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About The Monmouth herald. (Monmouth, Or.) 1908-1969 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1922)
OREGON 1925 INVITES THE W ORLD d » ' : • ■ I H ■ \ , M OFFERS A M A R K E T FO R YO U R PR O D U C E PORTLAND Portland. Orejron V A U D E V IL L E P H O T O P L A Y S CompU-te Chan*« Saturday. Adult®, Matinne, 20c: Evening«. 39c. Continuous 1 to 11 p. m. Children 10 cents all times. p * * M TY T T C A AA W a te rp ro o fe d W»U m ake S ilos. Gran.irte*. lia sem enta, etc.. W a te r - p ro o f, R o tp r o o f, Ratpro« f and F irep roof «*.cw»»i i* GOOD HIGHWAYS ROAD WAGES ARE DECREASED Bureau of Public Road* Prepare* Chart Giving Interesting Study of Condition*. (Prepared by th® I'm ta l States Department o£ A g r i c u l t u r e .) A chart pr»-pured by the bureau of public roads of the United States De C E M E N T partment of Agriculture showing the trend of common labor wages on high HEMSTITCHING AND PLEATING. B u tto n h o lin g — B u tto n s — P la itin g — T u c k in g and C h a in stitch m g way construction In \urlous gi-ograph- A ll M ail O rders r iv e n ca re fu l and p rom p t a tte n tio n lc divisions since 1915 presents an la- ________ ELITE SHOP, lffij Tenth near Washington. | teresting study of conditions during ; the period. The price !>er hour which -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- O p tP ■ a m to 2 i rn S tark St. j in 1915 ranged from 12 cent« to -hi 1 cents, gradually rose to from 31 to 03 Cents in 1930 and has new declined to We Pay Highest Price® for P O R 1Ü5 T L U A NIO N N âVCNUf D HICE & WOOL CO. HIDES. PKLTS. W OOL MOHAIR. from 15 to 47 cents. At tlie present NONTH. PORTIAMO, OUQON. CASCARA HARK. Write for Price* and Shipping Tugs ' time the prices are us follows: 15 Address Department B cents In the South Atlantic states, IS cents in the states east of and border he Phonograph Known for Tone ing the Ohio and Mississippi rivers Agents wanted. Order direct from factory. 330 East and including Alabama, 34 cents in ^ S I r ä d fw i t v «0*4 a r a . , Mi ! r aoi si Portland, O ngon. SIRXDIVARA PHONOGRAPH CO. the Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Louisiana gro;»p, 30 cent* in the states Included between the Otilo uud Mis sissippi rivers, 39 cents in the states Ä w w - W O O D -LA R K ' from Kansas and Missouri to the Canadian border, 30 cents in the R mountain states end 47 cents in the PRICES: I’ueltic states. Figures for the New Q uart. 75c; h a lf PLEATING SPECIAL England and Middle Atlantic states Cut. seam, hem and machine g a llo n . 91-25; 85 cents huve not yet been completed. pleat skirts ready for band. gal loa. Ji.'IU. H e m s titch in g . E tc. On the chart referred to the lines EASTERN NOVELTY MFG. CO. Order f r o m th St._____________ „ showing the trend in the various di your dealer. If visions have the same general rise and __ he hasn't it. b R A Z I N G . W E L D I N G £ C U T T I N G L w we’ll send you N o rth w e st W e ld in g «v S upply Co. 88 1st St fall and cross each other In only a few C L E A N I N G A N D D Y E I N G a gallon, charges paid, for $¿.00. Postage stamps cases, a particular exception being in accepted. F or reliable C lean in g and D y ein g se r v ice send p a rcels to the states from Kansas and Missouri Clarke, Woodward Drug Co., us. W e pay retu rn postage. north to the border, where the highest In form a tion an d p rices g iv en PORTLAND. OREGON' rate of all the groups prevailed up to upon request. 1020 and which lias since shown the If your RADIATOR heats or ENK£’8 CITT DTK Wl RJCI most marked decrease, dropping from leaks, send it to us Established 1810 Port!—d 02 cents in 1020 to 30 cents in March. C U T F L O W E R S <& F L O R A L D E S I G N S Armstrong Auto Radiator Co., Clarke Hi os.. Florists, 287 Morrison St.__ 67 Burnside street. Portland. Oregon the b e st fo r S tu c c o P la ster on ou tsid e fo r B u n g a low s— D oes n o t sta in an d d irt can be hosed off. Writs for Literature. Sold by A. McMlLLAN A CO.. _________ 190-3*0 Ernst Ankeny Street. Corner Second. BAB'S RESTAURANT “zm IN F O R M A T IO N DEPARTM ENT © □ E x p e rt a d v ice on any Incom e tax problem s. INCOME S evera l y e a r s' a ctu a l o v e rn - T D A P X f t R I C l i Q m e e x n p e t rie B n u ce rea u in s is G offe re d FO U N D RY AND M A C H IN E W ORKS C o m m e rcia l Iron W ork s, 7th & M adison.__ F e a th e r w e ig h t A rch S u p p orts m ade to order. J. E. T r y z e la a r , 618 P itto c k B lock, P o r t la n d , O re . _____________________________ i n U D L l I i i O t h o s e un able to visit our o ffic e . S ta te you r trou bles b r ie fly and I H I D E S W A N T E D W e tan d eersk in s p rop erly ta g g ed , a lso se n d in w ith $1 and w e will g iv e you h o n est to g o o d n e s s a d v ice . It will pay you to p ay h ig h est p rice s fo r n orseh ides. W e s t C o a s t T a n n in g Co., 892 T e n in o S t., g et in tou ch w ith us now . E . J . C u rtin , R oom 806 L e w is B ld g ., P o r t la n d , O reg o n. P ortlan d , O r e . __________________________________ MOLES BARBER COLLEGE Teaches trade in 8 weeks. Some pay while learn Fire P roof and M od ern ing. Positions secured. Write for catalogue. 234 Burnside street, Portland, Ore. R IT Z H O T E L M O N U M E N T S — E . 3d and P in e S ts . O tto S ch u m an n G ran ite £ M arble W orks. PERSO N AL M a rry if L o n e ly ; m ost su cc e ssfu l "H o rn ® Depot Morrison Cars direct to Hotel. Popular M a k e r” ; hu nd reds rich ; c o n fid e n tia l; Prices. Center Shopping and Theater district. re lia b le ; y e a rs e x p e r ie n ce ; d escrip tion s free. " T h e S u cce ssfu l C lu b ,” M r* . N a * h , FRANK A. CLARK. Prop., B o x 556, O a k la n d , C a lifo r n ia . formerly with Clyde Hotel. SHIP US YOl R WOOL Cleaning, carding and mattresses. Crystal Springs Woolen Mill®, 7*.*i Umatilla. Portland. P A R K A N D M O R R IS O N STS. R A IN IE R HOTEL S A N IT A R Y Fair« 51.00 «Mi a®. 128 N 6* SL Nnb®d. ‘V* Very Centrally Located. Convenient to all Depots, and one block from main Postoflfice H otel H BEA UTY PA RLO R W e help the a p p e a ra n ce o f w om en. T w e n t y -t w o in ch sw itc h o r tra n s fo r m a tion, v alu e |7.60, p rice 52.45. 400 to 412 D eku m B ldg. INTELLIGENT PRODUCE MARKETING oyt Y ou L o c a te d S ix t h and H o y t S tr ic tly F ire p r o o f an d M o d e m . N ear b o th d e p o ts and co n v e n ie n t c a r se rv ice to all p a rts o f c ity . will g e t h ig h er retu rn s fo r We W ill Be P le a s e d to USED TRUCK BARGAINS V E T E R I N A R I A N — C a t t le Oi F IS T U L A .F IS S U R E , it c h ing anti all o th e r rectal c o n d itio n s e x c e p t C an cer p erm an en tly cu red w ith ou t a su rg ica l op era tion . M y m eth od o f trea tm en t sa v e s the tissu e instead o f d e stro y in g it. It is p a in less. requ ires no a n e s th e tic and Is p erm an ent. T h e r e is no co n fin e m e n t w ith b u sin ess o r social en g a ge m e n ts I g u a ra n te e a cu re or will refun d y ou r fee. C all o r w rite fo r b o o k le t M ention this p ap er w h en w ritin g. T e ll You IN LOST Outbreak« of wcbwurius in corn In | the Middle Eastern slates can lie pns * vented only by cultural methods. uc- | cording to the bureau of entomology of the United State* Department ol J Agriculture. Unlike most of our de structive jiests, the various si»ecle* of webworms ure ull natives of Amer ica and huve not been introduced from foreign lands. Summer or very early fall plowing should be practiced. Plowing in late October or November lias little effect because the worms are already in their winter web« under the surface of the ground. Land that lias been in sod or pasture, or lain fallow- and grow n up to weeda and grass should be plowed in July or August, if it is Intended to plant It to corn the fol lowing spring. Grasslands of all kinds—meadow«, pastures, or lawns—furnish tlie nor mal food of sod webworms, hut they also gnaw young corn plants below the surface and deform them so ns to prevent the production of grain. After the corn is once planted und the field Is found to be Infested there Is no practicable method of getting rid of the worms; the only thing that can be done Is to produce conditions that will permit the corn to grow in spite of them. Disking In the spring, the application of fertilizer, and the sowing of sound see-1 are the chief preventive meas ures that will have any effect. Nei ther poisoning nor trapping 1ms met with any success. U tm ost in Q uality Pure materials, scientific manu facture, absolu te cleanliness — then sealed against all impurity. That is W rigley’s as you get it — fresh and full flavored. A id s white and clean — breath sweet and disposition sunny. H ave you tried this on e? n, K< B o u q u e ts and n. I ’uitiand. P ie c e s L u b lin e r F lorists, 348 M orrison St. FINKE BROTHERS USED FRANKLIN FOR SALE Strike Rockefeller In the Pocketbook. Buy Our Franklin Car—uses less gas oline. gives better mileage and ridee easier than any car you ever saw. The full elliptic springs takes the bumps out o f the road—you arrive at your destination fresh as a daisy at minimum cost. You can buy another car with the amount you will save in tires and gasolene if you run a Frank lin long enough. -Bargain at $650 -Cash 420 U. S. Nat'l Bank Bid*.. BEFORE is th e n ew re fre s h m e n t th a t c a n ’t b e b e at. KEEP WEEDS OUT OF GARDEN With Few Pieces of Flat Iron and an Old Wheel an Efficient Tool Can Be Made. From n few pieces of flat Iron, such ns old baggy tires, and a wheel that can be taken from nil old wheelbarrow or truck, It Is possible to make an ef ficient weeder for keeping the home garden free from weeds. The device is construct«!, ns indi cated by the drawing, with a Made, parallel with the ground, which Is pushed nlong Just nudernenth the sur face, cutting the roots of weeds and flther plants outside the rows. Not C l 08 W rigley’s A dds a Zest and Helps Digest WOMAN COULD NOT WORK C u tic u r a S o a p W ill H e lp Y o u (•Hear »Your Skin Votes of British Parliament Chiefs. a S p e c ia lt y Fu n e ra l WRIGLEY’S P. K. frwe o f C u tlctr* L *i*»/»u a .<*• D «p i X. il«Jd «u . U u i M odel S h oe R epair, 272 W a sh in g ton S t Dr. C has. M. A ndei d ig estio n , keeps teeth ?«*». Ointment.Talcnm, »<• f»erywh#r« PO RTLAN D Portland. Oregon M o rris o n S ts ., P o r t la n d , O re. CHARM (Prepared by th® United States Department • •( A irlcultttre ) How AMERICAN NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION DR. C. J. D E A N After Crop I* One* Planted and Flelo I* Found to Be Infested Ther« I* No Practicable Way of Getting Rid of Them. v ou r Manufacturers o f all kinds o f Tanks, hard and eoft wood Barrels and Kegs. Write for prices. 254 Front. Portland. Ore " P I L E S ^ Seco n d and R E P A IR IN G W e d d in g P o r t la n d , Road material surveys now being made in several stutes will give con tractors a more definite basis for bid ding on road work and result In cheaper costs of construction, says the bureau of public routls of tlie Unit ed States Department of Agriculture. In making these surveys, supplies of stone, gravel, sand, slag, and other materials ure located, samples tested and Information secured as to acces sibility. freight rates, und other fac tors. This information Is of permanent value ns supplies ure rarely exhausted. By furnishing a contractor Informa tion ns to the location of satisfactory O RE. 1 to 3 ton GMC, Republics, Whites, etc. O re g o n D istrib u to rs fo r G M C T ru ck s (Prepared by the U n 'tfl State* Department of Agriculture.) RUBY & COMPANY, 169 FRONT ST. SH O E WENTWORTH & IRWIN, Inc., Contractors Given More Definite Basis for Bidding on Construction of Highways. WRlGLEYS Control Webworms in Corn by Cultural Methods. n ew m eth od s C ro e fo d r u e ce sh If ip y p W ou in r i g t w e a ill n U y s use a p t ro o O d u n u r ce. ct to m a r k e t PO RTLA N D , Send for our List. SURVEYS LESSEN ROAD COST F O O T C O R R E C T IO N iS T PREVENT OUTBREAKS OF INJURIOUS PEST CAMERA New York Society Woman Ha* Expe in the open lights of the studio. She rience WitKr the Len* That May Is not pretty here. She appears to Profit Other«. struggle for grace of cnrrlaee, and In walking Into the camera the attractive Every now and again we hear of ; ness of her figure wilts as her facial Home charming young lady who feel* features come Into rnnge. This Is en that the world Is losing u great deal tirely mechanical and has no hearing because she Is not in the movies. She j whatever on her reputed natural beau may he right, and her face may be | ty. . . . In motion pictures one must her fortune, but we could commend, j he distinctive, whether that mean dis nevertheless, to rtie many thousands \ tinctiveness In homeliness, heauty. of optimistic beauties who are made | physical charm or whet not. Medioc unhappy because of unrealized ambi rity and sameness are fatal. . . . tion of this sort the following actual | The lady In question Is said to have experience: decided to drop picture work because A New York society lady, of ae- It takes more time than she had sus tnowledged good looks r.nd charm, ! pected. Of course, every body who made her first appearance the other reads this will be able to explnln and day, after due newspaper heralding, on prove that she is “ different.” We the “silver screen." From one of the hope she Is right. But we pass on this meticulous appraisals of her perform- ' little experience for what it Is worth, ance we quote a few sentences: nevertheless.—Leslie's Weekly. When her head Is bared and her face j pitted coldly against the lens, she js>»- ; Iowa Leads Farm Product*. sesses little of that charm of magnet- Iowa lends » uti all the tig in th# lsn so necesasry lu making sti. ■ • o »*>»»» irm tur ste -m or^ iof . . . Uer eyes are cold and harsh gross value of farm products. A Completed 20-Foot Concrete Road. materials one element of risk Is re moved, and some of the states report that they have definite proof that such service has resulted In decreased bids. The bureau of public roads In the course of Its operations lias tested some 9,000 samples of rock, sand, gravel, and slag, and reports gre avail able giving the location from which the sample was tuken together with result* of tests. There are now 08 laboratories engaged In testing road materials and datu ure being rapidly accumulated even in stutes that are not at this time making an intensive survey. LOWER CONSTRUCTION COSTS Decreased Prices Are Indicated in Bids Submitted on Federal-Aid Highways. Confirmation of the predicted lower level prices for r<«nd construction this year is fojind in the reports on bid prices of U8C miles of federal aid roads received by the bureau of public roads of the United States Department of Agriculture. The average cost per mile of some of the tyi<es of roadwgy, Including the cost of grading and drainage, were: 78 miles of gravel at «9,150 a mile, 4*> miles of concrete at «29,000 a mile, 47 miles of bituminous macadam at «25.2U0 a mile, and 23 miles of bitumin ous concrete at $25.ooo a mile. 1 SAILOR’S STRANGE WILL IS FILED ; Bequest Engraved on Dish Found en life when his ehlp, the Indefatigable, was sunk In the battle of Jutland. It Body of Victim cf Battle of Is In the form of the ordinary identi Jutland. fication disk. When viewed at a cer London.—Strange a* the story of tain angle there can he seen about •ny document told In fiction I* that of seTenty-five minutely engrave*! words. « will which has Just t>ecn admitted They constitute Skir.ner'a will, by to probate and 1* now filed in Somer which he bequeath* everything to his wife. The dl-k had l*»en removed set house. It la the "last will and testament" of , from the **a with S k iv e r’* b*«!y an-!. ■ sailor, William SUt.ner, who lost his ' on being den— rt, tevn led Its ’secret. Pay It Out of Taxes. network of highways throughout the state. The costs are to be paid en tirely by tax < fi gasoline and motor license revenue. Highway Cost Per Person. After deducting the amount paid by automobiles In license fees, one and one-tenth cents per day was the cost of the American highway to the in dividual man, woman and child in Mu* country la-t year,. Made Strong and W ell by Lydia E. Pinkham’* V eg etable Compound The difference between the speuker of the English house of commons nnd St. Tsui, Minn.—“ I took Lydia E. the lord chancellor, who occupies a Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for a tired, worn-out feel similar position In the house of lords, ing and painful peri is that while the speaker cannot take ods. 1 used to get up with a pain in my A Homemade Garden Weeder That part in debates and can vote only head ana pains in my Not Only Keeps Down the Weed» when there is a tie, the lord chancel lo werparts and back. but Serves as a Cultivator to Break lor is entitled to speak and vote on Often 1 was not ablo Up the Hard Crust Between the all occasions. to do my work. I Row*. read in your l i t t l e book about Lvdia E . only will this Instrument keep down Shave With Cuticura Soap Pinkham’s V e g e the weeds, but it also acts ns a And double your razor efficiency nsj table Compound and cultivator by breaking up the bard well as promote skin purity, akin com*| I have taken it. I crust between the rows and conserving fort nnd skin health. No mug, no _________________ f e e l so well and the moisture for useful vegetation.— slimy soap, no germs, no wnste, no strong and can do every bit o f my work 0. L. Meller, l-'argo, N. D„ in Popular Irritation even when shaved twice and not a pain in my back now. I rec Mechanics Magazine. daily. One sonp for ull uses— shaving, ommend your medicine and you can uso thi* letter as a testimonial.” — Mrs. bathing and shampooing.—Adv. P hil . M a s e k .8 0 1 Winslow St., SL Paul, GREEN MANURING AIDS SOIL Minn. Odd Numbers Masculine. Just another case where a woman Really One of Oldest Methods— According to all ancient lore, the found relief by taking Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound. M a n y Crop* for Thi* Purpose Were odd numbers are masculine, the even times these tired, worn-out feelings and Used by Ancients. feminine. The odd numbers were in pains about the body are from troubles women have. The Vegetable Com Green manuring—plowing under nearly every case the lucky ones—a only pound is especially adapted for just this green crops—as u means of soil Im notable nnd general exception being condition. The gessi results are noted by provement, ulthough it has been em the fatal number thirteen. the disagreeable symptoms p a s s i n g phasized in recent years, can hurdly away—one after another. be called a new discovery, says the Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com No Camera Fiends Then. pound is a Woman's Medicine for Wo United States Department of Agricul Another thing in favor of Pharaoh's men's Ailments. Always reliable. ture. It is really o«e of the oldest methods. Crops for this purpose were daughter was that ahe went down to One'a Ideals. used by the ancients, the ltoinans us the river to bathe rather than to pose. ing lupines, which were sown in Sep — Dallas News. Humanity never rises above Ha tember and turned under it) May for ideals. What ought to be is always the benefit of the following crop. Birds in the Dark. above and beyond what Is. Unless, In Germany the use of lupines be Not a few birds practically rear however, we have before us the vision gan in the middle of the Nineteenth century and hna proved an Important their nestlings In the dark, says the of something better, we can never factor in reclaiming tile sanity lands American Forestry Magazine. Well- rise above what we are.—Exchange. of parts of Prussia. In Euglund known examples of this are seen In legumes and other plants are com sand-martins and kingfishers — birds Why Turn to Rightf monly used; in India arid Jupan the that dig. or scrape out, long burrows The first "keep to the right” law farmers gather green plants of many kinds, sometimes even cutting twigs in banks, and lay their eggs at the quot ed in the United States Is be lieved to have been passed by the from the trees and carrying them to farther end of them. Maryland legislature early In 1800. the rice fields. In the United States the use of At Usual. special green-manure crops Is much Uncle Eben. There was a woman In our town more general in the South than In the who was so wondrous wise she used “ Dar'a mighty few people,” said North. Under Irrigation they play an her ears for hearing things, for seeing Uncle Ebcn, “ dat don't believe dey'a Important part In orchard culture in the West, but not under dry terming things her eyes. And when she'd intltled to sympathy; an mighty tew heard and seen It all, what did this dat won't resent it, it you offer it too conditions. female do but use her tongue for tell liberal.” GREAT IMPORTANCE OF GRIT ing every blessed thing she knew.— Exchange. Worth Remembering. Lack of Material Will Cauee 'ndiges- In choosing between light and tion and Impaired Health of Dally Thought. wrong. If In doubt, choose the least Poultry Flock. The greatest of faults, I should say, exacting and you will probably bo right. Many poultry raiser« gradually be Is to be conscious of none.—Carlyle. gin to slight the Importance of grit. Lark of grit mean* poor digestion and Are Yon Saliceti? RfHNKF-WALKFR BL'MNkSS COLLÊGF Impaired health. Regular poultry grit j u lipped le th * b i g g e s t m o st t pert-- p e r fe c t tly ly e - q ip p e d tr à in i t*<-hunt in the N itu sln « m m m m t n« r — - orth- should be kept before the fowls In w est F it y o u r s e lf fo r a h ig h e r p o s itio n b*-xes or h<*p>pers at all times. In ad with more money. Permanent position* BALL BLUE U S 'ir e d o u r D raduatee. dition. a load of gravel nenr the chick W r it e fo r c a l a l o « — F ou rth an d YamhtSk need to r bet»*'* cloche*, w in keep ens* horn« would Improve the henlth Port land. •wees ind «o o w T -w b it* uotil w orn — » ...... —~ ' * “ and Increase the egg yield on many a T r y It ind see lor yourself. < fr * r w n No. 39, 1922 P. N. U. farm. R e d C ro s s I I