THURSDAY, JANtUliY 2?, 1621 THE HERALD, MONMOUTH, OREGON fcAGE THREE W. H. Huff Plumbing and Heating v I IlUJItJ OUUO 977 XT' T; r 110 Stories High I A m. a. I 1 i i i i ii . .... . J i 1 'L FUOI.K KTA TO UK GIVEN I KIDAY, I KMUMKY lOl'KTH Volume II Thu pinna for Prolii'i'ta huvti tifcn iKiKi'''"llf vi'iy tupidly. 1'rHvlici' whn Htm ted Thurmluy iiml ovcry one In (liiitiK hi hi'nt to help iniiliu it u huccchm. The time for jntftife Imn bum changed no that a ttwlwr mny li with fiich group when It pructiriM. Tim dutu of Prolicvtn, which prurn- llM'K to 1)0 U gH'Ul NUl'I'l'NH thin yviit Iiuh hi'm not for Friday, lVhumty 4. It lam In in juht a year .hiiico the ciiiluiiiM und atitgo KiUinit wure pur chuNed und there .till rrniuiim u debt of Hpproximuti'ly two hundnd dollar which in uk t be puld tmrm-tiint during thu month of February. An nltimpl I Ix-iiiK made to miik i! till tho money pomtiblo no that thin debt may be paid. Kvt'iyotie come to Frolkfth und liuvo it Kood limu mid help thu hitch whool puy for thin Kci'iu'iy. m9mm IMtttN ' Saturday cveniiiir, Monmouth and Full City debuting tcwim will diwuK thu tiuestion, Hesolved: Thitt On-Kon tihould by Inw, cstJltlinh and coiiln hydro-electric power plant. Thu unintuitive U-ttm will ih to Fall City whilu the tietfutivo reinuim. ut home. All HtudenU and town peo ple ure iouenUtl to attend und (five thu Hunport neiCHniy for the bucking of our team. The debute promiHcs to bit very intcreiititig. Zellu (JilluM ha returned to uchool Kho wuii ubKi'iit for over a week due to illnuna cuuHud from a wrenched buck received during gym period. ' Thurmluy afternoon, Junuury 20, Minn Huckleberry led the ntudoiit body in a fifteen minute Hinging per lod. m m mm" " Kxaminntion The aemeBter exam will be given next week on Tut-mlny, Wednesday, und Thuruduy, Febiuury 1 to 3. Kv- ery student hu worked hurd In hope of being one of the lucky ones to find bin nume on tho exemption lint. The examination will Interrupt Froliccta practice. I'ublinhcd dull Thurmluy of the nchool year by thu anKociulcd utudcntu of thu Monmouth High School. KDITOKIAh STAFF Alitor Ilulley Johnuon AniHtunt editor Elmo Jcrwon New editor Zellu Gillum Society editor Glndin Mitchell iiteiury Corner .... Genevieve Ganinid Sport KdilorN Hoy , William Jeiison Girl Ilia Huber CluHK Reporters Sophomores Norman Roth Junior Nadu Johnuon Seniors Kviingeliiio Duvidaon Mr. Patchln: Huve you a question Dorothea T Dorothea: No, I jut forgot to lake my hand down. Interestiriir facts: It takes 110 nuts to hold a Ford together, but only one to scatter it all over the land scape. Wo Wonder Why Puul is seen so often at the jewel crs? Marvin doesn't notice " the cold weather? Leslie: I hear we received a mes sage from Mars. Mr. Putchin: Yes. what was the message? Leslie: They wanted to know if a man named Smith had died here or 3carth. David Wilson: They say that the man who invented the Life Saver be came very rich. John E: Ye-uh, he made a mint Reflections from the Window Porhans I should suy reflections whilu looking through the window rather than reflections from the win dow but, anyway, It is the teflectiort that count and not the window. On almost any afternoon, providing the weather Is just right, when two of tho neighborhood gossips get together something like this might be heard as . t . -.... - - Number ill) Typists Verda Humar, Thella Wood, Florence liiuie, CoiiNtuiico Hoik, and Wayne Higbe. Tho Cryutal Hull As I hold the crystal bull in my hand and fuze into it I see a snow covered highway, ns I look more closely I see a new Huick roudster coming nt a terrific speed. As it ap proaches it sharp turn the brukeg are applied. it swerves, sums arm crushes over the high bunk, turns sev eral flip Hops in the air, lands on it side and bursts into flames. As a little person crawls from beneath it I recognize him as Couch Pntchin of my old M. u. s. inys. no rusnes to the other side und drags someone from the flumes thnt. looks something like the noted feather weight cham pion, Bob Steele. HOYS I1KAT IIUTIIEL GIRLS ARE DEFEATED Iunt Friday night the girls' basket bull team played liethel on the home floor. Monmouth-lost with a score of 22 to 17. Tho lineup is as follows: liethel 22 Monmouth 17 Seurs 13 V Evangeline Duvidson 9 Christenson 9 F Greek Riley A. Rogers J C Gladis Mitchell Kogcis R C Florence Dierce Robinson G Jean 1 1 inkle Stofer G Ilia Huber Substitutes: Bethel None. Mon mouth, Bernice Winegar (2) The purple und white won easily from the Bethel quint Friday night with a score of 2'J to 9. , Monmouth held the lead throughout and at no time was tho outcome doubtful. The lineup is as follows: Bethel i Monmouth 2'J Domes F Winegar Stewurt 2 F Penhollow 9 Sears 2 C Smith Christensen 1 G Bun Shields 4 G Duvis Substitutes: Monmouth, Wilson (2) Bond, Higbee and Jemscn. Monmouth uighs hoopntera .were defeated by the second team from the Normal on Wednesday night. The score was 25 to 1-1. This was just practice game. Friduy, January 28 the girls' team will go to Silvtrton ami play the Sil verton High School girls. they gaste casually from tho window. "My word! There goes that Mrs. Carson aguin. Ive counted three times that she has gond ufr town to duy, an' she'll como back loaded with packages you can bet, and her poor husband only getting three and a half day. Say, Jane, huve you seen the Wilson's new dinintt-room set? Mrs. Smith was telling me this morn ing that is cost a pretty penny, but It will be just like the rest of their fur niture in no time." "Will you please hand me my specs so I can see a little better. Why, look! There comes that young Max well fellow. Yes, he's coming right on up the street. Oh, I see, he's turning in at thu Jones'. My lan' sakes, ain't you heard that he's mighty sweet on Funny Jones? What! you say you henr.t they were seen to gether at the Whitesides? Oh, Jane! Look that's the Brown's pews car. Ain't it a beauty! Folks say that he had to go in debt for it-and seo their chauffeur. My, they're gettin' high and mighty since they moved over to East Side. There goes Mrs. D . Say, do you really believa that she has been married three times? Well, I ain't one to talk about my neighbors, but from the looks of her I'd suy she had. Ain't she got a swell new hat on though?" And so on will the conversation go until all tho fnulls of the neighbors for a rudius of 10 blocks around will have been dLscus.cd und the jaws of the gossips will cease to move (until the next afternoon). ' Sometimes, as I go along the street and see a lady (maybe one wouldn't call her a lady then)' looking out of the. window I 'can' imngine what she is saying. It makes one get "red be hind the ears" just to think what is going on behind those "notorious" windows, and I hope that someday the gossips will get a dose of their cwn medicine. Nuda Johnson. Yell Practice Ten minute yell practices were held as pep rallies before the basket ball games with Bethel, Friday, and Parrish Jr. High, Tuesday. Mar ion Wilson led the first one and taught the Students two now yells. Evangeline Davidson conducted the second practive. v ' v - y il r? 4 h 1 r h s s Ik V'i i Organ Reproduces All Instruments of Symphony qua unu.niuisN oxer n t .... .. COLD FEET This life we live is irksome, no matter where we he; the road is lined with boulders, an' breakers crown the sea. Lint we mustn't net '.!i;s couraged an' declare that life's a cheat, for the prospecks ain'f so cheerio when a feller gets cold feet. The man .that proves a winner, is the mail that trims his sa.ls, and steers his crult, unernn am.u t ie storms or gales, the hard knocks don't dismay him, which he squares his chin to meet, and his symptoms "don't betray him he never'gets cold feet! There ain't no road to glory, but what's beset with thorns, and it's purty hard to travel, if you're pestered some with corns. So,to make yer failure certain, wear yer pants out on the scat, it's a sign that allcrs tells me that a feller's got cold feet. ... t like to greet the feller that can laugh at clouds an' cares that tj 'tares hisself in trouble, with his hsts as well as prayers. One that earns a benediction, that it mighty loft an' sweet. He blesfcd the, world he lived In. and he never got cold frctl - J : - (g M ZO YEARS Atf "w&iW Willi iji n i i a -ift-J-.--M h ' 1 ' 1 J'vc losr (ill my love Jur ye The one bit" of Joy I Kntv, TTarrv M n r t a o- h T-Tfl5? "13 tones are beautiful for narry m unabn rias chorSi but aftcr all.why limit lt3 Found New Popular Use usefulness to Sunday? Of course. for Church Favorite is nsts as wcu as prayers, , . . ' Chicago. "When I play a pop ular number such as 'I've Lost All My Love For You,' I can make the organ reproduce the violin, the cello and every instrument of a symphony." This is the boast of Henry Mur- ' tagh, world's most popular organ ist. Mr. Murtagh's admirers claim that under his direction the organ has progressed more in twenty years than during all the rest of Its 2,000 years of existence put together. New attachments and improvements have followed one another with remarkable rapidity since he undertook to make it the most popular instrument in mo tionplcture theatres. . "There is no reasonlii?t I can aee why the organ should have had to finish out its days as a lolemn cathedrcl instrument," lays Mr, Murtagh, it was just air experiment when I began to play it at motion pic ture theatres. A good many peo ple laughed at me and called me just another idiot with a crazy scheme. Fortunately, audiences seemed to feel differently about it. If the organ music was miss ing, they asked what had hap pened to it. "Even when jazz was played on it, they were rested and stim ulated by its mellow tones. Then I found that it was excellent to lead community singing and noth ing brings people more happiness than singing. It is like a medi cine. I have actually known of ills it has cured when applied reg ularly. That's really all of th story." The scoffers have re mained to imitate some of them, anyway. And the organ Still hat a great field ahead for popular service." . Mr. Murtagh playi at the CnU onto Theatre har. John A. Lurkin, is the prospec tive builder of ihe new monarch of New York's skyline a 108 story office building. It will be the big gest thing made by man and wDi rise 1208 feet, overtopping the Woolworth Buildinpr'by 416 feet end will cost $22,500,000. THOMAS BROTHERS ORCHESTRA Now Playing at the Mellow Moon Pavilion West Salem Wednesdays Bargain Nite Saturdays The Big Nite Normal Book Store Cigars, Confectionery, etc. P. H. JOHNSON i YOU CAN'T RUN AN AUTOMOBILE WITHOUT GASOLINE You Shouldn't Run One Without Insurance Insure with CHAMBERS and POWELL, Agents Monmouth, Oregon ft i i NEW REDUCED PRICES Jor Economical Transportation J- rr ii - tt .J" - Roadster $680, $670 Touring 1 680 670 Coach ..: 799 746 Coupe - 799 777 Sedan 889 849 Landau 921 899 Cabriolet .'. 869 We also have some good used cars and trucks for sale HALLADAYS GARAGE En GOOD FURNITURE is YDURDUTY TO YOUR HOME lan site LA' Modern Furniture Needs In the dining room, in the parlor, in the hall are many places call.ng for lndivluual pieces of furniture. For instance, there are stands of Various kinds, hat racks,' china closets, book cases. In each of these needs and In many others we have a variety of styles from which to choose. They are both Useful and Ornamental We offer a worth-while collection of table and floor lamps, porch furniture, etc. There is scarcely a limit to the list of items we carry under this class of furniture. A casual 1 1 stroll through our displays mignt suggesi J5r exactly what you want Ikyou are undecided,. Monmouth Hardware & Furniture Company 0