Image provided by: Monmouth Public Library; Monmouth, OR
About The Monmouth herald. (Monmouth, Or.) 1908-1969 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1913)
t encieg iTxmziy it). rr, wftw afn j& &&&& v v YOUR IDEAL a cream separator is found . uream separator, liecause' t s the best skimmer n the world. Hold . World Record. Because it is easiest j washed by hand or by the rotary washinsr device, as thousands of satisfied users te- tify. Because it turns easiest, is noiseless, , attractive and very durable and sani tary. Because the U.S. is guaranteed by the lirm that has "kept the vl "j uuu ui r vears. I v Ask us to enow you. Wi ire Fenci mg ! Just received a Car Load lot of Wire Fencing material and we can supply your wants and fill all kinds of orders for high or low, delicate or strong, fancy or well, just any kind of a fence. Let us show you. It Is Price and Quality that Makes our Sales for us. Quality Lures and Price Secures our Patrons. S loves, Ranges and all kinds of Shelf Wares Come and see us, we are stocked up with bargains. EGAR & LORENCE Oregon Monmouth, I rml anrl pAKcrmal Saves Himself by Impersonating Woman, Abstracts promptly made by Brown & Sibley, attorneys and abstracters. Miss Ruby Fleam visited I'ort hnl Monday and returned home the next evening. Collates Toilet Soaps 10c to ': a c:ike. Why not get the best? PERKINS PHARMACY. Walter F. Seott, who has had employment in Newport for some time past, will return to his home in this city next week. Glenva Graves, of Corvallis, came up Sunday and is visiting her uncle and aunt, J. S. Prime and wife, and other relatives. A. F. Huber moved Ralph Bar ber and family to the hop yard Mr. Huber has rented near the crossing, this side of the Luckia mute bridge, Sunday. liy an order of the P. E. & E. Railway management the cros sing at the Salem, Falls City line north of Independence, has been named "Gerlinger." Prof. Wallace, of McMinnville College, will preach in the Bap tist church Sunday night at 8 p. m, It is said a treat awaits those who go to hear him. Through the Tyley & Baiter Real Estate Company, Dr. F. R. Bowersox purchased a lot from E. II. Lorence, lying next to the doctor's residence lot. Miss Cora Rossitter, who is teaching school at Dallas, will close her school this week and will be the guest of Mrs. A. J. Haley, Sunday, and will leave on Monday, the 16th, for her home at Manley, Iowa. The Herald carries butter pa per and dairymen can get their paper nicely printed at small cost at this office. Douglas. Ariz.. June 9. Geo. Bogartis, a Mexican-American rancher of wealth, attributes his personal safety and the posees sion of his money to his success at feminine imoersonation. He arrived here yesterday to relate how, by donning women's clothes, he escaped bandits who had demanded his money. Captured near Oputo, Sonora, Bogartis was ordered to pay $5, 000 for his life. He tock the ban dits to his ranch house and told them to wait outside while he went after the money. In the house he put on women's cloth ing and, secreting his money, boldly passed through the picket lines which had been placed about the premises. The bandits doffed their big hats as the supposed woman passed, and the rancher safely made his way to the border, de positing his money in a bank here. i cajed the hail received a drench- j ing rain, which assures a big! ' wheat crop. A number of dattle and hogs were drowned on Thirty-Mile Creek and Rock Creek. The damage will probably reach $100,000. Hail Storm In Gilliam County. Condon, Or., June 9. An elec tric storm, accompanied by hail, which struck this section Satur day, did considerable damage to growing grain and garden truck. It appeared to be a mile wide, and from Antelope to the Colum bia river everything it struck was ruined. It seemed to follow in the path of last year's storm, and crops on a number of ranches struck last year, and which were in exceptionally good condition this season, were again practic ally wiped out. Among those hit the worst are the Coney ranch, Walter Meyer, Orwick Cook, Clyde Cripe, Farr Bros., and nearly every ranch on Rock Creek. The ranches which es- Monmouth Heights Allen Clark,of Monmouth, was in these part9 Thursday. Clayton McCaleb spent Sunday with friends in Monmouth. R. M. Bosley made a business trip to Falls City Saturday. Ed Rogers and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Treat, of Monmouth. Jim Goodman, of Monmouth, visited with George Sullivan and family Sunday. T. G. Sefton, of Independence, was here Saturday in the interest of the Grand Union Tea Co. M. Hinshaw, of. Dallas, the traveling salesman for Watkins' Remedies, was on the Heights last week. Mrs. Arthur Haley and Misses Nicholas and Hill, of Monmouth, were here Sunday afternoon sightseeing. . Mrs. Vernie Ogle and children, of McCarthy hop yard near Inde pendence, are spending the week with relatives here. Buy Wool and Mohair I am in the Market for Wool and Mohair, always paying the highest Market Price. Allen T. Clark. 31 tf Bell Phone Main 53 FOR SALE Belgian hares. Settle the meat question by raising cheap whole some meat. Phone 186. W. A. Wood. First National Bank Monmouth, Oregon Successor to Polk County Bank Paid Capital, - . - $30,000.00 Surplus & Undivided Profits, $13,000.00 J. B. V. Butler, President; Ira c. Powell, Vice Pres. and Cashier; W. E. Smith, Assistant Cashier. Transacts a General Banking Business DIRECTORS: I. M. SIMPSON, F. S. POWELL, Wm. RIDDELL, Sr., J. B. V. BUTLER, IRA C. POWELL. City Meat Market JOHN GRIMES. Proprietor We aim to carry everything in Fresh and Smoked Meats, such as Bologna, Minced Hams, Boiled Hams, and Hams and Bacon. Special this Friday: HALIBUT, SALMON AND CRABS UNIVERSITY of OREGON SUMMER SCHOOL June 23, to Augurt 1st, 1913 Twenty-fiive Instructors Fifty Courses Distinguished Eastern Educators Added to Regular Faculty University Dormitories Open. Board and Room at $3.50 per week. Reduced Railroad Rates. For Complete Illustrated Catalog, Address The Registrar, University of Oregon, Eugene.