The Monmouth herald. (Monmouth, Or.) 1908-1969, June 30, 1922, Image 3

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    Ira C. Powell
J. B. V. Butler
President
F. E. Chamber»
Vice President
CU res C. Powell, Asst. Cashier
CVsiurr
First National Bank
OF
MONMOUTH, OREGON
W e E ncourage N ew D epositors
A great many people hesitate
about opening a Bank Account be­
cause they regard their knowledge
of banking as limited or probably
♦hey consider the amount of money
they have to deposit too small. It
is a very easy matter to open an
account here.
Just deposit your money, sign
your name and receive your book.
We cordially invite you to open
an account with us, subject to
check, and will be pleased at all
times to explain any details in re­
gard to financial matters.
Capital........................................ $30,000.00
Surplus and Undivided Profits $24,000.00
Directors
J. B. V. Butler, Chairmaa
Wm. Riddell
Robert Steele
A. M A R A N T
Fire Insurance, Real Estate
and Surety Bonds
Reliable Service
D R . F. R. BO W ERSO X
P H Y SIC IA N & SURGEON
PHONE NOS
R epresenting the
“ P E N N S Y L V A N IA ”
F i r e I n s u r a n c e Co.
of Philadelphia
Notary Public
Blank Deeds, M ortgages, Etc.
3302
Eyes Tested
Glasses Fitted
Hartman Bros.
D r. W . C . G e h m a p ,
For Sale to highest bidder—
Barn about 16x24 with 12 foot
posts. Inquire at Riekreall plant.
Willamette Valley Flax & Hemp
Corporation.
HEMSTITCHING-Leave orders
with Mrs. Cornelius, Millinery
store. Mailorders promptly filled.
Mrs. Barnell, Independence, Ore­
gon. Phone 4321.
L e n t.« a c c u r a te ly d u p lic a te d
O p tic a l r e p a irs c a re fu lly a n d
p . o c n p tly m a d e .
S a le m ,
W A L T E R G. B R O W N
Our Bargain Column
3303
O F F IC E
H O U SE
I. M. Simpson
Ira C. Powell
O p to m e tr is t
O regon
Orders taken now for red rasp­
berries. Market price on delivery.
B.T. Merrill, F. 3303 Independence
pAffiVIp O P IC S
’.VILL STUDY EUROPE'S
TRADE CONDITIONS
HEADS BIO RAILROAD
SERVICE
For Sale— Team of mares weigh-
! ing respectively 1300 and 1000 lbs.,
, wagon and harness for $160. The
wagon is a Shuttler with 3 inch tire,
i Owner leaving country. Isquire at
this office.
THE GOLDSTEIN Si
TH AT MAY WEAR OPE
bargain.
Let me mend your furniture or
file your saws.
J. W. How»ll. 4t
Have a letter written on
any of the standard makes
of typewriters.
Then have the same letter
written on a Woodstock.
Ask any competent critic
to pick out the neatest let­
ter.
The reason is built in the
machine.
'Woodstock Typewriter Co.
S3 N orth D earborn S tre et
Chicago, U. S. A.
When you build
Build perm anently
B u ild
jwith f ir e p r o o f
Brick or
Building
Tjle
The W om en's Service D ep art­
For Sale
ment of the Chicago, Burlington A
2 of the finest lots in the city on Quincy, O m aha and K ansas City
paved street. Concrete walk and
Railroads is now headed by Miss
D. Ogden, as Supervisor.
curb. Price $200 each.
Miss O gden has had y ears ex ­
7 Room house, lot 82J by 330 perience
in the passenger d ep a rt­
feet, fruit for family use, barn and m ent She know s the intricacies of
chicken house and park. Price '» ilro ad in g thoroughly
$1800.
Large house, two lots, right
close in. Price $1200.
7 room house, good orchard, elec­
tric lights and city water, toilet.
Price $2500. Terms. G. T Boothby.
4 room house and lot. Fruit and
berries. Close in. Price $850.
Principal Events of the Week
8-room house, 1& acres of land,
Briefly Sketched for Infor­
located on East Main street. Curb­
ing and concrete walk. Price
mation of Our Readers.
$3000, terms.
Say—I have one of the easiest
W ork h a t begun on th e highw ay b*
and surest money makers in the
city. Come in and let me put you tw een H arrisb u rg and Ju n ctio n City.
T he 8llverton schools have passed
wise.
from secondary to first class schools
6 rooom house,, close in, City
R e-establishing th e m ail route be
water, lights, toilet. Price $800.
G. T. B oathbv.
OREGON NEWS NOTES
OF GENERAL INTEREST
(Ask for Demonstration)
.
Central Clay Produ ct* Co.
Don’t Neglect Your Floors
It's fun to paint or varnish them
yourself- -easy too
LOORS that have u good fin­ I inishes and Stains for you to
ish do not get scarred and use. They are the best products
worn, the finish takes the wear.
of their kind that we know and
Well finished floors always look we have been making such prod­
better, too.
ucts for 73 years.
If your floors need refinishing
Take a d v a n t a g e o f Fuller’s
and you can’t get a painter to do Free Advice and Fuller’s Prod­
the work, refinish them yourself. ucts in beautifying your home.
You can do it easily—“it’s really
The results will surprise you.
fun."
The work will fascinate you.
Our “Home Service Paint Dc-
Fifteen-for-FIoors
artment” was organized jnst to
e n -/o r- F lo o r# V a rn ish .
elp women refinish things about T h F is ifte varn
ish is u n e x c e lle d
the home. Write for free advice, f*>r b e a u ty of h a is h , d u r a b i l ­
ity a n d e a se of a p p lic a tio n .
telling us what you want to re- R o llin g f u r n i t u r e , b o ilin g
a te r, h e a l m a rk s , e v e ry d a y
finish and how you want it to w wear
a n d t e a r h a v e n o e ffe c t
on
th ia gloaay, e la s tic a n d
look.
d u ra b le finish.
Our experts will explain every
W e a lso m ake D eco ret V a r­
ish S ta in s . A ll-p u rp o e e V a r­
step of the work and recommend n n ish
a s, R u b b e r C e m e a t F lo o r
the right materials, brushes, etc. P a ia t, W ash a b le W a ll F in is h .
S ilk e n w h ite E n a m el. F u lla rw a a r V a rn ish . Floor
Th ere are s p e c i a l F u l le r W a t. A a to E n a m el. F u lle r # H o t W ater Wall
in ish ( k a la o m la a ) , P o rc h a n d S la p P a in t, a n d
Paints, Varnishes, Enamels, Wall P F IO
N EER WH I T E LEAD.
F
E
The Monmouth Cooperative Ship­
ping Association will save farmer’s
money in the sale of livestock. Ship
with us and cut out middleman's
profit. 11 you have stock to ship
notify W. J. Stockholm, Mgr.
tf
W e Stand or Fall
By This Test
T h e re 's a F itk T ire o f e fra va lu e in every size.
*
fu r ear. truck c r sp eed w a g o n
court.
The proposal to m erge two Oregon
City banks, the bank of Oregon City
and th e bank of Commerce, has been
abandoned.
Dry Oak wood $7 a cord.
J.W . Leask.
Used furniture at a
Inquire at this office.
S ’. - , y o a r wicsilcr you w ant
JL to t ce q I is!. T ire beside any
o th e r I'C offers you. H e has it
in stouk c t cun get it. S ee for
yourself w h at th e l isk Tire*has
to oiler in u x tiu sire and strength,
how its residency com pares w hen
you flex th e tire u n d er your hand,
how the d ep th f th e non-skid
tread looks besh e o th e r treads.
This is th e w ay to buy tires!
Quick action in getting results of
experiment station investigations
into action on Oregon farms wat
said by the California legislative
committee looking into agricultural
college work to be one of O. A .C .’s
most distinguished quaities. Farm­
ers have gone the plan then in use
one better Recently by visiting the
station in large bodies, seeing tor |
themselves just what findings are of
value and applicable to their condi­
tions, and going home with the
dope in their pockets for use- pos­
sibly the next day or that evening. 1
Col. Michael Friedsam . head of
Can you beat it?
R. Altman & Co.. New York, was
The shrewdest of these farmers
selected by President H arding to
investigate the trade condit i f
say that in one day they learn some
Europe
Colonel Friedsam .
'i n
things of great value that they have
head of the Fair Price Comrr.is -in.
was once asked how the people
tried many years of actual farming
might know when they were g et­
to pick up without success. Among ting
fair prices, and instantly re»
some score of things listed as high­ plied, "R ead advertising."
ly useful information the following
are frequently mentioned: By sim­ tween Canyon City and B urns is now
ply rotating crops—grain, corn and assured.
clover, say — net profits were in­ Mrs H orace R ichards Is th e first
creased by $8.82 per acre annually woman ever to be chairm an of a Bend
in rainfall farming and $14.09 in school board.
irrigation farming, farm manure re­ F ourteen applicants, all of whom
alized $1 to $5 an acre annually for were women, took the sta te teach ers’
exam ination a t Fossil.
three years—light application; al­ Many Im provem ents in Mount Angel
falfa on sand»1 loams of western Or­ during the laat few m onths Indicate a
egon yields an average of 4J tons rapidly progressing town.
per acre annually over periods of 7 Sale of 1123,000 worth of street-im ­
to 10 years—a most profitable for­ provement bonds was au th o rised by
age crop; the best kinds of wheat the K lam ath F alls city council.
Dr. C. W. Lassen of Pendleton was
to grow in each community to make elected president of the Oregon state
production and marketing best; board of v eterin ary exam iners.
white lands can be tile drained and
A city m anager plan of governm ent
made to grow more than 2 tons of for St. Helens is proposed In a ch arter
clover hay per acre; the new college am endm ent now being drafted.
River 1922 apple crop bids
bred vetch will succeed on many fair The to Hood
be one of th e cleanest and la rg ­
soils too wet for the common kinds, est sixed harvested in recent years.
sheep are most economically kept on
Cltlxena of Condon at a special elec­
western Oregon farms by a com­ tion last week voted, about 20 to one,
bination of native and cultivated to auth o rise an Issue of w ater bonds.
The longshorem en's strik e, which
pasture—rape and clover being two
has been In progress since April 23 on
good cultivated pastures; hogs can P ortland's w aterfront has been settled.
be profitably grown only for home
The contract for rebuilding Happy
market; Oregon grown clover seed Canyon in Pendleton, wrecked by the
is much the best for Oregon; clover heavy snows of laat w inter, has been
and alfalfa may be protected large­ let.
Plans for the new highw ay bridge at
ly from stem rot by clipping or W inchester, n o rth of Roaeburg, have
pasturing before winter.
been laid before the Douglas county
Nat Goldstein, who was dumped
out of the Kansas City Post'Office
because he accepted $2,500 to boost
Frank O. Lowden for the Presidency,
looks happy in this p icture; but did
he wear this smile when Republicans
and Democrats joined in denouncing
him as an unhappy choice when Presi­
dent Harding named him to be Inter»
nal Revenue Collector for the St|
Louis District?
Fu I fork
V tM oncsnsN
"Horn«
S«rvic«TOoiitti
Varw it h s s - ( n o m a la - 9 t o i n g
M an ufacture d by W. P. Fuller A Co.. D«pt. 4 1 , S«n Fr.nci.cc
B ra n c h « . In I S C i l i a . In t h . W .a t
s m T H E MEW6 BÍL 0 W CUI IT O U T AND P A S T E IT IN T OU R N O I f BOOK
roller's "Home S ervie.” Paint« are sold by t h . followlo« in yuur city.
Official
Washington Sees
Yoar Portrait Free
For a limited time the Herald i*
offering
an enlarged portrait taken
Efficient Service C ourteous T re a t­
|
by
the
Davidson studio to new
m ent
•
subscribers who pay $2.00 for a
A. k KEENEY
year's subscription and to present
F u n e ra l D ire c to r a n d L icen ced
suscribers who pay up to date and
E m b a lm a r
a year in advance. These pictures
are the highest specimen of the
Calls P rom ptly A nsw ered Day
photo art. The supply is limited
or N ight.
and patrons who w ish to take ad
Prices Reasonable
vantage of this offer should act at
p h o n e s 9821 AND 9822
once.
In d ep en d en ce. O re.
T he me «t
dittine
. i jo
t ' ; n i jjn c ' e y i.ocknart
|
' W addell of N ew > o * rk ‘"
rin * H ughes, d au g h ter of the
r r r r * l '1
City
T his pw ture show s the bride and bridegroom , w.iii
’ ’ “ S ecretary and Mrs. Hughes in the rear, parading
after the reception ai the 1’au A m erican Union.
Secreta - of State.