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About The Monmouth herald. (Monmouth, Or.) 1908-1969 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1923)
O SANTA FE AGAINST MERGER U t p r o r n U tit n o f Union and S. P. OF CURRENT WEEK!, Submit Data at Hearing«. Washington, D. C.— Executive* of AAAAAAAA AAAA a a a a a a a a a a A » w w W W W w ww ww ▼▼ MINERS’ STRIKE n i 3TATE NEW S * (N BRIEF. CALLED IN RUHR* western railroads laid before the inter 8riet Resume Most Important Daily News Items. state commerce commission Monday their vlewrs on tentative plans which the government has devised for con- : 'I of tr ; ta:T lit.- - in Railway Crews Quit Work in Dortmund Area. T Salem.— At a meeting of delegates j from practically all of the loganberry < districts in the Willamette V valley held ere Saturday it was voted to form a permanent organization for the pro motion of the berry industry. the territory west o f the Mississippi and south of the Missouri rivers. COMPILED FOR YOU W. B. Storey, president of the At- _________ GERMAN ARMS M0V*h chison. Topeka A Santa Fe lines, took a critical view of the scheme so far Event* . f Noted People, Government* proJected for conjbining hll rtl. d wlth Ludenworff Visits Keichwehr and Views and Pacific Northwest, and Other other systems, while W. H. Finley, Things Worth Knowing. , president of the Chicago A _____ _ North- | western, characterized a* reasonable plans for placing that line in a super- The Kanaas soldiers- bonus bill was j ra(lro>d #y|Um that would also passed by the lower house of the legis elude the Union Pacific, Chicago, St. lature Tuesday. Paul. Minneapolis A Omaha, and pos The bourse Tuesday witnessed all sibly the Central Pacific. other day of sensational advances in In suggesting consolidation possibili the prices of well known stocks. The ties, the commission proposed to put dollar rate touched 12,800 marks. the Santa Fe, Colorado A Southern, The Iowa department of the Ameri Denver A Rio Grande Western and can Legion will support a bill to be several smaller lines into one system. Introduced In (he state legislature pro- Representatives of the Union Pa- hfbitlng the wearing of masks in pub- clfic and Southern Pacific systems ln- lie. dicated that evidence supporting their viewpoint* would be Introduced at Coinage of 300,000 special 60 cent hearings which the commission will pieces, commemorating the 100th an hold on the consolidation matter in niversary of the enunciation of the western cities. All railroads concern Monroe doctrine, Is authorized In a ed have filed data as to amounts of senate bill passed by the house. traffic Involved in Interchanges be A strike at the silver mines at Pa- tween them at the present time. Mr. Storey said that inclusion of chuca, Mexico, resulted Tuesday In a clash in which two non-union men the Colorado A Southern system into were killed. One of them. Jenkins by I the Santa Fe group would throw the name, was said to be an American. proposed consolidated system rather / . I further to the north In its Interests Four men were executed at Roscren lhan wag neceRgary and one at Carlow by the free state government. It was officially announc ed In Dublin Monday. The charge against them was possession of arms. CALIF0RNIA JARRED BY SEVERE QUAKES Carl Smith, an inmate of a Chehalis, Wash , hospital, has just awakened San Francisco. — An earthquake. from a sleep of nearly a month's dura- U H . Ills malady 1. a type of sleeping wlnd8 and raln8 aweP‘ CallIorBla earl>’ sickness, which has made its appear- Monday. A landslide 20 miles south ance in various parts of the country, of Fhireka threw Northwestern Pacific Oakland.— Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Wain scot t of this city celebrated their golden wedding anniversary' here Tues- day, January 1$. all of their children b e in g present for a family reunion. Training Maneuvers —French Soldiers Are Ready. .Pendleton. — Pendleton ex-service men of all wars have joined hands to fit up a common clubroom and meet ing place and have obtained from the city council a large ball. A public dance will be held to raise money. London.— T l i Mayence correspond Eugene. — A modern three-room ent of the Daily Mail learned Sun school building will be erected this day from a "very reliable source" that year at Leaburg, 25 miles from Eu Germany is on the eve to reinstituting gene on the McKenzie river, accord compulsory military service, which ing to E. J. Moore, county school super intendent, who attended a meeting of was forbidden by the treaty of Ver I the voters of the district Saturday. sailles. The correspondent added that j Hood River.— The Hood River Coun negotiations toward this end have been ty Pomona grange has forwarded to in progress during the last several the county's legislative delegation let days. ters urging opposition to the proposals The German miners In the Ruhr of an amendment to the market road law which would permit the use of have thrown down their tools refus market road funds on state trunk high- ing to carry on the mining operations wayg. Uncommon Sense under French cohtrol, or until the , — , . i | Dallas.— An attempt was made some ' mine directors and owners now un tIme Friday night to rob the safe at der arrest are released. , the Southern Pacific railway station A general strike of the miners will in city. The combination knob go into effect Sunday, and this is wa8 broken off the 8afe- but the rob- ... . . . . . . , . ... . bers failed to open the safe. The likely to be followed by a strike of . . . . . .. work was believed to have been that the railroad workers, which may ex- 0f amateurs, tend to all sections of German labor. Salem.— The orphan situation in Ore- Sunday was a quiet da/ In the Ruhr, gon_ ag lt reiates to the farm home but beneath the calm there was French established about a year ago near Cor and Belgian determination to force vallis by the Women's Christian Tem through their measures and German perance union of Oregon, was explain determination to oppose the occupy ed in detail at a mass meeting held ing forces by a complete cessation of in the First Methodist Episcopal work and what is known as ’ passive church Sunday. resistance,” but which may develop Medford.—There are 9 feet and 7 along active lines unless some sort of inches of snow at Crater lake, accord settlement Is reached. F'ritz Thyssen and his colleagues, ing to a telephone message received the leading industrialists in the Ruhr, by Superintendent Sparrow Saturday will be placed on trial Immediately fer from Pete Ord. the ranger stationed their refusal to obey the orders of the In Crater national park. This is two economic mission. The penalties im- feet more than the depth of snow posed upon them may be the measure at the lake at this time last year. of the retaliatory action by the Ger Salem. — The stock of the Oregon mans. state library consists of 196,101 Berlin still insists that German ac volumes, exclusive of periodicals and- tion is entirely passive, but an ulti uncatalogued books, which number matum has been delivered to the work more than 10,000 according to the bien men in the Ruhr that they must re nial report prepared by Miss Cor fuse to haul coal or bring it to the nelia Marvin, state librarian. The surface under pain of severe penalties. report will be filed with the governor At the same time Berlin is discuss this week. ing the possibility of exacting indem nification for the present invasion of Hillsboro.— Much of the time during the Ruhr. the present week has been devoted to M. Barthou will present before the “ road districting” by the county court. reparations commission Monday a new Several changes have been made. One FTench plan relating to a moratorium new district was created. No. 63. ad for Germany. joining Hillsboro on the east. It lies The separatist party discussed at between Newton and Orenco and Hills Aix-la-Chappelle, without Belgian or boro and Orenco. The supervisor has German interference, the secession of not as yet been named. the Rhineland provinces from the Eugene.— The Holstein cattle breed relch. ers of Lane county will hold a big Dortmund.— The railroad men de meeting at Arp's dairy, six miles north clare a strike at noon Sunday. All of Eugene on the Pacific highway. passenger and freight traffic ceased February 14. when the breeders of in the region of Dortmund. Langen-, Benton and Linn counties will be In dreer and Bochum. The service was vited to discuss problems. Professor K. C. Jones of the Oregon Agricultural normal In other parts of the Ruhr. Nationalist demonstrations took college will speak on breeding. j By WILL M. MAUPIN By----------- JOHN BLAKE t;< FTAHERE’S wealth enough for all of TH IN G S WORTH D O IN G I f wealth we want to win. Just waiting for the call o f us. F’or men to gather In— T IS easy to sit and watch others work. But we know of no employ Enough to have, enough to hold. And wealth enough to share. er who will pay you wuges for doing lt, unless you know how to <lo the For weak and strong, young and old, Just waiting everywhere! work yourself and are working hard at the Job of supervising lt. It is easy to travel ubout the world There's friendship for beginning with, A golden Joy, a friend; on steamships and parlor cars; very pleasant and profitable to the man F'or what's the use of winning with No comrade at the end? with an inquiring mind. But that Is a vacation occupation, So find a comrade heart and mind. They come so easily— and unless you have earned the money to do it by hard woik you will get lit For all you need a friend to flail Is Just a friend to bet tle out of lt. I It is easiest of all to feel sorry for yourself and to think that you haven't had a fair chance in life, and that you'd have been a big success if you hadn’t met with so much injustice and bad treatment. But that will get you only unhap piness, which is the least desirable thing in all the world. earthquake shocks were felt at many F'mbalmed In k casket, the heart o f . There are many things In life that the late Sir William Osier, famous <’* lfornla no earthquake was are well worth doing, but none of them are easy. physician, will be placed In the Osier .felt In San FYancisco. The first-class fiction writer takes library at McOHl university. Montreal, According to tlfct weather bureau delight In his Job, but he also works upon its arrival from England. The qyagpg were felt at Orland. Chico, Red at It, harder than any man who Is not heart and a medical ljbrary of several Bluff and Weaverville. The quakes a first-class fiction writer ever dreams thousand volumes were bequeathed to o f doing. were recorded by the seismographs at the university. The great tenor finds pleasure In Lick observatory and ai the Univer his job and incidentally in the money sity of California. No damage other Inland Empire wool consignments he gets from It. will be routed to Portland, Or., for than the landslide at Scotia has been But he works about six or seven water shipment to Boston, Mass., as reported. hours a day at a time, ard In earlier A storm, centering off Eureka, is a result of advanced wool freight rates life he worked ten or twelve hours, to the Atlantic coast that become ef credited with the responsibility for receiving far less pay for exactly as fective February 10, R. A. Batch, sec rajns and winds along the Pacific good music. retary of the Washington Wool Grow coast. I f good Jobs were to be had by lit ers' association, aald in Spokane Tues tle effort practically everybody would U. S .-T u rk P act L ik e ly . have a good Job. The reason that day. they are so few, and that so many of Lausanne— It seems likely that ne Veterans of the American clvibwar, those few are not filled, is that all of them demand the hardest kind of bard resident in the Philippine Islands, have gotiations having for their object the work, not only to get but to keep been reduced in numbers until only conclusion of a general treaty between them. one remains, lip to a few weeks ago the United States and Turkey will be Genius, which is said to know how there were three here, but Tuesday gin here after the close of the near to do tilings before it Is born, has to Fibene^er Cook, 85, formerly of Port east peace conference work Just as hard as mediocrity to land, Or., is the only representative of gain and keep'success. The American chief spokesman. the Grand Army of the Republic In the Nothing you can think o f that Roseburg.— Failure to receive a sat brings real rewards can be accom Richard Washburn Child, his fellow place in Dortmund and the city was Islands. decreed ‘‘a danger tone,” by the isfactory offer caused the county court plished without more work than most delegates and the American commer The fall a week ago of an immense French authorities. All French, allied to reject all bids on the $35,000 road | o f us can contemplate without getting cial experts, through their attendance and neutral nationals In the Ruhr were meteor between Fairbanks and Cha- bond issue offered for sale Saturday. tired at the mere thought of It. upon the conference sessions, have be tanika and the deacent of other me come so familiar with the questions warned to keep away from Dortmund. The bonds were authorized in 1917 I Yet people are doing lt right along, FY-ench troops were ready to inter teors for hundreds of mllea along the and bear only 4 4 per cent Interest. | and you seldom hear of any of them which must Inevitably be dealt with killing themselves In the effort. fere In the event of clashes between Kuskokwiin river in Alaaka haa led A ll of the bids were below par with In a Turco American treaty. It is said, the nationalists and the communists. I f you have made up your mind to to a theory that they reauited from the exception of one, in which, how that much ran be gained by inaugurat do something unusual or to he some the blowing off of the top of Mount ever, a discount was demanded. ing the negotiations with the Turks body o f importance, learn how to Rare Library is Bought. Pavloff. in the Aleutian Islanda. in here. work twice as hard as you ever did Hood River.— Within the next 101 eruption recently. . .. I London— The Tim e* has announced bwl'ore. That is only a first step. The Bus Wreck Kills Child. | that the Rosenbach brothers of N e w !* * * * the H ,od R lvrr » ' « ■ * * will second Is to think hard. I f you can The "fuzz tail” horse problem Is 'm ove Into its new $10,000 concrete i do both, and keep them up long Ventura. Cal —One child was killed lY o rk and Philadelphia have bought for rapidly becoming an Issue on the for home. The structure Is 50x100 feet, enough, you may land, hut remember est ranges of central Oregon, accord and six slightly Injured when a munic $1,000.000 portions of a library of the and is being equipped with modern you will have a lot of competition. ing to V. V. llarpham, supervisor of Ipal school motorbus turned over here , Mh century. French authors, and also machinery. An Ice-making tank will Even hard work finds plenty of men the Oohoco national forest, who gets Monday. F'rances Jones, 12. daughter : transjatlons comprising 6004 volumes enable the plant to turn out two tons to believe In and practice It. And most of them get what they are after. frequent profesta tockmen and of Frank Jones, a prominent farmer. ! In the finest o f bindings. dally. A 10-ton refrigerating machine I t bjr John B lak e ) livestock ai atlona. With the short- was crushed to death beneath the driven by a 15-ton electric ’motor has Th# collection wa* formed by Olry The others, whose ages j age of range, he i says the ranges should 1 vehicle. Roederer, member of a champagne been installed. be cleared of th leas horses whose value ranged from 8 upward, escaped with j firm at Kheims. France. It had been Eugene. — A new sawmill of 40.000 la amali and wh appetites are large. minor lacerations and bruises. The in the chateau of Kheims. children were being conveyed from feet daily capacity will be built at An order In-council announc ■d Mon- suburban section* to a Ventura gram once at Nekoma on the Coos bay Opera Deficit Reduced. day aight from Otta wa. Ont. admits mar school. branch of the Southern Pacific, ac- | •c L- ¿ 1 *a American fishermen on tha Pacific cording to announcement Saturday of ! association closed Its season Saturday Ouster of Jews Urged. coast to Canadian p< >rta on obtaining | H. E. Poe, limber operator of this | ntght. facing a possible deficit over In a license costing $1. The iicease per- city, who returned to FTugene yester- , Vienna -FIxpulslon of the*Jei come of $420.040 as compared with $1.- mit* salo of fi*h In bond to dealers openly a d vo ca te at a demonstration day from a trip to San FTancisco. j . 1M.M4 last year, it was announced by indicateli by the vernmem trans before ,h(. t lt> hal| g und*y. speakers SamUf.| | „,un. chairman o f the asso- where he Interested several residents t of that cit>a in the enterprise. shipment of fl«h In bond to any part - asserted that efforts to regenerate the 'elation. nf the United States and sale of fish German people would not succeed un A season with a larger presenta Prinevllle.— Between 15 and 25 men outright If the Canadian duty la paid til the Jews were ousted from the tion of French opera was predicted are engaged in the construction work j dominant position* in economic life, by Mr. InsulL on the new $110.044 hotel— the Cor i Dogs Saw# Four Lives. art. the stage aad*the pt nett bnildlng and the postoffice, ac- j Chippewa Falls. W l* — Chased by a Hughes To Stay On Job. cording to John Hedstrom. contractor, League Heads to Meet. park o f wolvea while on their way Washington. D. C. — Secretary who has returned from Portland after | home from ichool. four children of Geneva.— Dominlcio da Oama. Brazil, j Hughes Sunday night authorised the an absence o f several weeks. Con Antone Dodge and Wenzel Farosll, liv president of the council of the league ( statement that he had no intention struction was suspended about a ! ing near Jump river, thrc<’ miles north of nations, has convoked the 23d meet J of resigning from the cabinet. Be month ago during the extremely cold { of here, were saved by two dogs be ing o f that body. The sessions will ports that he might do so have been weather, which Is said to have done open January 2$ in Paris. published recently. longing to Pnrosll. no damage to the structures. Judge Alton B. Parker, democratic j railroad trestles out of alignment, tied candidate for president in 1004, and up traffic three hours and impaired Miss Amelia Day Campbell were mar telegraph and telephone service. The ried at the Hotel Berkley, New York, landslide was attributed to tremblors Tuesday afternoon. Rev. John Roach Stratton, pastor of Calvary Baptist which rocked several northern Cali fornia towns. Despite the fact that church, performed Uie ceremony. WEALTH i ONCeiSEMUM And there's a wealth that's nearer jet. A love that's near you now. There's some one closer, denrer, yet To whom you made a vow. The love of husband, love o f wife. No purer gold Is found— So gather love to light your life. It's waiting all around ! The wealthy are not many, one Who*calls a million his; But wealth will come to anyone Who knows Just what It Is. For wealth is happy heart and mind. It's laughter, love and song— And, at the last, the only kind That you can take along! (© by McClure Ncwsp.per Syndicate.) --------o -------- riSCooKBook I h ave sat at m at w ith many a financial King and dined to the mimic o f m any an orchestra, but the b *»t m eals I e ver ate w ere the ones that m other served.—C. 1. Davis. W ORTHW HILE DISHES T O A F ' Cake.—Take two nnd one- half cupfuls of powdered sugar, one cupful of buter, cream w e ll; add the beaten yolks o f five eggs and three- fourths of a cupful of milk and one- fourth o f a cupful of water, added al ternately with four cupfuls o f Hour sifted w ith four teaspoonfuls of baking powder; add a teaspoonful o f vanilla and fold in the stiffly beaten whites of the eggs. Bake In a moderate oven. Whit# Loaf Cake. Cream one-half cupful of butter with one mpful of granulated sugar, add one-half cupful o f milk with one and one quarter cupfuls of flour sifted with two t<';i«poonfu)s o f baking powder, two-thirds of a cupful o f raisins, ooe- third of a cupful of sliced citron, both well floured; add a teaspoonful o f al mond extract and fold in the stiffly beaten white of an egg. Boiled Dressing. Take three or fonr whole eggs, beat nntll light, add an equal measure of mild vinegar and place over hot water to cook, beating with an egg bearer un til smooth and thick. Set away in the Ice chest and add such seasonings as desired when serving. Butter, cream, salt, mustard, red pepper and paprika with chopper! w-getahle« and chill sauce will make a dozen different dressings from this recipe. Scedoise Dressing. Take one cupful o f mayonnaise dressing, two tahlesponnfuls o f grate«I horseradish, two tablespoonfuls of chopped shallot, one teaspoonful of chopped capers, one tablespoonful of lemon Juice, one-half tnhlespoonful of tarragon vinegar, one-half tablespoon- ful o f gelatin dissolved In two table- spoonful* o f water, one-half rupful of Stiffly beaten cream. M l* Ingredients In the order given, adding the cream » t the last. ^ Ntwiptpgf