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About The Monmouth herald. (Monmouth, Or.) 1908-1969 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 24, 1922)
«R'WgTnTsT. accurdltk® to w ofj 1^, Every Thursday lion’s A storia cream ery, won the high phoned to the offlcs of the Cascade est score at the International dairy ! national foreat in Eugene. The high- . show held in M inneapolis, M inn., on w ay is closed to traffic, as It would be to Fuse Raw M aterials O ctober 11 and 12, according to a im possible tor cars to buck through the deep, w et snow. 1 m essage received. Irrigation activities in central Ore- Q Three thousand four hundred thirty- I gon w ere increased w hen th e U nited nine autom obiles, of which 2938 w ere j C ontra S\. j ng com pany began the re new m achines, were registered in Ore ! placem ent of a large am ount of old gon in October, according to a report ! wooden flum e on the Tuuialo project m ade by Sam A K oser. secretary of ; w ith au earth caual. K xcavation will state. L ast year only 2(32 care were registered in lltto b e r T his year 1SL* i reach approxim ately 20.000 yards. U n stinted approval of the action of 938 m achines have been registered 1 th e W orld w ar veteran s' sta te aid own- aud th e fee* have aggregated 11.30»,- ' m ission in the recent rem oval from 55112. More than 8000 barrels of cem ent office of II. J O verturf and O. B. H ardy ap praisers for D eschutes rouu are aw aiting shipm ent a t the plant ! ty, charged w ith m alfeasauce, was of the B eaver P ortlan d Cem ent com voiced by the special com m ittee of In pany at Oold Hill, and cannot be mov vestigation nam ed by the Am erican ed on account of the car shortage. A considerable im m igration of wild Legion W atkins Davis, K lam ath Indian geese, on a scale of tens of thousands, charged with second-degree m urder into the region around the upper Co in connection w ith the death of Oliver lum bia river, has been reported to Jefferson. K lam ath Indian who died Game W arden B urghduff and seem s to as a result of a blow over the head poiut to a great fall for geese hunters. w ith a billiard cue, delivered by Davis T he 1923 advisory budget, com plet about a year ago, w as acquitted ut ed by the B aker county budget board, K lam ath Falls after the jury had de carries a $3000 appropriation (or a liberated 20 m inutes. county farm agent. T he only other Snow to th e depth of 17 inches has | new item Is $500 for th e Louise hom e the kiln of Interest A greater degree fallen on the road at th e sum m it of in P ortland T he budget totals $219.- of heat Is required in the operation of th these kilns than In most any oilier In e C ascade m ountains ou the McKen 1 M l 65. dustrial process. “Like Looking at S u n “ W here the m aterials en ter the kiln the tem perature Is approxim ately 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit. By the tim e the pow dered m aterial has com pleted Its three-hour Journey through the 125 feet or more of brick lined “furnace." the heat lias reached anyw here from 2.500 to 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit. The workman w atching through his peephole In the end of the kiln must w ear smoked glasses, it Is like look ing Ht the sun. In a large plant a dox en or more of these kilns roar and re volve side by side In one great room. L stlm atlng a single kiln’s output Ht 25 barrels an hour. It would ineuii Unit nearly 5,000 pounds of pulverized coal hud been blown Into It to provide the trem endous heut necessary. It requires '200 pounds of this specialty prepared coal to m anufacture a single barrel of cem ent weighing .'170 isuinds ed to the state industrial accident coni m ission during the week ended O cto ber 19. there was but one fatality. T he innn who lost his life was W eeden M osher of Sclo, a saw m ill em ploye. Fred A. B aker, K lam ath Falls a t torney, has tak en charge of the Klam ait! Indian agency, succeeding W aller O. W est, who was discharged following investigation by th e Indian bureau on ch arges of im proper con duct. Sham rock butter, m anufactured at the Low er Colum bia D airy assocla- CEMENT IS PRODUCT OF FIERY FURNACE 52 Time» a Year Fierce H eat Required THE YOUTH'S COM PANION For Boys, for Girls, for Parents, for the Young in Heart of all Ages. Packed full of e a l n tu im i xnd Ins, Hundred* of Short Then the Bo»*’ Casts L E S S T U A N Five Cents a IVeek Check your choic« and send this coupon with your remittance to the PUBLISHERS OF THIS PAPER. oc to THE YOUTH S COMPANION. BOSTON. MASSACHL sLTl s 1 . The Youth’s Companion — 52 Issues for 1923 1 all fo r 2. All the Remaining Weekly Issues of 1922 i $ 0 .5 0 3. The Companion Home Calendar for 1923 1 . The Youth’s Companion ( " V i ! » ; " ) $2.50 f 2. McCall’s Magazine, 12 FasLion Numbers 1.00 Has Your ... Subscription Expired? Let U s Print ei | Your Sale Bills Come arc renew in it next iime you art in town. Butter Nut and fTolsum breads at the MONMOUTH BAKERY Mrs. M. Cornelius, Prop. ^TMtKMKNlHJI S fnruurd strides In Ameri ¡in iixln-.tr> liuve developed in each brunch some particular spec tacnbir pli.ise Unit Illustrate* graph lenity this developm ent. In steel m anufacture It Is the oper- ! <ttIon of (lie open hearth and blast furnace. In the m anufacture of glass It Is the glass blower who holds the interest ^shipbuilding finds its focnl p oint III the lauiirhlng of some ocean greyhound. In the m anufacture of P ortlan d cem ent It Is the super heating of finely ground m aterial In gigantic kilns. K iln s Tall as Twenty-Story Building. The accom panying Illustration shows one end of a kiln used lu modem ce ment plants In many cases Its weight will exceed 275,000 pounds, empty. The foundations that support It are heavy enough to hold u ten story building One of the largest kllus, If set on end. would he as tall as a twenty story of fire building and ii touring car could run through It with room to spare. Not only In m assive proportions Is OREGON NEWS NOTES OF GENERAL INTEREST P ri n c i p a l E v e n t s of the W f*' B r i e f l y S k e tc h ed foi I n f o r ma ti on of O u r R e a d e r . F arq u liar’s island, a ten-acre Island lying w ithin the city lim its of Rose- burg in th e south U m pqua river. Is to be purchased by the Roseburg Elks lodge and will be converted into in ath letic field, playground and park. Although 595 accidents w ere report- Uneven. hangs Hems The Story Of Good Old Indan Summer. Y E S -S iR E E ! HE'S A» LIKEABLE O L' FELLER. B R /N G IN 6 WITH H |/A T H E AUTUM N Go LDE/M BRO W N ! H E NEVER. STA Y S LO N G FOR CLOSE BEHIND C H A SIN 6 HIM IS OLD S Q U A W W IN TER W HO S T A R T S T H E ROUGH w catheg . f - w N i fi v W -1 r / ' V , I ; \ t T he uneven hem line feature this new Poiret coat. It is buckled on the side, lied from the I m V rid is em broidered w ith r* -I and black. It is stylishly conservative. LOillE SWEET . ROHE | Oscar, Hard lines. hard lines. bT T erry G ilki-on . U T V C U III 7 / LATER’ • •yOU . Ç o m CT m /N I PO W O R S T IS S K A T E , SO I NOMrmwÿ ^ ..TO EIGHT O N * / wit LI WCAR 1 N 6 A PU USd S how . YOU OON’T KNOW \ n « im ’ÖÖVT S kat I no y l ik e tkai T l Y Y ES P O P ! B u t i t V t s h o w TH A T I* K MOW A L O T ABOUT P A v e /U C N T S / '\\O h \ E: H A P IT T , MAVf VtMA HOHf HA0IT AftOVNO -OUR M0W#f 'll IT rr ^ Vf - J\jPk to us w w ill PVlNf rr 3AM - - ^ THE S IN T T H IN G 'S w ant 9 • * - n S ay , junior whats -rue P il l o w to Y ME. I O L A O F T tE iM j MTS MA «fi MSS • HONE MART ."SMS Al v»A»S lot»«, 1W» ftO TP STf iS AMT BUT e l NT • MI O *«? 1 O e