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About The Monmouth herald. (Monmouth, Or.) 1908-1969 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 9, 1925)
THE MONMOUTH HERALD, MONMOUTH, OREGON FRIDAY, JANUARY 9. 1025 & I2SHS2 For More Than Thirty Five Years This bank has been identified with the financial progress of Polk County. It is a safe bank in which , to put your Faith, your Funds and your Future. First National Bank Established 1889 MONMOUTH, OREGON Guaranteed work, Cleaning, Pressing Men's Suits, Overcoats, Sweaters Ladies' Suits, Dresses, Sweaters Give me an order and be convinced. T. J. WEDEKIND Monmouth Ore School Supplies Candy and Fresh Fruit Holsum bread P. H. JOHNSON Groceries & Provisions Good Goods and Fair . Treatment C. C. Mulkey & Son 1 Fire and Accident Insurance Liability and Surety Bonds W. H. Successor to G. W. Monmouth MONMOUTH The Parity of Milk cannot be determined by' taste or appearance. The U. S. government says: "Clean milk is milk of good flavor from healthy cows, that is free from dirt and contains only a small number of bacteria, none of which are harm ful. Bacteria are tiny, single celled plants, invisible to the naked eye. So far as possible they should be kept out of milk. Bacteria dangerous to human health may come from unhealthy cows and milkers, contaminated water supplies, flies or filth. "Great numbers of bacteria may be introduced into milk from the body of the cow and from unsteralized utensils." DON'T TAKE THESE CHANCES. Buy Inspected Milk. Commencing December 1st the following prices will pre vailQuarts, 11c; 9 tickets for $1.00. Per month $3.30. 3 quarts or more delivered to same place 10c per quart. Pints 6c, 18 tickets for $1.00. Per month $1.65 i Per gallon, 35c; 5 gallon or over 30c. We produce all the milk wo sell. YOUNG BROTHERS DAIRY I NEY Chesebro Oregon TRANSFER Transferring by & auto truck and by & team, within the x city or out of town, c Leave orders at Garage Call fc'loiif m IAI R. fGLESTON I t By Arthur Bruban ALSO AN EMPIRE. SEGREGATE YOUR HENS. OUR AMERICAN MOUNTAINS. WHY CHEAT REAL WORKERS? Within a short time, says C, D. Burney, aviation expert, and mem ber of the British Parliament, the farthest point of the British Em- ire will be within twenty-four ours of London by flying ma chine. Uncle Sam, please take notice. This also is an empire. Is It at far from the south end of Florida to the north end of Alaska, and from Bar Harbor, Maine, to San Diego! The country is gradually waking t up 10 our nying innciiuia sivuauuti .t and it IS to wane up. Secretary Wilbur gives this In formation. Five hundred airplanos of the navy are useless. And even the remaining 224 that can fly, more or less, are all out of date. Do you keep chickens T Keep them away from other chickens if you. can. Europe has sent here a poultry plague for which there is no known cure. Congress voted $100,000 to fight it. Kigid quar antine will help the situation. Segregate your chickens, txA. beware how you eat raw veg etables, unless eleanea wren greav est thoroughness, which isn't easy. Be cautious, especially about raw lettuce. The French alone know how to prepare that plant, grown in onen fields, often with barnyard manure carrying typhoid germs. Every leaf should be separated from every other leaf and care fully washed. The salarT, should be mixed in a big bowl; turned over and over, "well fatigued," as tho French put it, until every part of every leaf has some of the vin- egar on it. Vinegar kills germs. ' With vegetables thoroughly boiled, there is. of course, no caw to fear typhoid. The New Haven Railroad want to stop bus lines in Rhode Island because they compete. That seems quite reasonable. While respectable gentlemen in Wall Street were gutting the New Haven Railroad, robbing old wom en and children that had all their money invested in it, they squan dered millions on trolley lines, eta. That was" all right, because the railroad did it. But now private individuals that own their omnibuses want to carry citizens that own their public high-, ways and want to be carried. The railroad says you mustn't DO t it interferes with us. What about flying machines, which will soon give REALLY cheap transportation ? Will the New Haven decide that it owns the air, and ask convenient courts for injunctions to keep the people f the United States from flying on their own atmosphere I yery likely. In generations to come, men and governments more nearly civilized will allow no children to develop stunted bodies and deformed minds in city slums. They will fly to the high lands of Nevada, New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, to all parts of the American mountain paradise of health and beauty. There they will develop into real men and women. The United States will breed its own strong people, no longer depending on Eu rope as it does now for constant supplies of fresh blood. Our mountains will supply the fresh blood, and men grown there will supply the workers, not han : dlers of picks and shovels, but workers with brains and machines. The bill to raise the pay of hard working post office employees may be defeated because somebody is accused of trying to get it through by bribery. What of that? Thousands of underpaid postal employees know nothing about the bribery, and had nothing to do with it. The bribery story sounds rather fishy. The only question for Congress to decide is whether or not the men that do the hard work in the post office DESERVE decent pay. whether or not Uncle Sam should set a good example, paying his servants properly, or , a mean, stingy, unworthy example, cheat ing his own employees that he may keen down the taxes of rich men. I THAT'S THE REAL QUES TION ilncle Jahn And now comes the prophet that reckons she knows, and gives us her jedgement pro foundthat wimmen is due to wear masculine cloze, from theii- fore-top clean down to the ground. 'The day is fast com in'," t'-.li' anifel assorts 'when the sexes UMte in the art, an they'll wear the same trousers, socks, wesklts an' shirts till bogoah they can't tell us apartl" In view of the prospecks, I've little to say though I'm half way inclined to approve . . . and, when folks is accustomed to havin' their way, it's as easy to wait as to move. I reckon the change will come on by de grees, like most of our needed reforms till, the fust thing we know, they'll climb ladders an' trees, an' their duds will stay down when it storms. . 1 . An' then the exchanges twlxt hus band an' wife, might load to en joyments Intense, I can see 'em a-havin' the time of their life, as rivals in jumpin' the fence! me WOLF AT MANY DOORS TmS WINTER. tS DAOC3WTEP. IN A Ney FOB- COAT in Clast by Themielvei A dear child, but overwhelmingly po lite as the result of her upbringing by two maiden aunts, cume to London to stay for the first time with her uncle. a well-to-do doctor. On the last ulght of her visit, as she was going to bed, she nstoiilslivd his wife to whom she was saying Iter prayers. "Oh, Lord, comfort the sick," she said ; then paused, and added, with a proper appreciation of the little cour tesies of life, "except those whose In Anilities keep my dear Uncle George i In a state of wealth. The Strong Man An extraordinary trial of strength has been performed nt Deeping St. N'lcholus, South Lincolnshire, Eng land. To settle a wager a horsetnun named Wnrboys carried a 252-pound snck of wheat for one mile down n main road wltlmut stopping. He cur ried the sack uero!"? his neck nnd shoulders, and did the Journey In 18 minutes. PLENTY OF DRY WOO! We have an arranger.un by which wc get 2 carlonc1 weekly, of Planer Mill-end Wood from Valsetz, wliich will mpplv all demands. This wood is dry and in stove lenirths, ready to burn. Ca it office with F. K. Skeen or phone. Wcnmcuth Wood Company Pollan Brothers, Props FOLKS IN OUR TOWN The truth By.. Edward McCullough AUTOC ASTER T'CAUSE DATS I I TH' ONW x v TIMB b &KTSL TOR GOOD FURNITUnE is YOUR DUTY TO YOUtt HOME I-V !..' If'.. 'r Good Furniture Is Our Pledge to You MONMOUTH HARDWARE J. E. Winegar, Proprietor Relieved of Catarrh Due io La Grippe Thanks To PE-RU-NA ft r Mrs. Laura Ferberkk, over 7'i yean of Hire, 1205 Willow A", liohokeii, N. writes: "A Severn attack of I. a Grippe left tuc vttth a. hoarseness and slime in the hcn and throat. 1 had chronic (at.irrli. It grew worse. I could not lie dnwn or sleep at tiinht. I was always bothered by the slime, pain in the back and a terrible headache every morning. Finally I bought a bottle of Pe-ru-na which was of great bene fit. It gave me blood and strength. I 1...VC no pains in head or back, n' r noises in the head. The slime has gone and I can sleep. My weight has increased. I am cheer ful and hanpy, thanks to Pe-ru-na, which I shall always keep in the house and recommend to my friends." For every form of catarrh Pe-ru-na meets ths need, Coughs, Colds, Nasal Catarrh, Indigestion. Bowel disorders are all forms of latarrh. Buy it any where in tablet or iouid form lCERTAINW lS (I'M GLAD POPS YES, IT'S VEftV - NICE Of - t OIDNT REMARKABLE ae,Aiiu MCS. SMITH ) , V FEEL 1.16 , Sonnv SE6M3 TO efrzLj) Tb INVITE COOKIN' EAT TWICE Ad J I .vw' BOYS - BOYS - BOYS BOYS WHO CAM DRAW THE BEST PlCTUCC Of 'Ctf POP" in TMiS 5TfftP, UAU2MIN T BEAT THJ 6AN0? FOft THE BEST DRAWINGS ,THR8 WHO noaca will. RE AWAonen ir a amioall glove , 2nd. a Bat sne Kirtu im: uiv LtAou&a use. pbviobb, THE WINNING- PRAWINGS.WITH NAM6.WU. W PU8U6HE0 IN THIS RULES OP CaTE6T I ONE DRAWING" BW BACH bcH . Pictures to Oe drawn 3'u Tb inchb IN HEIGHT. COPYIN& PICTURES OP THE BAMfi IZE IN THIS STRIP WIUU NOT BE ACCEPTED. PICTURES TO 62 PRAWN IN INK.. . VMRlTS NAME IH FULL, AL60 ADOOEGS AND ftSB ON Back, of drawing . whethe. left oft Right HANDED AND WHSTHEft YOU POEFErt A CATCHERS PITCHER'S , OB FIWST BASEMAN S &LOVE , IP VOO ARB WINNER. CONTEST STARTS OTANUAGY &VI , ENDS MARCH iSXH . OPEN TO ALL BOVS -AGES 9 7b 16 (inciosivb) rJEMEMDER. THE IDEA ft TO "OLD POP LALKUJ - A fiftrtn HPADTU UAU6H. ADDRESS CARE Or THIS PAPER Wl I I frrrvrrm I rffiTTrX n jam ft- j 1 i m t f-tn i k-f m m mFor the Cozy Home Life In the home revolves about tha living room. It Is the meeting place and resting place of the family. It Is the heart of the home. For furniture In keeping with this duty of the living room we have chosen carefully from the best work of the best manufacturers. Call and see our Furniture for Comfort The easiest of easy chairs Morris chairs of generous size all await your Inspection. There are rockers here tor mother when she sews and larger rockers for mother vhert she rets. We have also a lull line of th many piece, some d'Xorativa and some useful, that help lo glva the homelike Individual touches. Be among tho first to wle-ct from this collodion. $ ALL KINDS OF Fresh Meats i Also (Ircen and Ripe Olives g i i Pickles, Sardines Wienies, Dried Beef Canned Meats 6 MONMOUTH MARKETS $ Fred Hill, Prop. i W -r ' XtfCOKXsM BUILDING TILE Made in Monmouth make the hest and most J economical building mater j al you can buy. In long wear and low cost of upkeep there 'is nothing that will compare with tile or brick. The appearance of such a house is always attractive and it holds its selling vaiue better than a frame house. Drain Tile in all Sizes. Ask us about them. Central Clay Products Co. and Ball, &jo. a BauT, TMCI STfllP IN OVBft ftoO rVtfeR DRAWINGS Tb"SoYS C&nTeST . WAICH THIS STRIP BJiW WBST6