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About Falls City news. (Falls City, Or.) 190?-19?? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1916)
Raturdav, October 14, 1918 THE FALL8 CITY NEW8 Mrs. Chlo Seymour was up from West Salem Wednesday. Miss Velma Miller was a Dallas visitor Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Esther Montgomery went to Dallas Wednesday afternoon. 7 Jewel in Silveroid Case $3.00 «« *» 5.00 11 «« ss 6.90 15 ss ss ss 8 .8 5 17 Every watch guaranteed a per fect timekeeper. Ingersoll Dollar Watches for Walter L. Tooie, Jr., Lawyer. the boys. Dallas, Oregon. tf. P E R S E Y , T h e J e w e le r , M. L. Robinson started out on a Falls City, Oregon. hunting trip Thursday afternoon. Col. Mathews. Barb Hall and CHIROPRACTIC G. D. Treat went to Albany’ Thurs day. DR. VV. L. Holloway CHIROPRACTIC Mrs.Berl O’Brian of Black Rock WIU be >t Falls City Hotel was visiting Mrs. I. G. Singleton MONDAY. WEDNESDAY ana FRIDAY Tuesday. Afternoons of Each Week. Miss Hammond entertained her music pupils to campfire Friday eve of last week. Fresh Bread, Cakes,Cookies,Pies Face H air T o o th and other bakery goods, every day C lo th e s H and N ail at the Falls City Bakery. S h a v in g H at Baby Mrs. Addie Montgomery return ed Tuesday from a week's visit with her daughter at Dallas. B R U SH ES Mrs. I. G. Singleton and Miss Bertha Frink attended the Repub For every purpose; all sizes and shapes: in all finishes lican rallv at Dallas Monday night solid backs; bristles that Mr. Ivey Lewis and daughter, won’t come out—and all at Guylia spent Monday at the home the fairest price. of her sister, Mrs. I. G. Singleton. Miss Mary McNaulty and Miss Anna Voth of Dallas visited the T H O M P S O N S latter’s sister, Marie Voth, last Sunday. DRUG STORE. Mr. and Mrs. I^ane went to Dal las last Saturday to take their son Ira to the hospital to have his tonsils removed. John Hughes and Smith Collins have taken a contract of falling timber for the Falls City logging company and went to camp Thurs day. Chas. Nine, the new manager of the mill company store has opened the store and is getting things in ship-shape to do business with the public. Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Titus, Mrs. Headquarters for Candy and Cigar? WEATHERLY CONFECTIONERY. C. L. Bradley, Mrs. R. Paul and Mrs. I. G. Singleton attended ser vices at the Christian church in Dallas Wednesday evening. The Art Club met at the home of Mrs. F. E. Driggs last Tuesday and had a delightful time. They were taken out and brought back by automobiles driven by Austin Titus and Ira Mehrling. Mr. I. G. Singleton spent a few days in Monmouth this week look ing after his mother-in-law, Mrs. J. P. DeWitt, who has not been Candies,'Tobaccos and Cigars, at well for several weeks. She is now in Southern Oregon visiting L. B. WONDERLY’S hes son, after which she will come to Falls City to make her home with her daughter, Mrs.I.G. Sing leton. s S SS 44 SS S4 SOLD EVERYWHERE Deafness Cannot Be Cured b y lo c a l a p p lic a tio n s, as t h e y can n o t re a c h th e d ise a se d p o rtio n of th o t a r . T h e re Is o n ly o n e w a y to c u r d ra in e s» , a n d t h a t Is b y c o n s titu tio n a l rem edies. D e a fn e s s Is c a u s e d b y a n Inflam ed co n d i tio n o f t h e m ucoua lin in g o f th e E u s ta c h ia n T ube. W h e n th is tu b e Is Inflam ed y o u h a v e a ru m b lin g so u n d o r im p erfect h e a rin g , a n d w h en It Is e n tire ly closed. D e a fn e s s Is th e r e s u lt, a n d u n less th e In fla m m a tio n c a n be ta k e n o u t a n d th is tu b e re s to r e d to Its n o rm al condition, h e a r in g w ill b e d e stro y e d fo re v e r; nine c a s e s o u t o f te n a r e c a u sed by C a ta r r h , w h ic h Is n o th in g b u t a n Inflam ed c o n d i tio n o f th e m ucoua su rfa c e s . W e w ill g iv e O ne H n n d re d D ollar* fora n r c a se o f D e a fn e s s (e sn se d by c a ta r r h > that ca n n o t be cu red 0 / IN HONOR OF GRANDMA GRANT PEACE AT ANY PRICE Thursday uftornoon at the home of Mrs. Dave Grant, an entertain ment was given by Mrs. Dave Grant and Mrs. Harry Starr, in honor of Grandma Grant, who has passed the 81st milepost on life’s journey. A number of her friends, who have rounded out, "life’s alloted span,’’ or nearing it, gathered to pay respect and cheer her as she travels peacefully down the Western Slope of life, where the shadows lengthen and the twilight gives token of coming night. Those present were; Mrs. Josephene Grant, ago 81 SS 70 Elenor BuUer, ss 70 Win. Ford. ss 68 J. R. Moyer. ss 68 Sam Tetherow ss 65 Geo. Hubbard, ss 65 Frank Hubbard, «s 67 John Powell, ss 67 John Waters, ss 59 Henry Lewis. ss 59 Chas. Frink, ss 72 Mary Dennis ss 61 Jennie Cobb, ss 39 R. Paul. (Continued from page 1 ) HIGH SCHOOL HOTES The orchestra * et Thursday evening for its regular weekly practice. Mr. Miller of Dallas was present and offered much valuable advice. Miss Elizabeth Lewis, our new English and Latin teacher arrived late Wednesday evening and took up her duties Thursday morning. Members of the teachers train ing class who attended the teach ers institute were Hettie Newman, and Claude Graham. Our records show:—Number of visits by parents --------0 (zero). We cannot help but note the inter est taken in the school. Calvin Barnhart, one of our freshmen, came in contact with a yellow jackets nest last Tuesday. He is not suffering very much from the effects. Each member of the teachers training class have been put in charge of the register in the dif ferent rooms for the coming year. And this one of the delights of a teachers life. The teacher in charge hate very much to lose this privilege. Miss Ruth Ritenour entertained the E. T. C. club Saturday after noon at her home. Those present were Misses Olive and Beth Deal, Lurena Treat, Ruth Gottfreid, Lillian and Mary Marshall and Hettie Newman. Light refresh ments were served. Anent parents visiting schools, we would suggest that the orches tra render on public occasions, CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR SOCIETY whenever possible, the old-time A young peoples’ Christian En melody entitled; "Parents Don’t deavor society was organized at Visit Our Schools.’’ It starts off the Christian church Sunday af thus; Ob, dear, what can the matter be. ternoon by Homer DeShields of Oh. dear, what can the matter be; Oh, dear, what can the matter be. Dallas. The following officers Parents don’t visit our school. were elected: President, Mrs. I. G. Singleton, SPECIAL ATTRACTION AT THE GEM Vice-pres. Miss Leone Chapin Secretary, Treval Powers An extraordinary photo play, Treasurer, Olla Martin, "THE LURE” will be shown at Chorister, A. C. Powers, the Gem Theatre, Friday night, Organist, Lota Bradley. Oct., 20. Prices 10 and 15 cents. The society will meet every Sun Your only opportunity to see day evening at 7:00 o’clock at the this remarkable photo play. Con Christian church. Everyone invi ceded to be one of the best under ted to be present. world pictures ever shown. Children under 16 not admitted except withe their parents. Oakdale Item s. Our school has opened with Miss Georgie Curtis as teacher. H a ll s C a ta rrh C are S end fo r c lrc n la rt free. r . j e n EN EY . A C O , Toledo, Ohio. Miss Kate Barnhart was home Sold by D rogirls’s. Tic. Take H a u l Family n i l s for constipation. to spend a couple of days before attending the Teachers’ Institute. The Murphy boys are home from the hop yards and have en Local News Hems tered school at Falls City. Ross Murphy visited his grand mother last Sunday. The best show at the Gem tonight Mr. Dunn is logfiring for Mr. Roy Parent-Teachers meeting Tues- ! Gardner. ay evening at the school house Mr. Ollerson, who had some ribs t 7:30. It was postponed on ac- broken a several weeks ago is xint of the Teachers’ Institute in able to be out and at work again. alias this week. Mrs. C. L. Hop- Mr. Newman is picking apples i for W. L. Barnhart, Sergeant E. L French, recruit ing officer from the United States Army recruiting station of Salem, Ore., was in this city Thursday. "The recruiting in not progressing as rapidly as desired,” said Ser geant French, ‘‘due in a measure, perhaps, to the demand for men in all lines of labor at good wages.” He also stated that the Citizens Training camp held at American Lake, Washington proved to be very satisfactory and could be made more efficient. Morris Selig is having quite a serious time after having his ton sils removed. R. K. W i l l i a m s , M. L. T hompson , W. F. N iciiols , President nuinds. because, he said, "the 8- hour day has the sanction of the judgement of society and its favor. "This was a true statement put to a perverted use. Public senti ment does favor the eight hour day, in activities where it is prac ticable, as a means of conserving energy and raising the standard of existanee for* workers. But the railroad employes do not pretend that they they want shorter hours; what they demand and receive is higher wages. The \ ery language of the bill recognizes this fact. “ Eight hours,” it says, "shall bo deemed the measure or standard of a days work for the purpose of reckoning the com|>ensation for services.” "We are not prepared to assail the demand as unjust; only an ex haustive inquiry could determine where the right lay. Our point is that President Wilson, by charac teristically snatching at the readi est means of making peace at any price, shut the door upon such in quiry, and conferred upon a spe cial class, by arbitrary and ununi formed action, a vast sum which must come from the public. "The vice of this procedure was four-fold. It delivered a deadly blow to the principles of arbitra tion; it weakened immeasurbly the power of the executive to inter vene in such condition on behalf of the public; it established the humiliating and perilous precedent. that the government of the United States can be coerced and legisla tion extorted from Congress under preasure; and it embodied a settle ment which is deceptive and ut terly false in that it encourages, rather than averts, like invoca tions to brute force. "This situation,” declared Mr. Wilson, "must never be allowed to arise again,” and blithely de parted for Shadow Lawn in the conviction that his utterances rep resented an accomplished fact rather than an aspiration. That the situation will arise again no rational observer can doubt; and it will arise the sooner and oftener and the more menacingly because it was dealt with this time by an executive who will pay any price for peace, no matter how tempo rary and elusive it may be. "Already an official organ of the railroad predicts that other bodies of employes will undertake a similar action to that of the brotherhoods, and the sincerity of its opinion is shown by its admis sion that they would be justified in such a course, since their wages are lower in proportion to work done than those of the successful unions. While President Wilson was invoking "the judgement of society,” another of the conferees was bluntly telling the truth. A B. Garretson, chairman of the union representatives, thus de scribed the contest: “ In times like this men go back to primal instinct—to the day of the caveman, who, with his half gnawed bone, snarled at the other cavemen who wanted to take his bone away. We leaders are fight ing for our men, the railroads are fighting, for their stockholders, and the shippers for themselves. And the public will pay. "In his dealings with Germany a n d Mexico, President Wilson showed again that he saw only the problem of the moment, and applied it any solution that prom ised incidental relief. What a champion of principle to represent the public interests in a conflict between the rugged "cavemen” of industrial warefare! “One thing to be said in behalf of his course is, perhaps, that it is consistent. The historian of the future, when he seeks to learn the guiding principle of this adminis tration, will find it revealed in a cross section of any of its import ant acts, unmistakable and un changing. For the human thumb print is no surer key to identity than the basic idea of Wilsonism- peace at any price—is to its de plorable manifestation.” \ Vice-President R. G.W hitic , ('sahier Assist «nt Cashier Bank o f Falls City F alls C i t y , P o i . k C o u n t y , O hm uo n Does a General Banking Business. Interest Paid on Time Deposits. Exchange sold on all points in the United States. Notary Public officially connected with the Bank. Pendleton Normal School Proven Necessity (C o p ie d fro m P o r tla n d O r e g o n ia n I M O N M O U T H . O re., June 2« - T h e O reg o n N o rm a l a c h o o l o p e n e d t h is w e e k . . . » In d en t» e n r o lle d 7H6, la r g e s t on reco rd for s l a t e N o rm a l In O reg o n . . . . h o w lo c a r e fo r la r g e a lu d a n t b od y a p ro b lem H0U b ein g cr o w d e d In to a u d ito r iu m w ith » a a tln g c a p a r ity o f 660 (la lle r le a fille d w ith e i t r a ch a ir* In u I r I ch M ore th a n 150 » lu d e n t* » e a le d o n p la tfo rm N ew b o a rd in g h o u « r s c o m p le te d , a d d itio n s to room lu g houKes b u ilt an d te n t» uaed O n e h u n d red g lrla s le e p on u p p er flo o r o f a ch o o l T h e o f f ic ia l s c h o o l r e p o r t g iv e s 160 g r a d e p upil* In M on in u u tb . for t e a c h e r p r a c tic e Read what those yeu huve elected to handle the affairs of your state and who are thoroughly Inform ed regarding school conditions in Oregon have to say concerning m easure 308 on the ballot ut the coming election: By J a m e s W ith y c o m b e . G o v ern o r o f O r eg o n ! r 'Or«|i*n III uitipimillHiiiihiy iii ntrit of mor* normal school work uiul 1‘emJlfttnh it» th« lo cb u l plm a for a achool of (hla < la** In I^Mitern Oregon * By J. A C h u r c h ill, S ta t e S u p e r in te n d e n t of P u b lic I n s tr u c tio n : I truat that the v u tn n of (he S la te will u**ltt In rulelng the ntundurrl of «»nr «< hool* by ralabliehlng a S tate Norm al Sch«M»l ut |Vt»«!lt»ton * By P L C c /n p b e ll, P r e s id e n t o f t h e U n iv e r s ity of O regon: "At Iruet one additional Normal Hrfcool I q urgently needed In Oregon " By W. J. K err. P r e s id e n t o f t h s O reg o n A g r ic u ltu r a l C o lle g e : "Since the people of l*endlrton are Initiating u rnreaure for the eatubllahm ent «if n Norm al School at that place. It will g iv e die plee«ui*i to »support thlu m easure ' By J. H A c k s r m g n . P r e s id e n t O reg o n N o rm g l S c h o o l, at M o n m o u th : "A careful analyaia of th«’ situ ation will convince any nne that Oregon n eed s a Normal School in ICagtarn Ore gun and Pendleton fill» all the governm ent req u irem en ts " By th e C o u n ty S c h o o l S u p e r in te n d e n t s o f O reg o n : "Reantved. that It la the aensa of the County School Superintendent» of lh«- S ta te of Oregon, in convention it ear rub led. that the beet In terests of thr a«hoola «if the S tate deinan«! Increased fa cilities for thr training of teu ch n a . and »bet we, therefore, endorar the in itia tiv e m easure to astabllah a Norm al School at Pendleton " By M rs. C h a r le s H C a s tn e r , P r e s id e n t o f th e O reg o n F e d e r a tio n of W o m e n 's C lu b s: "I moat h e a itlly endorse the location of said Normal School at Pendlalon Prof- R o b ert C. F r e n c h . F o rm er P r e s id e n t of th e N o rm a l S c h o o l L o c a te d a t W e s to n : "An Im m ediate eatubllahm ent of such a achool at som e «-antral mnnl auch an P endleton WOtlM prove a f r i t aaaet to the s t a t e of Oregon B F. M u lk ey . Ex P r e s id e n t S o u th e r n O r e g o n N o rm a l S c h o o l: I ahull support thr locution ef an tuaatern Oregon Normal School at Pendleton " State Board of Regents of Oregon N orm al School declares that "the necessity for additional Norm al school facilities in Oregon i.s a p p a re n t.” I'nrtland C ham ber of C om m erce endorses m easure 308 ami say Pendleton m ost logical location for N or m al school in Kuslern Oregon 3 0 8 X Y E S is a vote for your children Kaatcrr> Oregon S ta te Norm al Hrhool C om m ittee »paid Adv > itv i H Owl n s, Mtc) Ityidlaton, O n I - l - H - H - H H - H - i- t - l-l- l"» 1 1 1 M - l-H - fr I | |., i ..|..| .,|.,| ..| ,. i . | .+ .| - i .. h - I- 1-H --I-H -1 -I-I- G E T YO U R B U TTER W R A PPER S P R IN T E D A T T H I S O F F IC E . ™ ü ® i? fo = 3 [ia © (p q ; ö The constant strain of factory work very often results in Headaches, Backaches and other Aches, and also weak- ens the Nerves. J D R . M IL E S ' ANTI-PAIN PILLS will quickly relieve the Nerves, or Pain, while D r. M iles' H eart T reatm ent is very helpful when the Heart is overtaxed. i r FIRST BOX. OR SOTTLE. FAILS TO BENEFIT YOU. YOUR MONBV WILL BE REFUNDED. SEVERE PAIN. u*ad to «uffer a great deal with lumbago In my »houlder* and back. A (rlend Indueedm e to try Dr. Mile#’ A n ti-P an PU1» and I am only too glad to bo able to attaat to th* rellj« that I got from the** pilla. They form » r a to * !* medicina and do all that claimed the y will "t » wrana .f. CUT t BA. l- l-I 'H -!1 H 1- H -H -t- h M- b-H W A T C H E S *