Image provided by: Monmouth Public Library; Monmouth, OR
About The Monmouth herald. (Monmouth, Or.) 1908-1969 | View Entire Issue (May 25, 1917)
18-92 Illinois Cooking Aluminum See our window display of cooking utensils Roasters, frying pans, double boilers, kettles, griddles The original aluminum ware. Made in America 1 i QDrPF A T . To introduce this ware we have ten 3"qt' $1,35 kettles which qo i. brtLlAL: , we will sell as long as they last, each for TO CIS No More Treadle Pushing ? Mrtimra The portable, self contained, compact - w 14 AVA w w Ci B Western Electric Sewing Machines A new shipment juft received. l&ipSSN LJ Garden Tools make sewing an unalloyed pleasure. Conven- Everything in this line for the ient - the machine can be stored on a closet Home Gardener shelf. Price complete, including motor $37 WINEGAR & LORENCE, Monmouth i 1 8 v......: . 1 . cis o Interest Mi s Lois Osborn. who attends N mal. The boys at Vancouver have moved out of the barracks into Miss Myrtle Crabtree of Alba- tents and expect soon to go to ny visited at C. C. L3e's Satur- Clackamas. day- Wm. Luckey of Canby, form Miss G rtrude O.sborn of Cul- erly of this county, was a lay ver is visiting with her sister, delegate to the conference. NORM THEATER Monmouth Oregon paramount 'GjMtirefc Friday, May 25 Frederick Lewis and Ethel Grey Terry m "BOUGHT" Saturday, May 26 Hazel Dawn in "The Feud Girl" Thursday, May 31 Mae Murray, in "Sweet Kitty Bellairs" Ina Fishback had cl a ge o the bakery during the absence of Mr. and Mrs. Mulkeyat Eugene. Jefferson Wood and wife of Al bany were visitors at A. ,L. Phil lips' recently. Miss Doughty expects to have work on her new house started soon. Ranie Hurkhead has complet ed his school duties at Shaniko and is back in Monmouth for the summer. Pomona Grange 'which was to have been held Saturday, is postponed to the fourth Satur day in June. Two small mills near Falls City have been closed down be cause of lack of help to operate them. Miss Lila Dobell spent Sunday with her mother in Monmouth and the latter took her to Corval lis in the car Monday. C. S. Coats has been under the weather for a week or more and his place in the Monmouth cream ery is being filled by a man from In( ep ndence. Pearl Fishback has been work ing in town a few days this week doing landscape gardening for A. Parker and Chas. Leonard. R. VV. Dobell who finished Jack Wood's term of school near Junc tion City, is back in the Normal until graduation time. Hood River county and expects to teach in that county next year. C. E. Force is "baching" it at present, Mrs. Force being absent at Arlington visiting her daugh ter who is a teacher there. With the closing of school they expect to return to Monmouth this week. Houses with gardens for rent. Houses and lots for sale. Houses for trade. See J. H. Moran. Jennings Lorence and Clares Powell are among the latest col lege boys to return home for ag ricultural work. The former will assist on the Lorence ranches and the latter raise a crop of beans. Dual Optimism!' 5 per cent milk at 6 cents per quart Cream at 15 cents per pint. My quo tations to regular customers for the year 1917. All products from my herd. The herd increases in numbers proportionately as your patronage. M. Sacre. Phone 4105. 28tf Septic Tank I have received plans of the latest Standard Septic Tank as designed and recommended by the State Board of Health and am ready to build such tank for any person who desires it This tank is guaranteed sanitary and effective in the disposal of sew age. C. G. Gkiffa Christian Church Notes W. A. Elkins, Pastor Bible School at 10 a. m. Senior and Junior Endeavor at 7 A. M. Baccalaureate services for the graduating class of the High School next Sunday at 11 A. M. Memorial services at 8 P. M. Special invitation is extended to soldiers of the Civil War. be in the ranks and to answer roll call. After that we go to the parade ground for 15 min utes physical exercise. We have breakfast and at 8 o'clock is our first regular drill, period. That lasts until 9:15, when we have inspection of clothes or quar ters. At 10 we have calisthen ics and we get a good work out in that. It loosens up every muscle in the body and strength ens the heart, the lungs, etc. It is pretty hard at the beginning, but doesn't take long before we are used to it. This lasts until 11 and then we have nothing more until 1:30, when we have our regular drill till 3:30." Carrol Lake was over from his Salem Heights school for the iweek end. They keep the boys in the ma rines busy acquiring physical per fection as is evidenced by the following from Joe Clark: "At 6 a. m. the first call is khmm14 and 6:15 the secomj ctX 1m re supposed to o ' It Is a world of leuii years, says tne New York Times. Its food lies In this year's crop. The reserves will be ex hausted at the end of the crop year.. The outlook Is not too roseate. The Eugllsh wheat crop is reported back ward, the Dutch small. French wheat will yield less than usual. Argeutina will have little wheat or corn to ex port. The Australian wheat crop Is estimated at nearly 50.000.000 bushels less than last year's. Our big winter wheat states have not had moisture euough. Early vegetables In the south ern states bfve been nipped by frost. So the shortage goes. Food prices are high already. This careless, easy going America must re member the ant and prepare for next wii.ter. One thing nearly all of us out side the cities, and many urbaus, can do. That is tu raise all we can of the common vegetables, so easy to raise, thriving almost everywhere, so large a part of our food. We can't Import them. We must grow them; and they should be grown In quantities unheard of before, grown by the rich and the more they sell the better-by the poor, by the great mass that is neither. Beans, onions, peas, potatoes and the rest, these should be the crop of everybody with land euough to bend over In. Selectmen, town committees, town trustees and councilors, spy out the vacant cultivable land and see that it Is tickled with the plow. Commuters, who farm for exercise and pleasure, vr say you do. this Is the spring when you need to farm for business. More ' ground for garden this year; and gar I Jen for vegetables, not for ornament 4w fcca Q tb'tt 4y trip t e