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About The Monmouth herald. (Monmouth, Or.) 1908-1969 | View Entire Issue (June 25, 1920)
Monmouth Herald Monmouth, Ore. June 25 1920 Page 4 DR. F. R. BOWERSOX PllYSICIAN V SVRGEOS PHONE NOS. OFFICE WW HOUSE M . WALTER G. BROWN Representing th "PENNSYLVANIA" Fire Insurance Co. v o! rhilde!ph Notary Public , Blank Deeds, Mortgages, tit. OREGON NEWS NOTES OF GENERAUNTEREST Principal Events ol the Week Briefly Sketched (or Infor mation of Our Readers. A. N. Halleckbuysiunk of all kinds and pays highest cash prices. 11 Biliousness Dont let a smooth tonKued stranger persuade you that there is any kind of printing the Her ald Print Shop can not do. .aui rEN you have a bilious attack your liver raus to perform its functions. You become con stipated. The food you eat ferments in your stomach instead of digesting. This inflames the sumach and causes nausea, vomiting and a terrible headache. Take Chamberlain's Tablets. They will one up your liver, clean out your stomach and you will soon beaswcll as ever, lnercwnuuuuguv. PIIIIlI Bcjartiiis in Mind" it i . says the uooa juaje You not only get com plete tobacco satisfac tion from a little of the Real Tobacco Chew But it costs you less. The rich tobacco taste than the old Wnd ,,V1 you don't have to have V a fresh chew nearly as often. Any man who uses the Real Tobacco Chew will tell you that. Put up in two styles RIGHT CUT Is a short-cut tobacco W-B CUT Is a long fine-cut tobacco ai fifty 5r7 PAINT 4. NEVER has there been a better reason for preserving your property than at the present time. High costs of construction have greatly increased the value of homes and buildings, no matter how old they might be. Paint-GOOD Paint, will do more to preserve and increase the value of your property than anything else you can possibly invest in. It is the greatest safeguard against the ravages of time and weather. It is the best kind of insurance. Guard your home and buildings with FULLER Paint ' and other products. Back of them are 71 years of raint-making experience. Thousands of property, SS hav; used these productlyears. Look Up a FULLER Dealer 4 in Your Town : ' W. P. Fuller & Co. Northwest Branches at Portland, Seattle, Tacoma, Spokane, Boise 3 - " riifl I Your Home yp with y cm Tfce fifteenth annuel convention th Oregon Banker!' association too ned it Eugeu Tuesday. . The $60,000 gravity water project undertaken by Monmoutn nearly tear uo hu been completed. While fishing on a dock at Newport Ivy Howard caught an octopus whlct measured about six feet In diameter Charlea A. Barr, resident of Marlon .niv ilnca 1879. died at bia home -.Hu ninth of Salem, tie wai M vears of ace. i -irnle for all retldenta of Marion county la belni planned by the Marlon County Community federation ana win be held sometime In July. The Roaeburf cherry crop la ripen Ini rapidly. Earlier varieties will be plentiful, It la believed, and the late fruit promlaea heavy yields. The Linn county farm bureau hu abided to arrange a series of poultry culling demonatratlona In Linn county durlni August and September. Former Salemltes from all iectloni of Oregon and the Pacific northweat utembled at Salem Saturday tor tne annual homecoming ceremonies. Eugene and Springfield have Joined forces for a Fourth of July celebration, Springfield will celebrate Saturday. July 3. and Eugene Monday, July 6. Aurora new artesian well la now flowing at the rate of nearly 40,000 gallon! a day, which li aeveral thou land gallone more than the city uses. Airplane foreat tire patrol aervtce In nreroa will not aUrt until June 26, according to a letter received at the Office of F. A. Elliott, lUte foreiter. The Sheridan Light Power to -iik t,.Hniiiirir at Sheridan, has (lied with the Oregon public service eommleslon application for an Increase In ratea. John Stelger, prominent iheep man and rancher of Baker county and ! known throughout eutern Oregon ' died Friday while on a fiahlng trip new Baker. I Bert Jewell, of Greenpolnt, formerly ' game warden for Clackamai county, drowned In the Clackamai river when the boat In which he and two compan ion! capslied. About 80 reoreaentatlvei or Baptisi churchei of Malheur, Wallowa, Union nil Baker countlea attended tne Or.nde Ronde Baptist association, which wai held at Baker. tit u omi,h Frhn firmer, waa mil on hla ranch by Mayor Aaa B ThnmiMon. of Echo, who went to aid the iherlff In arreitlng Smith on ,.w,i of robbery and aasault. nmelnta of the motor vehicle oepart meni of the itate government tor the mnnth of May. 1920, totaled WW. according to a financial statement pre- Suri-it hv the eecretary of state tlnnrecedented Increase in Dusinesn during the past tew month! Ii given the reason for the Increase in toe capital itock of the Phei company of R.l.m from 11.500.000 to M.OOU.UUU A number of men of Coburg and vicinity were cited by Deputy Sheriff kroner to aDDear before Dlstrtct At- tni-nev Rav and explain why they have not obtained Hate license! for their dogs. v Washington county Holsteln breed er! held a field meeting on the farm of H. Martin, near Eddy. Mr. Martin has herd of thorough-bred cattle. A cattle Judging contest for both adults and boys was ataged. , For the purpose of discussing the wool and mohair market situation ana the organization of a county wool and mohair growers' association, a series of meetings of growers of wool and mohair will be held in Linn county this week. Th,, fleht of the Dallas churchei to the moving picture theater! In the city on Sunday was lost when the citizens of the town In a special tian decided they wanted the Sunday .veninz shows by a vote of 407 to oon otwllni a bitter fight. aw, o A large amusement hall and several homes for employes of the Oregon Timber onrnany are being constructed at Bates, a lumber camp on the Sump- . Vullev railroad, by the lumber cor poratlon, in an effort to better living conditions and attorn recreation w mnlnVM '' - . ' n.i.n 0M and 7000 uneamuv .em are to be hatched thli year t the state game farm at Eugene, M, m state Game Warden Burgh- duff. At present 1300 young birds are out and 2600 egga are under ,tne hens.' The Corvallls farm will also produce about 7000 birds this year. Because a large number of cases of illness from Btomach trouble have de- inn in Meiiford from unknown causes, none serious, Dr. E. B. Pickel, city health officer, has Issued a warn i .it nn nf eltv water to boll the water for cooking and drinking until a on mule of the water has been analyzed by the state board ol hualtlL .. . ....a in nunitan metnodl will be offored O Agricultural college In the summer session, junr 11 to July II. Field work In nearby rural communltlea will m an imp.. Unt feature. The Wtllaulna 4 Grand Ronae nan- ... mtnnanv. which proposes to con struct a railroad and telegraph lines h. ih fnrmer town along th lam- hill rlvar to a point near Grand Ronde In Polk county, has filed armies oi irnnr.ilnn In th stall corporslloo ,.r .-- . . . . .. ..- department. Ths capital iioca is tw,- 000. Street car farci In Portland were advanced from I to I cents, effective Tuesday. June 15. on an order Issufl by the public tervlc commission of Oregon. In th findings of th com mission th new rate was held to be necessary In order to Increase (he rev enue of th company, to meet It x peneea. A new prun evaporator will be erected In Dallai this lumniwr by Cal ifnrnla turtle on th B. C Klrkpat- rick tract. North Dallaa. Th vau- orator la the patent of ths partle wno .in Inmill It and If It Drove th suc cess they claim for It will greatly rev olutionise th drying of prune In this n.rt of the country. . ... ..... John W. Todd, supermienueui oi " Salem public schools, whoss nam Has been mentioned on 'soveral occasions In connection with th operations of Carloa L. Byron, now serving a long term in th federal penitentiary for l.nri frsuds. hu been completely ex onerated In a report prepared oy an Investigating committee. The Salem dehydration plant will start operations for th 1920 season within th next few days. Spinach .in com first, then strawberries. cherrie and other fruit and vegeta- bles. Th largest runs will be on prune and apple. Owner ol the plant expect to hav mow than U. 000,000 worth of product ready for the market before th end of th season. Election of officer of th depart ment of Oregon, Grand Army of the Rrnubllc. In annual encampment at Astoria, resulted In th selection of J. T. Butler, Oregon City, eommandori R. A. Abbott, Astoria, senior vice-com mander; Donald Clark. Portland, jun ior vice-commander; Joseph E. Hall, Portland, medical director, re-elected, and T. Broullette, Portland, chaplain, re-elected. The Eutern Oregon Livestock com pany bu filed with the stat engineer application covering th construcuon of what will be known u th "P" ranch reservoir for the storage of 120,- 000 acre-feet of water from the Donnor and Blltxen rivers for Irrigation pur pose. A dam 40 feet high and iuuu feet In length wlU- be construct, which, together with th other pro posed Improvements, will cost approx imately 1760.000. An Initiative petition providing for the complete abolishment of cigarettes In Oregon hu been filed with the sec retary of state, and will b referred to the attorney-general for ballot title. tinder the nro nosed law It will be a violation to sell, keep for sale, aollclt, advertise, receive orders or possess cigarette, cigarette paper or what is generally known among smoker a "the makings." Persons violating the proposed law will be subject to bolh a fine and county Jail sentence. Purchase of practically all of the Clatsop county holdings of the Ham mond Lumber company by the crown Willamette Paper company wu an nounced by R. L. Herren, timber su perintendent of tho paper company. Although the exact purchase price wu not made public It is known to range between 11,600,000 and 2,000,000. The iinal involvea 17.600 acres of timber land in the Necanicum country with approximately 650,000,000 feet of standing tlmbV This timber cruises I per cent of spruce and hemlocK. Tn slcnerl confession reiterating statements made previously to fellow convicts but the truth of which were, doubted by Dr. R. Lee Steluer, until rAwntlv sutierlntendcnt of the peni tentiary, Jame Ogle, now serving a life sentence In the Institution tor me n,ror nf J. N. Burgess and ucorge E. Porringer. of Pendleton In Multno m,h Miun.v'l&st November, has as sumed all blame for the shooting of hn . twn men and exonerated uavia Smith and Walter Bannaster as far .v.. ,il killing was coacorneu. ai,k a nonnter also are under life sentence for the part they played in thA miirdrtra. F. A. Elliott, state forester, nas signed the lormal contract wnereny nrnnnt. through Colonel W. H Arnold, commander of the western f lr service, will assign to Oregon a squad of airplanes for ntrnl work during the 1920 seanon. Under the provisions of the contract a pntrol base will be located . ir,np . from wnicn poiui iv plane, will ;make trip, dally. One plane will go as tar no -'"-"- while the other Plane will fly south to Medford. At Medroro w. -....J . .,,h.hM.e. where the planes op emeu ,,, ratlng south out of Eugene will stop ..j .iin There will also be oper- ;ftted out of Medford a plane which will travel In a northeaster. ... ... summer lake, thence south to IjUturas and return to th sub-base. TOWNS. JU fresleat ol bSetv-KtorAig k) aulhonUtivti MWY Ktb town that on WoeooVJ upoa. T)uilowndOUr-ivlJttowB'l , , -"l hk to deal ii nw IBn,T hw-u cheap ot cW 3 . -nF Thai uMolkited totinwoy how the town -PFM)H)uriho"P! TlL. SERVICE lh nwchsnU wl h" m "wnt" Ubluh," . i In oSis hoillkn Jay, m0' too Itsy to Und rot W wuco . L0STMOI10N. SlowrrAunreuabk taJJJg ubsntuli, JgriicUhdNOM fr7'E? ISAJWlNTMElVrS, an iom of the usual rndordeiouy- jouilovmaMwmmtgu'ryTRADL Tkr. it EVERYTHING hre-o! oS Irtchrtnni OU MACHINES IN TEST JLJr Mechanical mathematics haa received Jolt. Th ipeed. ease of operation and absolute certalu ty of correct answer from the adding machine wu made to look like a truck-homo, and til by this little 13-year-old Kansas City (Mo ) school girl. Her name Is Esther Kaplan, in recent com. petition thore she sot an Interna tional record a a lightning cal culator when she solvod six prob lems In addition In 47 seconds and the machine with an export demonstrator took one minute and 42 seconds on the same problems. Four types of adding machines wore used agalmi tiie girl. . PITCH LONGEST GAME I J : ma wm IPl it I L . u i3 . . . aWl 'fl 111 tV "rwr , w ' I' - " Engen V. Deb, 8oclallit Horn tne tor president. hoogPhM with vice presidential candldato Seymour Slodman a he was noti fied in the 0 8. P""B"rJLfi Atlanta of hi! nomination. Debi la tervlng a ten-year wntenc fw unpatriotic remarki during l0 period of the war. ..-, r- HORNSBYTfOUNGESTOP MAJORS' BIG STARS iaf .: " '1 9 AM Her are the two pitchers who let the new: major league record by battling 24 innings to a 1 to 1 lie, game called on account of darkness. It Is Joe Ooachger of Boston Braves and Leon Cadore ot Brooklyn. Both pitchers hurled superb games, but sensational Beldlng saved both at times. The former big leag'ie record was In till when Boston beat PltUburtf 1 21 tunings. f'A.:-'1 " Rogers Hornsby, brilliant In fielder and batsman with the w Louis Nationals. Is the youngest of the "big league" baseball iters. He was born at Winters. Texas, April !6, 189--now betel lust 84 yean old. He hu stw ilnce 1911. , ,, 1 j, i - -