Falls City news. (Falls City, Or.) 190?-19??, January 31, 1914, Page 2, Image 2

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    T h * F ai ta C i t y N e w s , J a n u a r y 3t, 1914 *
öil?r JFallö <Uit|i Nruta
C W. L IE
Death of B. A. Lombard
ID IT 0 1 AMD PUBLISHER
Knt«*rv4l •• ##••»»«<1 « U m atail at lb* pualoffl«'»
• t Falla r ity P o il C m u I|, ttrrgoa. umlor (la
A d of i^ u fr H i .«/ Marth %. Ifc7t
TrIc phones
Newt Office. M ; Reside rcc . I l l
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A bJu4D-p#nctl mark on th# ftrat pa«# o f Vh# N#wa
n«ana that your subscription ia du#
A d T ir t iiin f Rate* Display. 10 cents an inch
HuainoM N otices Scania a lln# For Sale. Kent.
K x ch a n fr W ant and Pay Entertainm ent No
ticea. $ eta a line. 10 eta. a line for three Issue«
t aril o f Thanhs 50 eta; I egal Notices, legal rates.
I ’opy for new ada and changes should be sent
to The N ew t not later than Wedneedey.
Th# N#w» ta represented for foreign advertising by
Th « American Press Association
General office#. N#w York and Chicago.
OFFICIAL DIRECTORY OF FALLS C ITY
F K H ubbaid Mayor.
T D. H o llo w ell. Councilm an at Large
W T Grier.
H. C Brown
Albert Teal
A. Sampson.
Councilman
C. I Ropkine.
A K Merer
C. W Lee. A u d itor and P olice Judge
W F Levria. Marshal aud Water 8upt
M . L Thompson. Treasurer
J. 3 Sammons. Engineer
I>r. F M Hellwarth. Health Oftcer
The Council m eets in regular session on theSrst
M onday ev en in g o f each m onth, at 7 SO o ’clock.
In the ofllce of the Falls C ity News.
A letter to The News from Mrs.
Bertha Adams, Sacramento, Cal.,
contains the following statement:
Benjamin Annis Lombard died
January 5, 1914, aged 78 years 6
months. He was born in Lincoln,
Maine, and had been a resident of
Falls City, Or., for many years.
He leaves two daughters and one
son. Mrs. Adams, o f Sacramento.
Evvie Kay. o f Stockton, and A l­
fred R. Lombard, o f Lodi, Cal
Mrs. Adams is just recovering
from a serious illness, which de­
layed the foregoing information.
Mr. Lombard was well known
here, and had been quite feeble
for a long time.
The many Falls City friends o f
the family. The News included,
extend sympathy and condolence
in this time o f bereavement.
Golden Wedding Anniversary
W’ednesday, January 28, was
the 60th anniversary o f the mar­
riage o f Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ford.
No celebr aion was held owing
to the absence o f Mrs. Sears. A
more extended account will be
published in The News next week.
In the meantime their host o f
friends may congratulate them
S a t u r d a y . J a n u a r y 31. 1914
News and Comment
Chas. K ing has rented the Lom­
bard place.
J .C . Talbott was in Portland
this week, on business.
Wanted, more houses to rent.
List at Th£ News office.
Mrs. Starr is quite ill. at the
home o f her son H. E. Starr.
A good roads meeting will be
held at Independence. Feb. 4.
Mrs. L. H. Treat, o f Monmouth,
is visiting her son, G. D. Treat.
The Lewisville school, Miss Ce­
cil Dodd teacher, is now a stand­
ard school.
W hat’s the Moose orchestra
with Roy James left out? See Dal­
las Observer, Jan. 30.
FallsCity has been divided into
four precincts, for primary and
general election purposes.
County clerk Robinson and Miss
Ivy G. Burton were married Jan.
27. They will reside in Dallas.
Jack Moore, o f Black Rock, has
purchased 75 feet frontage on
Terra« e street from Alex Courier.
Chauqcey Ferguson returned,
Thursday, from Fresno, Calif.,
where he had been for several
months.
Resolutions of Condolence and
Respect
DANGER
IN
OZONE.
While It Kill* Some Germe, It May Be
Injurious to Health.
That ozone is a most desirable
thing, that it is a purifier of the
air, a destroyer of noxious bacteria,
a wholesome stimulant to the lungs,
is a popular belief that cannot be
banished too quickly.
Oione is a poisonous gas. It is
injurious to the throat and lungs,
irritates the endings of the sensory
nerves, corrodes the epithelial cells
and causes indirectly changes in the
blood which produce headache, de-
presaion and drowsiness!
The very latest word on oxone is
in the form of two articles in the
Journal of the American Medical
Association.
One by Dr. W. A
Sawyer, director of the hygienic
laboratory of the California state
board of health, and his coworkers,
Beckwith and Stolfield, denounces
the use of oxone machines in thea­
ters, schools, offices and other places
where it is desired to purify the air.
The other, by Drs. E. 0. Jordan and
A. J. Carlson of Chicago, describes
a long series of experiments with
ozone performed by them.
So far as its effect upon bacteria
is concerned, oxone ia valueless in
the opinion of all these experts. It
undoubtedly does kill some germs,
they agree; but, in the words of
Drs. Jordan and Carlson, “ human
beings are injuriously affected by
amounts of ozone far less than are
necessary to produce even this slight
bactericidal effect. * * * Oxone
has no place in room disinfection.”
Neither is ozone a deodorizer. It
sometime« disguises odors, but more
often paralyzes the olfactory nerves
so that the nose is incapable of
amelling them.
Ozone gives a certain “ tang” to
the air, a “ tang” that may tempo­
rarily whip up a fagged brain. But
Dr* Jordan and Carlson consider
this no more beneficial than “ a whiff
of smelling salts or a puff of the
cigarette.”
Dr. Sawyer reports that ozone in
concentration sufficient to kill ty­
phoid bacilli in several hours will
kill guinea pigs in an even shorter
time.
Thus is another theory that has
been taught as a fact in school
textbooks on chemistry and physica
— if it is not taught still— thrown
into the scientific rubbish heap.—
New York World.
Whereas, the Supreme Ruler o f
the Universe has removed, by
death, from our midst, Brother J.
H. Flower. Therefore, be it
Resolved, That we, the mem­
bers o f Falls City Lodge No. 148,
I. 0. O. F., extend our heartfelt
sympathy to the sorrowing w ife
and other relatives, and commend
them to the Higher Power as a
source o f consolation. And be it
further
Resolved, That a copy o f these
resolutions be sent to his w ife Mrs.
M. R. Flower, also that a copy be
sent to The News for publication,
and that a copy be entered on the
minutes o f this lodge.
Quaar Wadding Effigy.
Dated January 28, 1914.
There is a curious custom still
revalent in the Bt-llary district of
( Geo. M. Tice,
ndia in connection with the wed­
Committee ( J. R. Moyer,
ding ceremonies among certain
( G. D, Treat.
A meeting will be held today,
i.m., in W agner hall, for prac-
e, and all scouts are requested
bring the articles needed in the
rformance o f the program.
Gazelles in Nubia «re hunted by a
powerful breed of hound* in build
somewhat heavier th«n « grey­
hound. In spite of being far swift
er than the hound
the gazelle falls
nc
a vict'm from the nervous habit of
constantly stopping to look back
to see if it is pursued. It also ex
pends its strength by taking great
bounds in almost vertical direction
thereby not only losing time, bill
exhausting itself, si that it is ever
taken without difficulty.
The Daily Oregonian
Daily Oregonian, to Mar. 1, ’ 15, $6.00
Assumed Nam*«.
Sunset Magazine, a full year,
2.601
A New York detective says there
McCall’s, full year, with pattern, .65 are probably at least 1,000 men in
$9.15 that city living under names assum­
ed after reaching the age of
Our bargain price to you, $6.00.
twenty-one vaars, many of them re­
The more quickly you take advantage spected and trusted citizens. He
o f this offer the more copies you will adds, “ Men wrho have been unfortu­
receive for your money.
nate in other cities, who have com­
This special offer made for imme­ mitted some petty crime and want
diate action, and will not be open to hide from the world, come to
New York to begin life anew, leav­
after March 1, 1914.
Subacriptions, as above outlined, ing theor old names and reputation!
behind.”
taken at The News office.
<
F a l l s C i t y , P o l k C o u n t y . O rkiion
Docs a General Bunking Business.
Interest Paid on Tima
Deposits.
Exchange sold on all points in the United States.
Notary Public officially connected with the Bank.
REAL ESTATE
T K Ila n te ò a n M o r S a le
Town Houses, Lots, and
AcreageforSaleorRent
Miacel laneous
Ore. Fire Relief Associ'ii,McMinn­
ville. F. K. Hubbard, local agent.
For sale, 15 acres unimproved, in Falls
City, on the new Siletz highway; water
and wood in abundance. Good place for
fruit, garden, and poultry. $600 cash.
Meals 26c and up Sunday dinner«
a specialty. The Falla City Hotel.
Freeh Bread, Cakea, Cookiea,
Piea, etc., every day, at the Falla
City Bakery.
Highly improved 10-acre home in Fall* City;
good buildings, with all modern improve­
ments; fruit, fiowers, berries, garden; big
money maker, and getting better as young
trees come into bearing; price $5,000; terms
Abstracts of title promptly fur­
nished. Rates reasonable. Brown A
Sibley, 610 M ill St., Dallas, Or.
1 x)ts 7 and 8, in block K ; price $100.00
Lot 14. (8-r. house) "
” $1200.00
Lot 23.
block "
"
150.00
Lots 11 and 12,
“ E,
“
85.00
Services in the Churches of Falls City
C h r is t ia n
Lot 2, block M, Mont, add., 78x78, house
and garden; close in; $050, cash or terms.
Sunday: 10 a m,
. Bible School
11 a m, Communion and Preaching
6:30 p .m .,. . Chiiatian Endeavor
7:80 p.m. Preacbingfgood singing)
Wedues. 7:30 p m. Prayer Meeting
Friday, 7:30 p.m. Choir Practice
You are invited to all these eerv-
icea.
Lee Sadler, Pastor.
For Sale- Lots 16, 15. 14, E. i o f 13. blk L;
good house, barn; running water; city wa­
ter, electric light; rents at $10, . . $1,600.
For Sale 5.82 acres in city; improved; rich soil.
Price $2,500, at least half cash.
For Sale—20 acres in city; improved; $3,200, half
cash. Good place for fruit and berries.
F r e e M e t h o d is t
For Sale- good house, lot 150x150, rented.
For sale. One acre, adjoining city
limits, with 5-room bouae. A bar­
gain at $125 terms; The News office
for pa rticulara
For sale— 10 acres, partially im­
proved; house, timber; apring aud
living hi ream; near western city
lim it«; price, $1300, cash.
For Sale. 2 good lota, on Pine
street in block K, cultivated.
For sale, one acre, cultivated,
fruit, berries; 6-r. house insured
for $1400; elec, light, city water,
cesspool; puce $1050; all cash, or
$700 cash, terms on balance.
R**p*ct For Funerals.
across, with one side festooned with
a million rainbows, makes the other
valleys seem contemptible, while
the cathedral, built of layers of mar­
Sunset, and McCall’s
ble, standing in the center of the
Sunday and Daily to Mar. 1, ’ 15 $8.00 canyon, ten miles around at the
Sunset Magazine, one year,
2.50 base and with its final tower twenty
McCall’s a year, with pattern, .65
times aa big as the dome of Cologne
and far more beautiful, reduces St.
$11.15
Peter’s to the dimensions of a mole­
Our bargain price to you. $8.00.
hill.— Newell Dwight Hillis.
News
Bank of Falls City
G***H* Hunting.
S
A French friend of mine who has
been staying in Glasgow for a short
time is amazed, not to say shocked,
at the indifference of the crowd
during the passing of a funeral.
They do things differently in
France. Even in the crowded streets
of Paris every one lifts his hat or
cap at the sight of a funeral. In
many cases the onlooker stands
bareheaded till the cortege has filed
past slowly. My French friend as­
sures me that in some parts of his
country one would run the risk of
almost being assaulted if the obei­
sance were neglected. — Glasgow
News.
Oregon Journal --fa lls City
It is possible, even probable, that
Journal
B*g. Y**r Sal* wiibTbeNawe
Special meeting tomorrow, 1st.
the sea serpent nirth started in all
Daily,’ Sun. $7.60
$6.75
good faith
In the southern seas 2.30 p.m.. Oddfellows hall.
Daily,
6.00
4.60
grow the gigantic algae, tho largest
District deputy J. Sturr will be
Sunday,
2.60
2.26
of which measure from 400 to 600
present. Installation. Every mem­
Semi-weekly, 1.50
1.60
feet in length. These when rolled
ber
come.
B.
W.
Robison,
Clerk.
Subacriptions
taken
any
time.
on the beach form enoritiout cable«
several hundred feet long and aa
thick n* a good sized tree trunk.
Such cables washed out to sea by
R. K. W i l l i a m s , M. L. T h o m p s o n , W. F. N ichols ,
A. J .V ic k ,
storms may very easily have given
President
Vice-President
Cashier Assistant Cashier
rise to the farfamed but yet un­
discovered sea serpent.— New York
American.
f
Wonder* of tho Grand Canyon.
became necessary. Mr. Johnson’s
It might b e supposed that joy­
The
Grand Canyon of Arizona,
friends sympathize with him in riders will buy Stewedbaker autos.
7,000 feet deep and twenty miles
his dire affliction.
Notice to Boy Scouts
Modern Woodmen of America
Sunday School . . . 10:00 a.ui.
“
sermon . . ,11:00 a.m.
Young People’s Bible study 6:30p.m
Evening seriuou . .
7:80 p in
Brahman families. Just prior to the
Prayer meeting Thura., 7 :30 p.in.
close of the feasting a hideous ef­
Birthday Party
It. K. Nichols, Pastor.
figy of a male figure, fantastically
robed in rags, supposed to represent
M e t h o d is t E p is c o p a l
Last Tuesday evening a party the bridegroom’s fsther, is carried
. . 10:00 a.m,
o f friends gave Mr. and Mrs. R. along the streets in procession un­ Sunday School,
J. Hall a pleasant surpise, the oc­ der the shade of a sieve adorned Morning Worship , . 11:00 a.m.
casion being Mrs. H all’s birth­ with tassels of onions and margosa Epworth League, . . . 6:80 p.m.
leaves. Every few yards during the Preaching Service
. ,7:30 p.m.
day.
rocession the feet of the effigy
Several pieces o f china and oth­ ave to be reverently washed and Ladies’ Aid Society, Wed. aftern’ n
er gifts were presented.
its forehead decorated with a caste Choir Practice, Thur. 7:30 p. m.
A fine lunch was served at mid mark by its living spouse, the bride­ Prayer Meeting, W’ednes. 8 :00 p.m.
groom’s mother. The bridegroom’s
Milton A. Marcy, Pastor
night.
other female relations have several
The following were present:
GERMAN LUTHERAN
mock attentions paid to them by
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hall, Mr. the women of the bride’s party.—
[’ reaching services in Toller hall
and Mrs. S. S. Cook, Mr. and Mrs St. James’ Gazette.
at 3.80 p.m., third Sunday of each
I. G. Singleton, Mr. and Mrs. W.
month, by Rev. Grosse, of Salem.
Harry Krebs was kicked in the
face by a horse, at the company’ s
barn, Wednesday, and quite ser­
iously injured Several teeth are
out, and gashes cut in the chin T. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Lof-
and cheeks.
tus, Mr. and Mrs. W.R. Hinshaw
Over 100 teachers attended the
meeting a t Independence, last
Social Party
Saturday, nine o f them from the
On last Tuesday evening a num­
Falls City school. The next meet­
ing will be held at Airlie and Mc­ ber o f neighbors gathered at the
home o f Warren Ward for a pleas
Coy. Feb. 28.
ant
evening.
J. M. Johnson is in the Port­
People
present were: Mr. and
land sanitarium, where he has had
Mrs.
Ward,
their daughters Opal
both legs amputated above the
and
Luella,
and
their son Chester;
k^ees. His feet and legs were
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Arnold,
Miss Mabel
frozen while he was in Alaska a
Otte;
Miss
LaVern
Myers;
Mr.
few years ago. Recently circula­
Benton
and
son
Arthur.
tion o f blood in the legs stopped,
All enjoyed a pleasant evening.
gangrene set in, and (imputation
Ed. S. Rich returned, Thurs­
day, from Sparta, Wis., where
he attended the funeral o f his
father, Frank Rich, who died on
Jan. 14, tw o days before Ed ar­
rived. Mr. Rich was not quite 57
years old, and leaves a wife, son
and two daughters. He wa3 a
successful farmer, having retired
from the grocery business, and
was a man o f most excellent rep­
utation in his home town. E d.’s
FallsCity friends sympathize with
him in his great loss.
TH* 8** Sarpent Myth.
S eventh
t jt
D ay A dvent
For Sale—2 1-3 a adjoining city, $650.
Sabbath s'-hool Satuiday 10:00 a.m.
Preaching service “
11:00a.m.
Prayer meeting Wednes., 7:80p.m.
For Sale—80 a. 1 j mi. from town; 20 a. improved;
25 a. good timber; pasture; water. $5,200.
For ren t— 12-room house, barn, etc.,
close in; good placu for renting rooms
or for boarding house; $150 per year.
c a t h o l ic c h u r c h
There will be Mass at the Cath­
olic Church, Mary Magdalene,
regularly, hereafter, on the first
and third Sunday of each month.
C. W. LEE, AGENT
Wanted, the News
Citizens who wish to help The
News give the news of the town can
render a good service by sending or
phoning any information they may
have oi local doings, especially of
matters that are not likely to come
under the personal observation of
the editor.
M
;> i, '
/
W
k 7ÓJ&ÒJ,WJ, YnV/ V * 7SfA
The Rev. Irl R. Hicks 1914 Almanac
The Rev. Irl R. Hicks 1914 Al-
manac is now ready and will be
mailed prepaid for only 35c. Pro-
fesior Hicks’ fine Magaziue, Word
and Works, for one year, and a
copy of this Almanac for only one
dollar. The plain lessons on astron­
omy, and the correct iorecasts of
storms, dioutlis, blizzards and tor­
nadoes, make these publications a
necessity in every home in America.
Send to Word and Works Pub­
lishing Company, 3401 Franklin
Avenue, St. Louis, Mo.
Word and Works and the Falls
City News, one year, aud the A l­
manac, for $1.50.
DIM ES M AKE D O LLA R S
Get a Lucky Horse 8hoe Bank
•«
It Holds J«it T«a Dimes and th« Ttath Dim« Optai It
SELLS ON SIGHT
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE
ThU little bunk ia made of heavy nickeled braaa, highly poliahed, and Will laal forever
It c*n be worn on i k i y ring, watch chain, or eaaity carried In the pocket, «end 10* tor
aample, or 4>c If gold Aniahed la preferred. Aak tor tenua and open territory, whieh la
laat being taken. "Flrat come drat nerved."
Address, L U C K Y H O R S E S H O E B A N K , tIS Fitting, Ntw V«rk. N. V.