FRIDAY DECEMBER 26, 1924 THE BOARDMAN MIRROR 1 1 A4jrft ft FLORENCE E. KNAPP RAIL BOARD ASKED TO ANNUL AGREEMENT Western Roads Declare Wage Settlement Would Make In creased Rates Necessary. 8 DIE WHEN COAGH DROPS INTO RIVER Victims Submerged in Stream at Chippewa Falls, After Plunge of 60 Fee?. Chicago. A committee of managers of western railroads will file with the United States rail labor board a peti- Notice For Publication THE JOINER By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Dean of Men, Ur.iverity of Illinois. A DEAR old ladj whom I one used to say in evidence of t ice knew the fact that she had not wasted her eighty Department of The Interior, U. 9. Land Office at The Dalles, Oregon. Dec. 10. 1!24. Notice is hereby given that Ray S. f.amoreaux, of Irrlgon, Oregon, who, a Nov. 25, 1919, made Homestead Entry, No. 021140, for EMiN'E, bejng Uuit "A" Umatilla Project, Section Hon asking that the board annul an bound Minneapolis. St. Paul & Sault agreement entered into December 18 1 Ste. Marie passenger train plunged by the Southern Pacific system and its from the trestle over the Chippewa engineers and firemen by which the j river here into the icy water 60 feet men were granted an increase in below. wages. ! The dead are: Barbara Spencer The petition alleges that the de- : baby; Mrs. Harry Jones, Sioux City, cision was forced upon the railroad; la.; Charles M. Pardoe, Minneapolis; "under threat of an interruption of Miss Florence Higus, daughter ol transportation," and declares that Pardoe, also of Minneapolis; Kenneth "other railways may also be forced, In J. Henderson, Moose Jaw, Sask., Can order to avoid interruption of trans- ada; Richard W. Sharp, Toronto, Ont portion service, to make similar Canada settlements." The petition further and Miss May Chippewa Falls, Wis. Eight per sons were killed and seven were In jured when the last coach of an east cepted by the impulsive youth. There lg no doubt much to bo said in favor of belonging to something. It may widen one's acquaintance ami develop Initiative and increase responsibility but be that as It may, very lew fellows who are asked to Join anything can find It in their hearts to refuse. li is a sort of flattery which all fall for At this day and age, however, when clubs are multiplying ami lists of pro spectlve members are being prepared and the nets are being laid lo ensnare W .. I . . . ... ... John Dunne, New York city ""sopmsuenrea, it is p ssmiy no ini'AKii tt o.Min.l n r.,,f( . .. I . ..f years, that she had never belonged to lownsmP " ortn- "Se m wast. a club nor been a member of a com- Willamette Meridian, has filed notice mlttee. i C intention to make final three year Hers was, perhaps, an extreme view Proof, to establish claim to the laud to take, and one not likely to be lie- nhovo described, before O. O. Blavden. Comnmity Chords Sarvtoe Every Sunday School Church Serrtce Christian Endeavor . io -JO a. a. 11 :30 a. m ... 1 :SO p m. All are Welcome REV. B. S. HUGHES, Pastor. For bargains in Second Hand Goods, see Elder U Hemlstoa. Oct 24tf United States Commissioner; at Board-! man, Oregon, on the 28th day of January, 1925. Claimant names as witnesses) : Prank Frederlcksea, Chas. BenefieL Hugh Grim and Arthur Gergins all of Irrigou, Oregon. J. W. Donnelly,! Begister. j Mrs. Florence E. Knapp, republican, inc. I 10 man v in nsk-s vno 1 1 sets forth that the settlement direct- Point. Wis. something is like . , ly tends to make necessary an ad- The most seriously hurt were M. L.I surance solicitor or a I uok nt, II Vance in railway rates in western tor- Spencer, dean of the school of journal-, presents ths Invitation ly Ilia rltory. j ism of the University of Washington It seems like a rare rl it on The managers call attention to an and Harry Jones, Sioux City. Spencer cannot afford to slight, nr the oppor that office, elected secretary of state of New or(jer of the board dated November whose, wife's fingers were frozen and York, will be the first woman to hold 29 covering the dispute between most whose baby died in the frigid waters of the western railroads and the of the Chippewa, was injured inter Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers nally and his hands were frozen. Phy and Brotherhood of Locomotive Fire- sicians said, however, that he would man and Enginemen, by which the probably recover if pneumonia did not board awarded an increase of about, develop. 6 per cent In wages but made this in- Beports immediately following the crease conditional UDOtt modification wreck laid the cause to a switch holt of working conditions and rules which ' which, crystalized by the IB degrees Eleven cedar pole the railways contended were restric- below zero temperature, snapped un INDICT CEDAR POLE FIRMS AS COMBINE tunity of a lifetime which one shoul not neglect. The prospect Is alluring but the cost Is sometimes pretty great One may belong to too many thing I know 11 number of nun who lirliii. to so many thai they have time fui nothing else. The joiner niton has ho lime for his regular work and 11c money to pay his regular bills. At) hlR substance, both temporal and Moan clal, is wasted on his organizations, iiml all he has to show Is some unpaid bills and a collection of curiously designed pins. Don't join anything thai you haven': time to help, and d a't Join anything I Sell Insurance J. C. Ballenger POARDtoAN, OREGON Umatilla Pharmacy W. E. Smith. Prop. Mall Orders Qlvea Special Attention QUICK 8KB VICE SATISFACTION GUARANTEED". UMATILLA, OREGON y sattstttmitttittinm; ;ntatsmtttat J. L. VAUGHAN Spokane, Wash firms and 15 individuals of eight mid-: tive and unnecessarily Increased opcr-: der the weight of the train and allow die west and Pacific northwest states j ating expenses. I ed the last car to veer up a siding were indicted on a charge of violation j The committee says that the South-: Thrown from the track by the split of the Sherman anti-trust act in a true! em Pacific settlement was made with- the car bumped along the ties for Sj that cannot be of some real service tc bill returned by a federal grand jury! out reference to changes in rules as hundred yards before reaching the you. A good many organizations an here. Firms in Iowa, Michigan, provided in the decision of November trestle and then continued half WftJ fOplhg :aronnd with the hope t! I tin Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Mon-i 29. I along that structure before toppling! J "" I;"' the support of jeweler: over the side into the middle ot tin river. PROHIBITION CHIEF APOLOGIZES FOR RAID PROHIBITION FORGES SEIZE 5214 AUTOS tana, Idaho and Washington were in dicted. The indictment charged that the companies "combined to fix and estab lish arbitrary and non-competitive prices," and that they were In com bination from March 5, 1915, to Decern- t.pr 9f) 1904 in strain trade having Portland, Or. George L. Cleaver. uniform prices, freight rates and treat-. state prohibition commissioner, Who -ing rates. It was alleged the firms ' led a raid on the British vessel London Washington, D. C. Automobile? handled 70 per cent of the poles sold! Merchant, seizing a quantity of the numbering 5214 and valued at $3,226. in the United States and controlled 80 ' ship's liquor, and who was charged by 339 were seized by prohibition author per cent of the stocks in the United j the federal government with illegal (ties in the last fiscal year, the hom states j search and seizure, returned all liquor was informed in a table inserted in seized. the report of the treasury-post office Following the return he handed Cap-1 appropriation bill by Assistant from tain Anderson of the vessel a letter1 bition Commissioner Jones. Boats ami of apology in which he admitted that launches seized numbered 236, valued he had made the raid "under a mis-1 at $279,198. taken view of his own powers" and: The total appraised value of prop that he had no evidence of any law! erty seized and destroyed under tin violation aboard the vessel. I prohibition laws was $3,097,929, and International complications loomed, that seized but not destroyed, $7,745, when it was found that Cleaver's un- 952. authorized raid had violated the treaty. Two agents were killed on duty anti ind getting their photographs in tin' newspup rs Joining betionies with many fallows 11 fad and an obsession. It overshadow every other ambition and rfeslre. I: may be good to join something, but ii Is imbecility to Join everything, (, im, West.-rn Newnpnpr Union ) Matched Sports Sets Trim and Becoming uinHiiiiiinmnmm Eat and Drink At The New French Cafe E. .1. McKNEELY, Prop. Pendleton, Oregon (Only tie Best Foods Served) FANCY ICE CREAMS Furnished Booms Over Cafe Quick Service Lunch Counter In Connection With Dii'ing Room VOL' ABB WELCOME HKBE 206 K. Court Street PENDLETON, - OREGON "1 Electrical Fixtures and Supplies ELECTRIC CONTRACTING ALTO REPAIRING mm At jnnr Ilotre All Work Guaranteed M. U MORGAN Telephone CoJl Weston's FIVE DEAD IN STAGE SMASH Vehicle Was Passing Truck When Tree, Uprooted by Storm, Falls. Chehalis, Wash. Five persons were killed and two probably fatally injur ed when a big tree, uprooted by the high wind, fell from a bluff across a Chehalis-Morton stage. The dead are: Dan Shuler, farmer; Engiand which was made last ' twenty-eight were injured. Persons ar May, and known as the 12-mile treaty, rested numbered 6b,lbl. Missouri led all states In spirits seiz BASIN FUND IS VOTED ed, amounting to 939,582 wine gallons and California was first in the amount of wine confiscated with 61,084 gal Ions. Shuler's 7-year-old son; Buck Belcher, farmer; V. S. Kaiser, garage man; and S. N. Chapman, 60, school teacher Chapman is a resident of Harmony and the others are from the Klickitat ; Prairie district, on the route traveled House Passes Bill Extending Time for by the stage. The accident happened ' Columbia Project. 21 miles east of Chehalis asie stage Washington. D. C.-A resolution by hnn.i for this eltv Senator Jones of Washington making The stage accident occurred as the the appropriation for investigation of as.. i I. ; .. Knnin i, ,,. r ovniliihln Mil or I Khonlfi and vehicle was passing a truck from uie . uiun.um u... v,. . The stage after January was tinatiy passen uy hnth houses Saturday, alter item;: Mossyrock at a turnout. was in motion when the tree struck it, almost lengthwise, crushing Its top in 'm on the passengers CONGRESS ADJOURNS Salary New York Poison Booze Deaths 31. New York. Poison holiday liquor, indirectly or directly, has caused thirty-one deaths in New York City since the first of this month, the city's chief medical examiner, Charles Nor ris, reported Monday. Postal Raises Muddled. Washington, D. C. Congress ad Bnded tn the house to limit the time journed Saturday over the holidays. to February 15. Jones stated that the Three of the nine annual supply uuis report Is expected to be ready by thej were passed by the house and sent tc ! middle of January or first of February! the senate where committees have t the latest i completed consideration of one ol Sonator McNary proposed to attach them and are well advanced with the to the genial . . .i. f' ...i, n a aofnnd one. North when inlt r n amenument auuionzane u.-c ! 1' 1 Fresh Christmas Candies We Arc Now Displaying a Large and Choice Assortment of (ilPT CANDIES FRESH FRUITS AND NUTS ,t.i. t 4 Latourell Auto Company BOARDMAN. OREGON The Best is none too Good - 1U uiuvuuuicui - i lior.si.lf u-tlli . . .... , .i, tt,.! rph i nnssed two important i'trsiir nn IDOUt JOUUU leu ovei uuu. me uu. .. ... - ,.1(,1., sivl Whether the real sportswoman turns or the rigorous omes, she outfits joyous and beenmlng in n.nMl una in ll II, o tilla Bapids project appropriation for1 measures - the $100,000,000 bill IOI l)mM, wl l ', , , ' , , further inquiry on that project, but modernizing the battle fleet and the M Mii.in , ,. w,)0 ..f withdrew it after Jones had express- construction of eight additional light QUtdoorlng under tropic ekles, and Ho ed fear that this would complicate I cruisers, and the $186,000,000 de- (rm costume shown here reveals liow matters McNary will ask that this ficiency hill, carrying funds for putting they have sue be done in another bill, with a view the soldiers' bonus into operation and a preference for white, and here - we . . , .v. n,n J r,oiir,o- n now rpf ama on DOllCT, " "".. I'" Wheat - Hard white. $1.80; soft rT'" and tne postal yam, ,ioM,e, ,,, ,, .., , , car white. $1.82; northern spring, nara J ....B y maicn, gnnes oi miihneu wuoi, u winter and western white THE MARKETS Portland western red, $1.65. Hay Alfalfa, $19(3)19.50 ton; valley timothy, $1920; eastern Oregon timothy, $2122. Butterfat 40c shippers' track. Eggs- Kanch, 42 o 14c. - . . . . 1.1 . v. , ri ... Hiam mui ' a i- kui im . . . , ,, a S1 7n- level lanas exciuueu iu mc iyvn. . , o...... .. . noso nti n j,nir or trim twin i i;i i . I ui. .v,. -nno f iho loaders run . .. . . . . . V the engineer. a muuui mai u.. v..- ft beautlXul eusetabio una immeiisei is o o Q t Try Our Sherwin-Williams Paints and Varnishes. There is I none better also- o We Have a Complete Line of- cedar Flume Stock Huilding Materials h Builder's Hardware v Cement, Lime, PosU Wood & Coal Wm. Green is New Labor Chief. New York. The American Federa tlon of Labor executive council elected William Green, one of Its members, foresee the outcome. becoming. se-Prices f. o. b. Tillamook: and treasurer of the United Mine Chee Triplets, 2Sc; loaf, 29c per lb. Cattle Steers, good, $7.758.25. Hogs -Medium to good, $8.75'g9 75 ghPepSpring, medium to choice, $9.50(9 13.50. Workers of America, to the presidency of the federation, left vacant by the Oil Conservation Board Created. Washington, D. C An oil conser vat ion board, consisting of the secre tary of war, navy, interior and com merce, was created by President Cool Idge. The board will study the gov death of Samuel Gompers. Green lei ernment s responsiuiimr .u u.. a resident of Coshocton, Ohio, is 61 servatlon. years old, and has been a miner sinc he was 18. Hard. $1.80; soft white. Dr. A. C. Schmitt of O. A. C. Injured ; ficial move toward Joining the l eague Germany Moves to Join League-Geneva.- Germany made its first of New Captain of Dartmouth MM - Wheat Albany, Or. Dr. A. C. Schmitt, In 1 j7. woatorn white, hard wln.er . " I ... v I k.mu. OH western red. $1 71; northern strucior in uie o.um 01 ministration at the uregon Agricui tural eollegS and formerly president ol $1.73; Big Bend bluestem, $1.72; spring, $1.92. Hay Alfalfa. $22; D. C, $27; tim othy, $26; D. C, $28; mixed hay. $24 Eggs -Banch, 40 47c. Butterfat 46c. Cattle Choice steers. $7 50S.35. Hogs-Prime light. $9.609.90. Cheese Washington cream brick 2223.c; Washington triplets. 21c; Washington Young America. 22c. Spokane Hogn-Prime mixed. $9.2519 50. Cattle Prime steers, $6.750.' 2- of Nations when the German consul formally asked the League serretariat what military obligations Germanj would assume if it became a member the First National bank at Albany, waf - 77.- m seriously injured in an automobile Ore8on State Tax Total Is 7.49Z,76i Ml accident on the Albany-Corvallis road, two miles from Albany. One Pint Whisky Limit Upheld. New "York - The Cnited States ctr cult court of appeals here unanimous ly upheld the constitutionality of that provision of the Volstead set which limits the amount of whisky a physkias may prescribe for a patient. One pint every ten days is the limit fixed Salem. Or - Th state tax levy 101 IMS, as computed by the state tax commission was fixed at $7,492,761.47 This is $32,591.47 in excess of tbt levy for the current yesr, $7,467 170. Ousted Atlanta Prison Head Indicted Atlanta Ga - A E Sartain deposer! warden of Atlanta penitentiary, wat 1 Indicted by federal grand jury lot bribery. j A t. 1 M -7' W. A. MURCHIE Boardman, Oregon rmiiiiiiiinioiiiiiu 1 n The Highway Inn O, H. Warner, ProprietorJ Boardman, Oregon Wholesome Home Cooking WW. HKST nJUM TO EAT BETWEEN THE OAI IES AND PENUIJCTON tUmillllllllllllllll