PAGE 4
THE BOARDMAN MIRROR
FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1925
SUCH IS LIFE
4
Van Zelm
A PUZZLING
co i n c i rH rs ce.
4 BUDDY
T Vic Z4-"
MBWy 'W ii nrrrny
Give I ' the New
ll limy tickle your ; 1 1 1 i t y to "close
np'1 about some little news Item and
tin n find it all in the (taper bul it'a
dBrael poor co-operation from our
M n tidpolnt.
We are not mind readers, wc want
the news from everyone bitl ie daw
ml spend nil our I line chasing people
nnmnd who eonld i -n us I he Item If
they' hrould.
We are trying to Biye you a good
paier, Wc cannot wive kiii per cent
HBtlsfaction, because wo know thai Is
Impossible. The hitman capacity to
accept nil benefits us natural person
al reward and i" "beef" :ii anything
detrimental to each ones individual
se!f standard of personal Importance
Is pas) the ability of any newspaper
to overcome,
siill we go on doing our beat, tr'j
Inn in exert u stimulating Influence
I'mi' the welfare of the Community an I
to give yon h newspaper ilmt is really
worth iiiiu.iin about whether you 'beef
in' praise.
iiui lOi'iisr send in the New
We thank ydu for your help ami o
your slreel, your cluh nr lodge, yoi
operation along this line, four hoini
i usiness, your hobby, mi occasionally
engage in activities thai ate titiJep
osting DeWS If We only know f.botft it
Don'l hang back imt call us up,
send in i he notes or come in and see j
us. Again Sfe llmnk ynu.
ISLINGTON vol MJ FOLKS
HAVE BIG TIME T DANCE
'i in dance which was given under
the management of Ari Miller In
tjouy's Hall Friday evening was well
attended and thoroughly enjoyed by
nil (hose present. The Columbia Sere
naders, with the aid of Earl Sneii
and Mr Anderson, lived up to their
reputation of furnishing peppy music,
feature of the dance was the
Scotch dances, To the time of various
Scotch pieces by the orchestra", seve
ral of the couples ably schottished,
heel and toed" and did Justice to
those popular dances of the ' Kilties.'
Several carloads of young peopte
p n I 1 eill lei Minn , omiioii, I ,i in I ' nil. 1 1 1 .1111
Willow Creek.
Mr. MileV promises another dance
about March 'Jil.
Wolisei ilie for I hp Honr'l'i'im Mirror
The Popular Girl
By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK
Dean of Men, University of
Illinois.
Phone
173
For
Your
Office Supplies
In Connection with our service to business and
professional men in supplying their printed sta
tionery, etc., we are usually expected to also
famish them with various standard office sup
plies. Here is a partial list oi our stock at Port
land prices or less.
RUBBER M AMI' I Alls
No. I Sie 50c
Aaaorh.il colors OlhiH' sIxcm
mid slninps furnished on
Nei in I orders.
PASTES and INKS
High Qrada Fountain fSm
mni General Type office Ink,
'' es. lc 20c; I .. HOY
K . .Mir
Office Panic with hrush
5 H o. 15c; 8 . !."
CAHltoN pitks
l or Pen, ii or Tj pewrlter
SB sheets K'2 ID He
KM) sheets (boxed) s.- , .
Large We Pealing Wax Ue
Kile Hook. Shipping Tnc,
LtfgH BJavekipi'S, Adding Ma
clllnc Kolls, Staples, etc.
TYPEWRITER RIBBONS
Guaranteed iest crude, made
speeinlly for Pndcrwiaxls,
Royals, U 0, Smith's, Ram
luglou'M and Olivers. Kn !M)V
typbwrItrb papers
Bold in reams of BOO sheets,
i ui s'.. ii Inches (letter
head size i and can lie fur
nishcil in lurKcr sizes at pro
porlioiuilc prices.
10 Ih bond, hiie. ream !'
90 Ih. Iioiid. while, ream $l.t."i
1Q u. manila, anrher, rag. $l.2.
10 Ih. JUBO filire. eimary .8.1
Colored bunds ami higher
grade paper m higher prices
SALES ROOKS
in prices before order-
And Remember Wtj Can
PRINT IT RIGHT, IF
You'll iie us a Chance
The Currey Printing Co.
Arlington, Oregon
I'ublisacra Vrlinftoa llulk'tin and Hoar dinan Mirror
INSURGENTS LOSE
POWER IN CONGRESS
Radicals Are Classified By
House as Members of a
New Four;h Party.
MIDDLETON did not return to col
lege after the Chlstmas vacation.
He was down in his .studies, his in
tractors said; his father did not wish
him to contfhue, he told ihe fellows;
he had accepted 'a position, the college
paper announced; but the real facts
were Hint it was a girl a very popu
lar girl, who had upset Middleton and
put an end to ids college education,
She wns a pretty girl with pleasant
manners and stylish clothes and a
read; Bow of talk and exemplary
morals if her clothes had been a
little less correct and her morals n
little less exemplary, she might have
been less dangerous. From the time
she had entered the high school she
bad kept ii siring of fellows uhout her,
and she had played them adroitly,
Skillfully, and with a steady eye to
her own selfish interests. If one ever
tried to hreak away she melted Imme
diately and gave him the impression
that be was the only one for whom
she had really cured, and he usually
rushed back into her train.
When Barton entered college he was
ambitious and gave promise of nn ex
cellent record; hut she was attracted
by bim, and he no sooner came under
her Inffhence than he lost all ambition.
Be wns wild after her, spent his
Bioney on her, and neglected every
thing to he with her. She would never
lei him alone, played with lrim in a
tantalising way, called him on the tele
phone if be failed to see her, and. then
when she luul ruined him as n student
and tired of him as u lover, threw him
aside unemotionally ami picked up !
another victim.
There had. been several of them be
fore .Middleton came a shy, sensitive,
tender hearted hoy, easily led, easily
discouraged, and In love with the girl.
Ills attentions .hit "red her, and,
though she did not nally care for him.
she was too calculatingly scllisli to
let bim go. She smiled on him and
almost Insulted him in turn; she made
engagements with him and then hroke
them without compunction if a more
desired escort came along. tShe count
ed on his coming whenever she hack- j
oiled, and, too weak to resist her. she
made life for bim a constant uncer- I
talnty and hell which he left college
to rid himself of.
Sm h a man is weak, you say. Per
haps put a real woman might have
strengthened him, encouraged Ii 1 in. Ret
for him ideals, or, best of all, she
might have let him alone.
There are man such niris with
pretty faces and cursedly attractive
clothes, Inc. pable of real feeling and
Incapable of an unselfish thought
They conic out unscathed, many people
think, from these social escapades, but
It is not true. They pay every one
of them. Sometimes the time of piij
men! is long deferred, but they pay
to Ihe last farthing, cruelly, far more
than their little petty popularity and
pleasures are worth. When they come
lo the point of wanting friends there
re nunc; when they want love and
real devotkJl they are gone; through
their trilling with sacred emotions
they become Inckpable of feeling or
appreciating such emotions, and the
cud Is loneliness, unhnpplness and
neglect.
U?). 1926. Weftrn Newspaper t'nton.)
Dry Agents Frer to Search Autos.
Washington, D. C. federal prohibit
HOB agents may lawfully step auto
mobiles and other vehicles and search
them for contraband liquor without a
warrant, the supreme court decided in
a case from Michigan. In another
liiiuor case decision, brought from
Georgia, the court held that states
may, under the constitution, make un
lawful the possession of liquor acquir
ed legally before enactment of the
federal prohibition act.
Boardman Utellem
If MOMM1 t LOOK N
DOD "Pur The moon ,
OUT BUT FOR DOT j fSBL
To TAKE HH The A V'',v5.
Edited by the Students of the Boardman High School
FOURTH YEAR. 1921-1925
FRIDAY, MARCH C, 1925
Washington, D. C. After wielding
the "balance of power" in both branch
es of congress for the last two years,
the i-a Follette insurgents stood
shorn of their republican affiliations
and herded by administration leaders
into the classification o a new fou.th
party.
This was the outstanding result of
the republican caucus.
Those affected include Ilepresenta-
ives '.,;,. s Veivht, Nelson. Shafer.
I.ampert, Beck, Browne, Schneider,
Prear and I'eavy of Wisconsin;' Sin
clear of South Dakota, Keller of Min
nesota and Laguardia of New York.
Senate and house republicans acted
simultaneously in displacing the in
surgeuts. In the house the rebels
were barred from the caucus and in
the senate they were denied party
affiliation by a vote of the senate
committee on committees.
The specific action taken against
the four senate insurgents Senators
La Follette of Wisconsin, Ladd and
Frazier of North Dakota, and Brook
hart of Iowa was to deprive them of
all committee assignments as repub
licans for the next congress and to
assign them as independents. This
action will rank them lower than the Tremors Lasting From One to
given Senator snipsteau oi
Fire Escapes Completed
The contract recently let by the
school board to the F. S. (limning Co.
for installing lire escapes in the audi
torium has been completed. The fire
escapes are installed except the com
pletion of the lire doors. These are
being installed by I be Goodwin Bro
thers. This has always been a much need
ed factor in our school building and
insures the safety to public gather
ings. We will In' able to have movies
too.
Sophomores to ive Party
A parly for the high school, alumni
and teachers to be giwn Friday the
thirteenth by the Sophomores. This
i; to be one of the big events of the
school year for the Sophies have tak
en hold with enthvsinsm,
The Senior
lures have comi
Seniors in good
Juniors Is rathi
The members
class have tx in.
pic
of
of
the
I .luiiior cla:
The picture
but the one
blurred.
f the U. S. History
orklng bard on their
twenty-five hundred word theme. They
are biographies Of thg great men of
the country.
Plans For a Big May-Day Exercise
At a recent faculty meeting forma
tive plans were made to celebrate May
Day on the Afternoon of Friday, May
1st. 1826. While the school, both
Grammar Grades and High School de
partments, will entertain with revelry
and song, there will be a special in
vitation to all parents to visit thru
out the several rooms to observe work
done by the children of all ages. In
feet, it will be a combination of Par
ent's Day and May-Day greetings.
Besides song, speech making. May
Queens, May-role dances, there will
be a big noon-day luncheon such as
lias never before been witnessed on
the Boardman Project. Set this com
ing event definitely In your minds
Cor you are to spend the day with
your children and the teachers. We
hope to give you the real greeting of
the school year.
EAST IS ROCKED
BY EARTHQUAKE
the "third parly" farmer
Btandln
M Innesi
laborite.
Senator McNary of Oregon was the
only, member of the republican com
mittee on committees to cast, a nega
tive vote.
Five Seconds Are Felt Over
Wide Territory.
J. C. STURGIL ACCEPTS
POSITION AT BAKER
J. C. SturgiH, former County
School Superintendent and County
Clerk of (lilliam county and well
known "here, passed through Arling
ton on Sunday, enroute to Baker, Or
egon, where he has accepted a posi
tion at Deputy County Clerk.
LONGWORTK NEXT
SPEAKERJF HOUSE
Washington, D. C. Nicholas Long
worth of Ohio will preside as speaker
of the house in the sixty-ninth con
gress and John Q, Tilson of Connecti
cut will he the republican floor
leader.
The present majority leader was
selected by republican members-elect
in the house in caucus as their candi
date for speaker on the first ballot by
a vote of 140 to 85. '
Other selections made by the cau
cus Included Representative Hawley j
of Oregon as chairman of the caucus
and Representative Sweet of New
York as secretary and Representative
Vestal of Indiana as republican whip,
a post he now holds.
Democrats elected to the new
house in a, caucus selected Finis J.
Garrett of Tennessee as the demo
cratic candidate for speaker and as
a result he wilt continue as minority;
leader in the house during the 89th 1
congress.
New York. An earthquake, varying
In a general sway to a tremor of such
intensity as to shake pictures from
walls, Saturday night shook an area
of approximately 400,000 square miles,
inhabited by mora than 35,000,000
people, nearly one-third of the popu
lation of the United States. The trem
ors lasted from one to five seconds.
The territory covered by the quake
extended from Michigan to the At
lantic ocean, and froni New England
to the District of Columbia. West Vir
ginia, Lower Pennsylvania and Ohio.
The quake was felt between f : 15
and :30. Thousands in Widely scat
tered communities rush d from
theatre and other places of amuse
ment, or from their homes into the
streets. The giant skyscrappers of
New York swayed with the motion o
the earth. Manhattan island, upon
which these skyscrapers are built, is
solid rock. Excavation is such a diffi
cult affair that a basement for an
apartment house involves blasting.
But Manhattan island trembled before
the force of nature. No material dam
age was reported as a result of the
quake several hours after the first
tremors were felt.
Road Taxes Centuries Old
AutolStS who feel abused at Ihe
modern highway vehicle tax may find
some solace In the fact that coaches
were made to pay highway taxes as
far hack as '1601. In that year more
than 400 coaches operating in London
and vicinity had to pay taxes to U3e
the roads and the money was used to
pave the London nnd Westminster
Slice's.
Housekeeper's Fault
There Is too much effort to keep dust
out of the bookcase and not enough ef
fort to keep dirt out. Duluth Heruld.
Seattle Man Gets State Job.
Olympia, Wash. --Governor Hartley
announced his acceptance of the resig
nation of Fred J. Dibble as director
of licenses and the appointment ol
Charles R. Maybury of Seattle as his
successor, effective March 16.
fex-Senator Clark of Montana Dead.
Now York. William Andrews Clork,
exPnited States senator from Mon
tana, died at his home here Death
was due to pueumonla. Mr. Clark
wns M years old.
Quebec. Three persons dead,
scores of homes damaged by tremor
and fire, one church collapsed and
goneral consternation among resi
dents of the St. Lawrence and Sague
nay valleys are the known result of
the earthquakes of last Saturday night
and Sunday morning.
President's Pardon Right Sustained.
Washington. D. C The president
has authority under the constitution
to pardon persons held in contempt
of court in criminal cases, the su
preme court held in a decision up
holding the pardon granted by Presl-1
dent Coolidge to Philip Grossman of
Chicago.
Notice For Publication
Department of the Interior. U. S.
land Office at The Dalles, Oregon
January 29, 1025.
Notice is hereby given that Werner
Rletmann, Of lone. Oregon, who. Oil
February 81, 1022. made Homestead
Entry No. 02170K. for NEV4 nnd B,
Section ",4. Township 3 North, Range
26 East. Willamette Meridian, hnij
filed notice of intention to make final
three year proof, to establish claim
to the land above described, before
Cay M. Anderson, United States Com
missioner, at Hoppner, Oregon, on the
1 1th day of March, 1026.
Claimant names as witnesses: T.
W. Craig, George Gorger, Victor Riet
mann, and P. M. Roche all of lone.
Oregon.
J. W. Donnelly,
Register.
Newton Painless Dentists
DR. II. A. NEWTON, MGR.
Cor. .Main and Webb Sts. Pendleton
ANNOUNCING
The association of
Dr. W.
of Spokant
M. Kelly
, Washington
with
tmWttttttf If ttl Iff ' tmttmii itttttttq
The Business Man
Bridge Over Columbia Authorned.
Washington. D. C The bill giving
ccuseiit to the state of Washington to
construct a bridge aoross the Colum
bin river at Vantage terry was passed
by the house Saturday. The seuaU
acted favorably on the measure som
time ago.
To be successful in handling: your business
affairs, no matter how extensive or how
limited they may be, you must handle them
in a businesslike manner.
Paying all bills by Check is one of the first
steps, since it pivos you an absolute record
of receipts ai.d expenditures.
ARLINGTON NATIONAL BANK
Oldest Hank in (lilliam Ounty
Dr. F. V. Prime
llcriniston. Oregon
Dentistry, Dental X-Ray
and Diagnosis
Evenings and Sundays by appointment
S. E. NOTSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office In Court House
IIKITXER - - - OREGON
A. H. SVVITZER
ATTORNEY AT I. AW
Arlington, Oregon
WOODSON & SVVEEK
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
IIKPPNER.
OREGON
HERB GREEN
Watchmaker and Jeweler
Diamonds. Watches, Clocks, Silver
ware Tim. Inspector O-W. R. R. Ce.
M Main St Pendleton, Oregon