iocai ,. p -v. J - time t: hear from thr-ir company aiM 1 -wiidi . , establishing and A. N. Walsh, of Portland, was ' maintaining an exchange at Mon in town yesterday. mouth. The Commencement program Pursuant to adjustment the beprins at 8:3o to-night, council met again on Wednesday R. H. Savoy, of Salem, was do- evening, June 8, but the tele ing business in town Friday. Phone company failed to come to G. H. Baird, of Portland, had the terms asked by the council business in Monmouth Tuesday, and hence tr franchise as prayed . ... .for was laid upon the table m- iu. iu. isomer anu wne, ui n..ji... .1 - j. tv.:.J roruanu, were in town nuwy. , .. , . . - thiiWt E. P. Weir, of Salem, regis- pi.escnt to the company to enter tercel at Hotel Hampton yester- the town providing they keep day- ( their poles off Main street and C. D. Cook, John Miller and j maintain an exchange office in V. W. Yates registered here Sat- i Monmouth. urday from Drain, Oregon. Fred Zook was a Portland vis itor this week having gone there to attend the Rose Festival. T. J. Beery, of Salem, was in town yesterday looking after his property which he owns here. Mrs. Hattie Richardson, of In- j adjourned. A WINNING TRICK. He Lost All Hit Bets and Made Money by Doing So. The captniii ot one rather old und Blow steamer of years ago. finding that be would tmve tt be it long time In China before he receivl a full caro of tea and would have probably to re turn in ballast, begun, to every oue's astonish uieut. to say that, owing to the repairs thHt had U-en done to his etujnes, he hoped to make a raelug passage back to lingliind. Then, still definitely, but the councij extend-; more to the astonisnim-nt of the cap- " ' I . . .1... jr..... ....... t . i. ..ml ttia UU11 OI lilt IUM Bl'-lllll'in u. world ut large, he commenced to back biaiself to make the Tautest passage home. in sucb very considerable sums of money did he wagei that people be gan to think there was something In It. and the merchants sent their tea almost entirely to bis ship, arguing that as the captain stood to lose t"2-rJ the repairs to his steamer's engines had probably pin him in a posittou to bet almost on n certainty. Of course the steamer, whose great est speed was eight knots an hour, ar rived in Euglaud weeks after the oth ers, and the captain lost VEii, but in stead of having to lie In China wait ing his chance of cargo, coming in from the interior, n probable delay of weeks, lie had cleared in a few days after his bets became known to the public with a full ship, thus recouping to his owners wtio, of course, paid bis betting losses, a considerable number During the week a petition was written up and circulated asking the council not to grant a franchise for any number o; years. The petition was signed by some 70 persons. After pas sing upon the permit the n.eeting dependence, was the guest of, Mrs. W. VV. Newman yesterday. Monmouth Heights. Tom Hampton, of Jefferson, ; Elmer Griffith called on friends Oregon, had business in Mon- here Sunday. mouth the latter, part of last! Mrs. E. Clark was a county 1 of tD",lf1",,ls (,f imuuds pat-Biact wee. , . -.. -1 seat visitor Wednesday. Miss Ethel Newman was the : V., !Wrs made a husines trio guest of the Wm. Fugate family 1 to Falls City Wednesday. at Salem, tnday evening till William Fishback, who is work-j Sunday afternoon. ; lg in DalaS( Sundayecl at hoTne. j Cass Uiggs and wife are downj Dr Bl,tler of inaependence, from the Northern i art of Polk ; wag sumrnoned to the Heights county visiting Mrs. Riggs' ; gun(jay . mother, Mrs. Bedwell. i 0 . , ! 'lvira. vjku. owcanimfii ttuu The Monmouth Creamery : Mldren did scme shoppjng in : Inge in.,. .. .1 i. 1lb into . i . . i . i CT .... A DANGEROUS TRAITOR. The Result of Pechantre's Plot to Kill the King. Probably no well meaning poet was ever more taken by surprise than was M. I'echaiitre. a gentle and mild man nered Krench dramatist ot the seven teenth century, who was one day ar rested for high treason as he was peacefully eating his dinner at a vil- thej at i ....j. m iino ... l . x- l ..i i tuuifu uui io- jwunus oi oui-1 the Herald city Fridav. -' t.r last month, the greatest ; y A amount iur one irionui since me ,r r n n n . . j. , .,, Y. P. S. C. E. entertainment creamery wus uum. . ,, ., . , , ! Monmouth Friday night. Our townsman A. N. Poole is ' , f,,. . T( T , . i , , T j i Mrs. S iger,' oi Rose Lodge, moving his work along at Inde- . , , n -ci i , ,, ... visited her son, A. Griffith, and penuence, having three of his i ., , ' .., . . , family, the first ot the weeK. contracts we 1 along, and he wi ! ' Mrs. Allen towns was a guest of her nephew, Elwood Sloan and family, northeast of Monmouth Thursday. Two Raike brothers and James the ! new road between here and Dal las. ; . soon commence the fourth. Messrs. Zook and Wheeler are painting and fixing up Frank Murdoch's house, getting it readv fjr occunannv or wll Fiv.nk says he is too busy to hunt 1 Goodman are working on a Lird for the cage. Miss lieula TwiKsrer. kisLm- to Mrs. W. W. Newman, arrived Ja5' and y-Clark, who are here Friday from Mantague, ' 'vcrking in Monmouth, spent Shasta Valley, California, and j Sunday with thoir mother, Mrs. will visit her sister and family,, E- Clark. for a couple of weeks. Misses Launa and Addie Gin- Mrs. H. W. Lucas and d.iugh- wh ' have heon working in a ters, Ethel and Liva, leave for j hoP yra at Airl;e- turned to Coi vallis Friday to attend Com- lhf ir hoir,e Sunday, mencement exercises, and to vis- Misses IIn::el r.nd Fern John it Mrs. Lucas' sister who lives in sn, who have been working in Corvallis, for a few days. j L- Damon's hop yard, returned Mr. and Mrs. K. 11. Sickafoose nome Saturday to stay, came down from Airlie last Sat-' Tom Osborne and family, of urday, .Mrs. Sickafoose having Independence, have moved' onto contracted a very severe cold and ' Dave Dove's place here. Mr. being in need of medical aid. She has about recovered her us ual health and she and her hus band will return to Airlie the lirst of next week. We visited (1. H. Stone's Hour mill a lew days ago and found it fcnuuuiK uul urn1, winie iiour Osborne is assisting Mr. with his wood hauling. Dove Administrator's Notice. , Notice is hereby given that the under signed lias been duly rrpointed adminis tratorof the estate of Rachel Newman, do ceased, by the County 'Court of l'olk The landlord of the inn where be was lu the habit of dining discovered on a table a piece ot paper on which were written some unintelligible phrases and below in a plain, bold hand. "Here I will kill the king." The landlord consulted with the chief of police. Clearly this clew to a con spiracy ought to be followed up. The person who had left the paper had al ready been remarked for his absent air and gleaming eye. That man waa l'echanlre. The chief ot police instructed the landlord to send for him the next time the conspirator came to dinner. When i'echaiitre was shown the evi dence of his guilt he forgot the awful charjre against him and exclaimed: "Well, I am glad to see that paper. I have looked everywhere for it. it is part of a tragedy 1 am writing. It is the climax ot my best scene, where Nero Is to be killed, it comes in here. Let uie read it to you." And he took a thick manuscript from his pocket. "Monsieur, you may finish your din ner nnd your tragedy lu peace." said the chief of police, and he beat a hasty retreat. ' ' . ' Honest Mistake. The story is lold ot a little New England gill the workings of whose Puritan conscience involved her In dif ficulties on one occasion. She was studying meutal arithmetic at school tt'jd took no pleasure lu It. One day she told her mother, with much depression of spirit, that she had "failed again iu meutal arith metic." and on being asked what prob lem hnd proved her uudolng she sor rowfully ujcutioncd the request for the addition of "nine and four." "And didn't you kuow the answer, dear?" asked her mother. "Ves'rii." said ihe little maid; "but. you know, we are to write the an swers on our slated, and before I thought I made four marks and count ed up.' 'Ten, 'leven, twelve, thirteen,' and then, of course, 1 knew that for, to the undersigned administrator at his residence at Monmouth, Polk County, Oregon, within six months , from date of this notice." ' : 1 Dated r.nd first published this 20th day of May, 1910. ' I ' . ' H. A. NEWMAN, Administrator of the estate of Rachel I Newman, deceased, j B. F. Swopu, Attorney. Your Buggy Painted for $8.00 A. B. WESTFALL Painter and Paper Hanger Monmouth Oregon which SO far as we could judge County, Oregon, and has qualified as I wasn't mental, so I wrote twelve for n ........ ..- ..1 - . . o.l.h i norrrxna l,o,-i.,. . . . ' lie Jim. una a luoi, luina ill Line, lull iuf .... . iu.iS ii,uiiio Stone presented us w th a small a!,inst saili C3tate nrc hereby not,fled ,..i, t. i . , i ' to present the same, duly verified to- sack ot mater a which he nrp- .i -.u i , , . "c t rfc? Rether with the proper vouchers thcie- pmes lur niusu ailJ we will vouch for the merit of that article. He makes a desirable brand in the mush line. Town Council Meetings. The town council met Tuesday evening, May 31, but lacking a qiiorcm adjourned until Wednes day evening, June 1, at which1 time the usual rou ine work of, auditing bills, etc., was done. j Messrs. Bice and Hanna were ' present asking a franchise for ! the Home Telephone Comuiinv i of independence to run its line i along the streets. Considerable I discussion was had after which a moflon prevailed to adjourn until Wednesday evening, June 8th, to give Messrs. Bice and Hanna The Cautious Kind. Before the customer paid his hill the hotel stenographer tore several pages out of ber notebook and handed iheiu to him. "Only the notes of his let ters," she said to the next customer. "Ue is one of the cautious kind. There are not many like him. About once iu elx months somebody comes along who keeps such a watchful eye ou his cor respondence that he wou't even let a stenographer keep his uotes. Of course It is nothing to us, and we always give them up wheu asked to. I don't kuow what the cautious folk do with them. Destroy them, maybe. Anyhow, there is uo record of foolish utterances left In the stenographer's books." New York iiuo. Trutrt. Iu troubled waters you can Rcarce see your f.ue or see It very little till the water be quiet and stand still. So In irotihlcd time you can see little truth. When times are quiet and set tled, then truth appears. Selden. Ridicule Is the first aud last ail ment of fools. Pi m mons. II Your Fare Paid Ladies ol Monmouth and sur rounding count-y during this month will be " allowed their round trip fare by railroad or boat to Portland on any suit they purchase of Us. We tail or and make ail our ready to wear and special order gar ments in Portland in our own establishment. You can see them being made. They are nfde of merchant tailor cloth and are the best on -the mar ket. Absolutely warranted. ' We sell wholesale and retail and this special offer to the ladies of Monmouth is equal to dealers or agents profit. No mail orders taken, because we guarantee our garments and must make them fit you, - and must have you here. 3C 14 I 1 I5ri yr,t ? m It Acheson Cioak and Suit TAKE LEVATOR Co., Portland, Ore. 148 5th Street- as as ;wi Work Try the Herald Office for Job Work. Let us Give You Prices, we Please. WORK Special Rates For The Rose Portland Festival : JUNE 6th to 11th the 11 on Southern Pacific Company , (Lines in Oregon) ' Of Qne-And-One-Thirel Fare From all Points in Oregon SALE DATES: From Roseburg and all stations north thereof, including all branches, June 6th, 8th and 10th. From all sta tions south of Roseburg, June 6th and 8th. : . Final Return Limit, June 8th. For further particulars as to rates, etc., apply to any S. P. agent, or to Wm. McMURRAY, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Oregon. Our Clubbing Rates. Monmouth Herald per year Evening Telegram, Daily per year Herald and Telegram, Evening Telegram, Sat. Ed. t Sat. Ed. and Herald, both The Fruit Grower, monthly Herald and TTVi i i f flmxtTot- - v--- M .AWVVWA mm mm " " li li li ii li ii $1.00 J 5.00 I 5.00 1.50 t 2.00 I 1.00 I