiting harvested this winter probably would the levying of Inheritance or Income be about the same as the 1924 crop. taxes. There were four fatalities in Ore a"Ption of the amendment eon due to Industrial accidents dur Florlda becomes the only state In the ing the week ending November 6, ao ,ln,on that nas definitely expressed cording to a report prepared by the itself 83 beIn determined that there state Industrial accident commission tiaHl1 uot at aD' llme b a tax levy on The victims were: Lloyd W. Lyons. incomes or inheritances unless Walton, donkey engineer; William ,n" PePle at Borae future date decide Handla. Portland, buoker; William F to again amend the constitution. Husrch. Camas Valley, laborer, and ; Basil Albeit Wilton, Vale, wood buck Washington Referendum Cost Huge, r. A total of 539 accidents were re Seattle. Wash. Printing, checking ported during the week. and pos'age for initiative and referee- Goose hunting on the upper Colum ,lum measures have cost the state de bia' river is good now and hunters fe- Pa"ment $919,707.61 since 1913, ac port securing limit bags in the vlcin cording to figures compiled for Waah lty'of Blalock and Arlington, accord !ate chamber of commerce by j Ing to announcement of Captain A. E l'- D M'Ardle, director of the state Burghduff. state game warden. He parunent of efficiency. During that : said goose hunting would be good for i mo 13 initiative measures, 15 refer- j the next two months on the bluffs ' ndum measures and three referen along the Columbia river and in the iuw biIls have come before the people ' wheat fields. Sportsmen are warned aud of tnese but tw0 Uitiatlve. one i that the territory along the Columbls referendum and one referendum bill river for a distance of a quarter of a ere aPProve, prohibition and the mile inland on Sach side is a game rt'PaI cf the state poll tax, the bone refuge. !ry law and the soldiers' equalized compejt8ftiB ct. 3 mVM I MM " Mi -