Image provided by: Monmouth Public Library; Monmouth, OR
About The Monmouth herald. (Monmouth, Or.) 1908-1969 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1911)
3. 4. 5. 6. Local and Personal 7. 8. J 9. 10. jll. 12. Earl White hos gone to Airlie to help H. R. Davis Build a barn for Fred Stump. F. Y. Mulkev informed us a!l!- day or so ago that he had effected ; the sale of the H. Best place, G. 1 T. Boothby being the purchaser. ! 17. Miss Emma Kramer took the : ls early motor, Wednesday, for Dallas, to visit her brother, Calj" ' Kramer, who is very sick at that '21. placer 22. The Golden Rule Bibk- Class, j. of the Christian Sunday school, 1 24 met at the home of Miss Lucy j 25. Foster for its regular monthly ; 26. business meeting. After the business session an hour was spent in a social way enjoying as 30' well the refreshments served by '31. the hostess. Those present were 1 32. Mesdames Foster, Parker, How-J33-ell, Waller, Cormvell, Mason, i1 Ostrom, Worth, Haley, Daniel, and Misses Maggie Butler and '36. I oster. 1 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. Free Traveling Library At Monmouth Under the auspices of the Book I . , . , 143. Club, Monmouth has become a L. traveling library stalion. The books are to be kept at the home of Mrs K. M. Jacobson, and dur ing the summer months may be drawn out every evening between seven and eight. After September first, the Book Club will have charge of a reading room at the same place, which will be open to the public afternoons and evenings. On Saturdaa afternoon of this week, the Book Club will meet with Miss Maggie Butler, presi dent of the Club, to discuss ways and means. Following is a copy of the rules and regulations of the Oregon Library Commission in regard to the Traveling Library. AGREEMENT I, the undersigned, hereby ap ply for the privilege of borrow ing books from the Free Travel ing Library. I promise to take good care of all the books I draw; to pay promptls all fines and damages charged against me, and to obey the rules of the library. Cut out for future ref erence the names of the books now here as listed below. KULES FOR BORROWERS No Charge for Books. The books of traveling libraries circulntied from the Commission are free to all the people of the town or village where the library in stationed, and of the surrounding country. ' Borrower. Any responsible person is entitled to draw books by signing the application provided by the librarian. Cbildred must obtain the signature of of parent or guardian. Number of Volumes. Each borrower may draw one work at a time, being entitled to loth parts of a two-volume book. 7t. 77. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. Time Kepi. A book may be kept ! ;); two weeks from date of issue, ami may be once renewed for the same period. Fines. A line of one cent a day shall be paid for each lnok kept out over fourteen days without renewal, and any j money thus received shall be used by the Secretary of the local library as sociation for library expenses. No book shall be loaned to anyone who has failed to return Kxiks or pay fines in ac cordance with the rules. Lost and Injured Books. Borrowers are held responsible for books and are required to pay for lost or injured vol umes. Country Circulation. Social rules in regard to number of volumes to be loaned and time they may be kept may be made for country districts, upon ap plication to the Commission. Addams, Twenty years at Hull House. Altsheler, The rifleman of the Ohio. Aspinwall, Listen to me stories. Bacon, Boy's Drake. Balzac, Eugene Grandet and Pier rette. Banta and Benson, Brownie primer. Darijiur, Kine;sford quarter. Beard, Boy pioneers, sons of Dan iel Boone. Bennett, Barnaby Lee. Bit-hop, Daily ways to health, Boyesen. Boyhood in Norway. Brown. John of the Woods. Browning-, Tied piper. arKe Burnett, That lass of Lowrie's. Burns, Story of tfreat inventions. Butler, Pigs is pips. Catherwood, i-'tory of Tonty. Churchill, Modern chronicle. Clemens, Adventures of Tom Saw yer. ! Cooper, Last of the Mohicans. Cook, Through five administra tions. Davenport, Country boy. Delaeombe, Boy's book of airships. Dodge, Donald and Dorothy. Double-day, Bird neighbors. Eggleston, Hoosier school-boy. j Ellis, Wide awake girls at college. ! Elson, Child's guide to history. Evers, Touching second. j Earnol, Broad highway. j Ford, George Washington. ; Ford, Janice Meredith. Foster, Cab No. 41. . Gale, Friendship village love stories. ' Golding, Story of Stanley. j Greene, A Lincoln conscript. Harris, Aaron in the wildwood. i Harris, Story of Aaron. j Harrison, Making wireless outfits. I Herbertson, Heroic legends. HHnd Historic girlhoods. Hough, loung Alaskans. r. Tllin,lllrv r.nm stm-ie 45. 411. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 513. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. GO. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. OS. C9. 70. 71. 7' Hugo, Toilers of the sea. Jacobs, Patricia. Jacobs, A Texas Blue Bonnet. Johnston, Home occupations for boys and girls. Johnston, Famous cavalry leaders. Johnston, To have and to hold. Kennan, Tent life in Siberia. Lang, Beauty and the beast. Lang, Book of princess and princ esses. Lansing, Life in the greenwood. Leighton, "Coo-ee." LeKossigol and Stewart, State socialism in New Zealand. Lindsay and O'Higgins, The beast. London, Lost face. Longfellow, Children's hour. Lounsberry, Guide to the wild (lowers. MeCutcheon, in Africa. McDonald, Gerda in Sweden. McDonald and Dalrymple, Rafael in Italy. Mofiet, Through the wall. Morley, Donkey John of the Toy Valley. Murray, Story land. O'Higgins, Old clinkers. Otis, Great white plague. Pint, Harper's handy beck for girls. Paterson, Cromwell's own. I'eattie, Poems you ought to know, l'ier, Crashaw brothers. Reeves, New Zealand. Richmond, Red Pepper Burns Riis, Hero tales of the North. Roosevelt, Stories of the great West. Saxhy, Life of a wooden doll. Segur, Sophie's troubles. Serviss. Round the year with the stars. Singleton, Famous sculpture. Spearman, Held for orders. Suttner, Ground arms. Swift, Benjamin Franklin. ' THggart, Little grey house. Thompson, American Patty. Thomson, Denmark. Tompkins, Mothers and fathers. Tozier, Susan in Sicily, Trollope, Dr. Thome. Vundewater, Kitchen to garret. Wallace, I'ncle Henry's letter to the farm boy. Waller, Flamsted quarries. Walter, Russia. Weyman. Under the red robe. White, Rules oi the game. Whiting, Four hundred good stories. Woolsey, What Katydid next. Wright, Adventures in the Arctic regions. 91. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. UK), Men Are So Unertain. "Why dlil you Jilt that man who wanted to marry you?' "Be'-fiuse." replied the prima donna, "1 couldn't decide whether he was tn lore with me or merely wanted to hear me sing for nothing."-Exchange. H Got U. Teacher-Willie, cive me a sentence In which the term hook and eye Is used Willie- Me an' pa went fishln'. I'n told me t bait me hook an' 1 did. Raltlmore American. Fine Vo"ce. Smlth-Ynnr wife has a fine mice. Jones- Yes. one of the best in the world; otherwise It would have been worn om veral years ago. Salem's Leading Dry Goods Store Is the Chicago Store a YE SELL merchandise of Dry Goods business in Salem. The reputation 01 our nmwi uusinew meinoas and the sterling values we give you for your money has spread all over the Willamette Valley. Profits are very small-it is the volume of business we do that keeps us growing big ger and greater all the time. Look over our prices-where can you beat them. Silk Bargains That will surprise you. Come and take a look through this great stock of fashionable silks. Everything that is new for street wear, evening wear and silk waists. All prices; at quick selling prices. Yard: 25c, 35c, 49c, 65e and up. Dress Goods Bargains 10,000 yards of this season's newest dress goods now marked down and placed on sale. Everything that is new in the dress goods line you can find here for suits, coats, dress skirts and waists; all specially priced for this sale. Yard 25c, 35c, 49c, 69c and up. MILLINERY argams Now is your time to buy stylish hats at small prices. They are now go ing at about half price. $7.50 hats now $2.50, $2.95 and $3.50. The Greater The Store BANKS "LOAN" MONEY. They Don't "Lend" It, Because It Is a Business Transaction. Why Is it hanking houses always "lonn" (heir htif-'e sums of money, never by any chance "lend" them? "Lend" Is the true verb, while "loan" was exclusively the noun. How came It about that "to loan" has uuiformly supplanted "to lend?" The purists make a great fuss about this. They Insist that the stupid and untaught (iminolal world has foisted upon the language n substantive verb when no new verb was needed, when the ancient and established usage wns fixed In the signlrtcntlon of "to lend" But prior to the modern development of business enterprise when money was lent It was bestowed upon the bor rower either for temporary use with out compensation, as a. mark of favor or patronage, or by the professional money lender who. taking advantage of persons In extremities of need, de manded usurious Interest This Anglo Saxon verb today retains Its ancient connotation When It was coined the productive powers of money were un known, and the wealth of rich men was locked up for safety and kept out of the channels of commerce. Nowadays, by devices of credit and rapid Intercommunication, it is kept constantly working tn productive en terprises. Immense loans are made, no longer to relieve t be necessitous and the Improvident, but to stimulate indus try and to enable the borrower as well as the leaner to reap a profit In his transactions Money is "loaned" In this sensa It is not lent New York Times Follows Instructions. The father of a small family tells ns this one: "My wife instructed our little boy when he was Invited out to lunch the other day that when he was asked to have a second helping of cake he should refuse. 'You must say, "No. I thank you, I've had enough," said she. 'And don't you forget It.' Tie didn't. When asked If he'd have some more rake he said. "No. I thank yon. I've had enough, and don't vou forget It T "-Toledo Blade. Merit, Quality ana aryie, mai is LADIES' SUIT and COAT Bargains The best we ever offered. This season's newest styles are now selling at half price, and some of them for less. We make a clean sweep at the end of the season, and close out everything in this department to make room for our fall stock. Now is the time to make a big saving on stylish spring suits and coats. $18, $20 and $25 suits now on sale $8.50, $10.50 and $12.50. CUT DOWN PRICES on the following goods: Dress Skirts, Shirt Waists, Petticoats, Middy Blouses, Embroidered White Dresses, Silk Dresses, Wool Dresses, House Dresses, Chil dren's and Misses' Wash Dresses, Sweaters and hundreds of other articles. Chicago ,bto That Saves You Money Church Directory. Evangelical Church W. A. Gueffroy, Fastor. Morning service at 11:00 o'clock ' Evening service at 7:00 o'clock ! Sunday School at 10:00 a. m. l . P. A. Meeting at 6.30 p. m. Prayer Meeting Wednesday evening. CHPJSTIAN CHURCH. W. A. Wood, Pastor. 'Morning Service at 11. a. m. Evening Service at 7:30 p. m. Sunday School 9:45 a. m. Y- P- S. . E. 6:30 p. m. Prayer Meeting Wednesday 7:30 p. m BAPTIST CHURCH. W. W. Davis, Pastor. Preaching Service, 11:00 a. m. 8:00 p. m. Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. B. Y. P. Union, at - - 6:30 W. C. T. U. Local Union meets every sec ond and fourth Friday in the E vangelical church at 2:30 p. m. Her Kind of Economy. Tersons who had heard the man de clare many times that unless he could find a truly economical woman he would never marry laughed cynically at the announcement of his engage ment to a woman who had figured in a thirty dollar hat episode. "Surely," said his friends, "you don't consider a woman who buys thirty dollar hats truly ecouomieal?" "1 do," said the man. "Just recall the circumstances. She was found lying in a faint in a milliuery store anteroom with $200 in cash and a bill for a thirty dollar hat in her pocket book. I claim that any woman who will pay only $30 for a hat when she has $200 In cold cash in her pocket book Is economical to the core, and I am going to marry her."-New York Times. uk ie oiggest Wash Goods Bargains We show the greatest stock of all kinds of colored wash goods and white goods in Salem, and our prices have never been beat. 10,000 yards of Percales, Calicoes, and ginghams Now yard 5c, 6 l-4c, 8 l-3c, 10c. 3000 yards of dark and light Outing Flannels, regular 7 l-2c quality Now Yard 4c. 5000 yards of all kinds of wash white goods now on sale. We show d complete line; any kind you want. Special price yd., 6c, 8Jc, 10c up. The Following Goods are now on sale at CUT ADVER TISED PRICES: MUSLIN UN DERWEAR, SUMMER HOSIERY and Underwear, Laces, Embroider ies, Corsets, Parasols, Suit Cases, Muslins of all kinds, SILK and KID GLOVES and Men's goods of all kinds. Salem, If Oregon THE WHITE IS KING The BEST all-round Family Sewing Machine that can be pro duced. Made in both ROTARY and VIBRATORY styles. The rotary makes both Lock and Chain stitch. The latest up-to-the-minute steel attach ments with each machine. Sold on easy payments. Send name and address for our beautiful H. T. catalogue free. White Sewing Machine Co. 1460 Market Street San Francisco, California NOTARY PUBLIC D. N. McINTURFF NOTARY PUBLIC for the State of Oregon, at the Office of The Monmoi'TH Real Estate Co., Monmouth, Ore. Deeds and all kinds of legal pape" made out and executed, and all notarial work promptly and carefully attended to. L. D. Brown, Attorney-at-la' Notary Public, Abstractor, Dal las. Oregon.-