The Monmouth herald. (Monmouth, Or.) 1908-1969, November 01, 1918, Image 5

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    Artistic Printing Work
Our man at the cue hat an eye
for the beautiful and symmetrical
in type,
A. N. llallock buys j ink of all ...
kinds and pays highest cash Trltln MNALjttil TUUtTHtr
prices. 20tf tl..AUrt. ...naeiv p.,hMi nn
tlon of tht Burial of Youthful Scot
tlth Oftletr With Hit Man.
let ui fix up your letterhead, youi
billhead, your buiineu card.
SAMPLES OP ARTISTIC PBINT
INO MAY BE SEEN AT OUR OFFICE.
Yfrt
tin . Wj
Suffer
Those Nervous Headaches
which are the lot of so
many Housewives and
Mothers.
nr-Mif
Seldom Fail to Relieve
Any Ache or Pain.
For Silo by All DruggLta.
MILES MIOICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind
ffieTof fiie Tteeplerhaiie Jockefonbat
name. lie la ninery-flve yeart old. Ill
memory la of the best and to la hla
hearing. He hna been connected with
horses all hla life and many a tala of
the-turf he can tell."
DON'TJFORGET
That A. M. Arant writes Inau.
ranee: Fire, Automobile and
Surety B nds.
Swopc &j Swope, Lawyers,
I. 0. 0. F. Bldg.
Independence
WALTER G. BROWN
Representing the
"PENNSYLVANIA"
Fire Insurance Co.
of Philadelphia
Notary Public
Blank Deeds, Mortgages, F.tc.
DR. F. R. BOWERSOX
PHYSICIAN ti SVRGEOS
PHONE NOS.
OFFICE - 330J
HOUSE 1502
old etblihed
D. aIFT 00." are beliur uutcklv
unuirni oy mun'iiuciimT
ol'tuiniil thrnuirh Hi !
Huml a mulnlor.kutcho-tnnH drwHntlon
of your Invention lur FRI
atxl report on patentability,
ptlon
rch n
entu or no foe.
of :kKI rnxxlnl Invention.
We vet DaU
Write for our free book
Patent Lawyers, titab.1889.
B 307 Sevenlh St.. Wnahlnnton, ft. C.
LC. PRICE, M. D.
Office and residence
Kurre Apartment
Phone 1903
Monmouth Grange 476
Mecta the Second Saturday In Each
Month at 10:31 A. M.
Public Program at 2:30 p. m. to which
viaitors are welcome.
P. 0. Powell, Master.
Miss Maggie Butler, Sec.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
In Odd Felluwa Hall
Servicca, 11.00 a. m
Subject:
REALITY
Sunday School, . 10.00 a. m.
Wedneaday evening meeting, 8.00 p. m,
I ttood one nlKht on a certain hill
that cottiuiand the firing line In ar
almost aoundle panorama. Beside
me was an officer of the Second Ca-
undinn division, who hud Just come
out There that night hy Ita white
trull of Iridescent light, we could truce
the course of the firing tine for many
wllci through France and Flandera.
Juat to our left the line of light
Jutted fur out, like a lone cape Infh
the acn. "What la that Juttlng-out
placer my friend Inquired.
That," I answered, "la the Ypret
aallent, the Bloody Angle of the Brit
Uh line."
To mention the name of Ypre la
to have one'a memory awakened with
a veritable kaleldoaeope of pictures.
Tliat trull of light that jutted out Into
the night looked like a rape, and an
' Iron caiie It baa been through moot hi
' and yenra of war. Rut the holding of
that enpe bat been at an awful coat,
' and there wat not an Inch along that
trailing line of light that bad not
coat Ita trailing line of blood.
Juat after the first gat attack In
April, 1015, the whole countryside wat
In a panic. The ronda were filled with
; clvlllnni In alarm, fleeing down coun-
try, and with limbers and marching
troops hfiatenlng up. I wat passing
through the town of Vlumerthlgne,
which It tltuated two mllet beyond
Ypret. In a field at the tide of the
ntad I taw a funeral party. It eon
alsted of several pioneers, serving as
grave diggers, a gray-beaded Scottish
major, and a corporal'! guard to act
at firing party.
I learned that thlt Inconspicuous
group were burying the lust original
officer of a battalion of the Cameron
Highlanders. The dead officer waa a
young subaltern, and the gray-haired
old major wat bla father, wbo had
come from another regiment to attend
the funeral of bla ton.
So, over In a great deep trench.
where a number of the rank and file of
the fallen Cameron were already laid.
the body of their dead subaltern wat
placed. As I taw the officer and hla
men of the bonnle Highland regiment
thua laid to rest together, I thought
of the requiem of Saul and Jonathan ;
"They were beautiful In their Uvea,
and In their deaths they were not di
vided." Capt Arthur Hunt Chute, In
the North American Review.
Siller Invents Fir Etcapt, .
One of the boyt aboard our navi
fleet ha Invented a fire escape which
la similar to the rope ladders used
aboard ships. Hit principal object
wat to provide a collapsible Are es
cape which could be compactly and
conveniently arranged at the window
of a dwelling. It conslstt of a con
tainer hinged to the sill In such a
manner that by opening the window
and folding the container on Its hinge
the pietal Jad4ffX rnajr. be unfolded
awl dropped. "When Tins opefallon Ts
gone through, a means Is automat
ically provided whereby the ladder It
held at a distance from the walls of
the building. The advantage of such
precaution is obvious.
Heroes Whs Don't Like Worship.
That kindly, admiring and enthusi
astic visitors to hospitals In the war
sone constitute a nuisance and added
trial to the wounded Is the complaint
of the New York Medical Journal. The
patients don't want to be bothered
with glorification, still less with the
dear, helpful souls who come to en
tertain them during the wearisome
hours of convalescence. "We know of
patient? dodging behind tents when
they taw certain ladles coming to
'amuse them,' " comments the Journal
EVANGELICAL CHURCH
Peter Conklin, Pastor
Sunday School, - 10.00 a. m
Preaching Service, 11.00 a. m
Y. P. A. Meeting, 6.15 p. m
Preaching Service; 7.30 p. m.
Prayer Meeting Wedneaday, 7.30 p. m
BAPTIST CHURCH
E. B. Pace, Pastor
Sunday School, - 10.00 a. m,
Preaching Service, 11.00 a. m.
C. U. E. Meeting, 6.30 p. m.
Preaching Service, 7.30 p. m,
Prayer Meeting Wednesday, 7.30;p. m
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
hunflay acnooi, - - lo.uu a. m,
Preaching Service, - 11.00 a. m
Y. P. S. C. E. Meeting, 6.30 p. m,
Preaching Service, . 7 30 p. m
Prayer Meeting Wednesday 7.30 p. m
Repair Ship Mysterious.
The manufacture of a large part of
machinery to replace anything broken
Is almost Impossible In the limited
apace of the battleship's machine
sliops. But wondrous feats are per
formed In the repnlr ships thnt ac
company fleets on stations remote
from dock facilities, states a British
war correspondent
The repnlr ship ts a hnge flontlng
smithy nnd machine shop packed with
even-thing that the wit of man can
concentrate Into the space for treat
lng wounded battleships. These ships
employ some of the best artificers
from our naval dockyards and are
scattered In every quarter In which
the British fleet Is stntloned remote
from dock facilities. The Boche has
nothing like them and It tins been
stated that no Inquisitive Boche has
ever been allowed to .Intrude his nose
aboard one to Investigate Its mysteries
nnd take the Information to his env
ployers of how the strange feots per
formed by the repair ship are effected.
The repair ship Is the abode of secrets.
Some
Satisfying
Chew!
Break two or three
little squares off the
filug of Real Gravely,
t's a small chew
tastes better and stays
with you longer than
your big chew of ordin
ary plug. That's why
it costs nothing extra
to chew Real Gravely
the best chewing
plug in the world.
.
goes further that's
why you can get the good
taste of this class of tobac
co without extra cost.
PEYTON BRAND
Weal Gravely Chewing Plug
10$ a pouch-anc worthit
Rides Well at Ninety-five.
Jockeys, no matter what their age,
are generally referred to by those not
closely In touch with racing as "the
boy on So-and-So," but a stable "lad'
still going well at nlnety-flve Is cer
tainly hard to bent There Is one, as
shown by the following clipping from
the London Sportsman of recent dnte:
"One of the brightest and most alert
of the lads'' riding horses around the
paddock at Windsor prior to their
races jvns old Fjiulkner, Jhe grjndfa-
Monmouth and Independence
Auto-Bus Schedule
Leave. Monmouth Leave. Independence
6. B0 a. m. North Bound 7.30 a. m.
1.50 p. m. " " 2.25 p. m.
5.15 " V " 5.48 "
10.00 a. m.- South Bound 10.34 a. m.
3.15 p. m. " " 3.51 p. m.
6.30 " " " 7.12 "
CRAHAM & SON Proprietor.
J. T. Graves
for
for
Republican Candidate
County Commissioner
Polk County.
General Election, Nov. 5.
' ' (Paid Adv)
Attention, Fellow Republicans!
Republicans as fellow partisans have never had cause .to be
more proud of the fact than at present. Born in the struggle in
cidental to the development of human liberty, our party has al
ways been foremost in ita defense of American institutions; for
their maintenance at home and for the furthering of their proper
respect and credit abroad. The Republican party has always befin
aggressively American. It has ever been an unfaltering advocate
of our flag and our democratic' institutions.
We honor the name of the immortal Abraham Lincoln and a
long line of illustrious statesmen who have followed in his foot
steps and commend them to the people of the nation as evidence
of the fact that devotion to liberty and the essential doctrines of
our free institutions are inherent in Republicans.
This record is doubly reassuring at the present time when
into the throes of a world in death grapple is flung the wealth,
the manhood and the ideals of our country to preserve for poster
ity the blessings we have heretofore enjoyed. The world old
struggle of feudalism, versus individual rights; of the divine
rights of kings versus the right of the people to rule themselves,
is at stake, and we rejoice that we are able to play a prominent
part in that contest.
We exult in the part which prominent Repubeicans are taking
in the civil and military porton of that struggle. In finances, in
ship building.'in national organization of war work, in the person
nel of our military leaders, Republicans are proud of their repre
sentation and it is only when it comes to politics that we feel in a
sense, humiliated. Politically, indignities have been placed Upon
us and our leaders in a manner that must make every Republican
who cherishes the name of our party and of its splendid record,
burn with resentment.
Fellow Republicans, this is our own fault and we have it in
our power to correct it. Oregon and Polk county Republicans
never Jiad less excuse for deserting the ticket than they have this
year.
We have a splendid lot of candidates.
From governor down to coroner, there is not a weak spot in
the line. They deserve your suffrage and as you honor yourselves,
your country and your state, and at the same time the splendid
old political organization of which we are a part, bear these things
in mind. Attend the poles on November 5, and vote the ticket
straight.
For governor, James Withycombe, a true patriot who is a leader
among the war governors of the nation. The prominence of Ore
gon in'war work is due in a large measure to its patriotic govern
or. Sane, energetic and capable, he is the right man in the right
place and should be retained there.
For U. S. senator, Chas. L. McNary, personally known to
many people in Polk county and who is practically one of us.
His record is his recommendation and the confidence which the
people of the state have in him is reflected in his vote at the.
primaries. Republicans are needed in the U. S. senate and Mc
Nary is especially needed there by Oregon.
For Congressman, W. C. Hawley, whose splendid record in
the lower house is eloquently testified to from the fact that this
year no candidate could be found to oppose him.
For state senator, I. L. Patterson and for representatives,
W. V. Fuller and Ben F. Jones, three good men who will do
honor to their districts and who have practically no opposition.
For sheriff, John Orr, whose disinterested work on the draft
board has given Polk a high reputation among the counties of the
state. An official who has made good and who should be reelect
ed by a big majority.
For county treasurer, A. R. V. Snyder and for coroner, R.
L. Chapman, ihen who have no enemies in the county and no op
position. You can't beat them. You might as well join the
crowd and vote for them.
For county clerk, Floyd D. Moore, who has made good as
school supervisor in a manner . that insures his making a good
county clerk. Courteous, intelligent and a hard worker, he will
render the county good service. Vote or hfm.
For county judge, E. C. Kirkpatrick, whose experience as a
business man has been of large advantage in his conduct of the
business affairs of his office. A man distinguished for his sanity
and fairness, his sagacity and integrity, he is a valuable public
servant and should be endorsed by a large popular majority.
Vote for him. ' '
For commissioner, Thos. Graves, recommended by his neigh
bors, tested by his friends, he will make a capable and efficient
officer. 4 vote for him is for increased efficiency in'the service.
Paid adv. inserted by Polk Co. Republican Central Commit
tee. Mrs. W. D. Henry, secy., Box 97, R. 1, Salem, Ore.