Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County observer. (Moro, Sherman County, Or.) 1897-1931 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1923)
Telephone« A re ria n d y -tf He A W , W H A T S T H E USE OU « U X , I WAD - t x M o rr M o ö n e v w ö UU | T U iN â H APPEN Tui9 M0QN1WG - T U C MAOktT H A H 1N »UIT& D MC . j F riday Oregea »•** “ bnel * \WUAT T>lD ut I» r AOkVwi A BOÜWD M i MU6M- QOOM« AND I Tbtf> U lM 'T U A r \WAA TÔO HÜCU AOÔUUD ABOUT l x PQKX 4 / n w A L tv me « aid u c voüld W t « t u . t i n Tfc MU C 1 9 M D A P O U N D -C B - M A f fIN — 1 j i t u_T - riS U C TU D PattfnroiA and Oregon Rotary olub w . » U r . plan to hold aa Interstate meeting at C r a f r lake July >7, to which a caravan of automobiles from Portland and WUlametth valley towns -in so from Portland the morning of HLlMD 3X0 v e r — IL L >NRiwG U l6 3X36 (SOME. M-CVC ------ K O MAW CAW 1N 6U LT FW V IC t « áfr W * |2 oW <? TUAT r : - *>■"■** O h . million dollars’ worth of »ut® highway bonds w ill be offered for aale immediately by the state board of oontrol. This Issue wUl match the federal amount to be applied on the construction ot poet and foreet road« in the state. An association of men’s classes of the ohurchee end Sunday schools of Representatives of the Oregon pub- Belem to eetablleb a civic unit that jjo service commission, professor shaU have a competent voice in dla- Peter Crockett, economist of the Uni cuealng public affairs, will -be work versity of Oregon, and Others started ed out during the summer with R mu *1J Monday on an automobile tour Glover as chairman. throughout central Oregon la the In Rev. E f t Gilbert, district super terest of 'the visualised railroad de intendent of the Salem district of the velopment In that part of the state. Methodist Episcopal church, and Mrs. Rural credit unions In the state are Emma B. Morgan, also of Salem, were subject to the double liability Im married In Portland at the home ol posed by the »Ute In oeae of Insolv Bishop W illiam 0 . Bhepard. of the ency, Attorney-General Van Winkle Methodist Episcopal church notified Superintendent of Banks Bramwell. Such unions are doing a bunking business and are subject to the same laws as banking houses. 1 b W H EN the attorney-general’s opinion. a anointment of members of the IN T H E D A L L E S EAT AT The National Federation of Business and Professional Women's clubs, open ed its annual convention In Portland Monday. Dr. S. M. Zeller, associate plant pathologist at the Oregon Agricultural college experiment station, w ill repre sent Oregon at the summer conference of Amerclan plant pathologists at Gen eva, N. Y., July 9 to 13. Howard 3. Dumbolton, former clerk of the Butler Banking company of Hood River, who pleaded guilty to a churge of embessling funds from the savings account was sentenced to five years In the penitentiary. Dr. Frederick Stricker, state health officer of Oregon, was elected presi dent of the Pacific Coast Health Of ficers' association, organised at the meeting of the American Medical asso ciation held at S in Francisco. The seventh annual group meeting of the Sunday schools of Linn oourfty was held Sunday at Waterloo ttn<er the auspices of the American Sunday | School union of which the eight parti cipating 8unday schools are members. R. H. M cKean, Manager, W asco, Oregon Lim e, Plaster, ,Cement, Cedar ro sis, Builders Supplies, Lumber, W ood, Coal and H ay. MANUFACTURERS OF M IL L FE E D A N D FLO U R C om plete L ine of A ccesso ries AUTO REPAIRING STORAGE Blacksmith and Machine Shop FOSS & CO., Ihc. e 303 M O qjp, O REG ON Have You Seer This N ew Super Stove? Moscow.—»The constitution of the new union of soviet socialist repot lies, or the United Staten of Russia, approved by the Russian parliament, parallels to a considerable degree the original AmertAan constitution, al though It provides some principles of government resembling the British. In no case dees it provide for a di rect election. Its two-chamber con gress and. supreme court jurisdiction resemble the American, while the cab inet la responsible to parliament, like Great Britain's, and congress Is en trusted with legislative and executive powers. A joint committee of both houses, consisting of 21 members, Is to be the supreme authority In the Interim be tween the sessions of oongress. and the council of commissars, or cabinet, will be mere managing directors of the various departments, whose acts can be overthrown at any time by congress or ita presidium. By JOHN OAKW OOD When a farm er takes his product to market and sells it for, say, a dol la r a bushel, he is dependent upon the honesty of two measures—the dollar and the busheL The other day n crossroads store keeper got sent to Jail for manipu lating a trick bushel basket with *e false bottom that would slide up snd down In a way that was grand, gloomy and mysterious. When using it to measure stuff ho bought from a farm or, he’d secretly shove the bottom down until It hold nJ least a bushel and a quarter, but he would only credit him with a bushel. The buying power of the farm er’s product was thereby depreciated by about twenty par cent. T O M L IN SVEEDER D *« sbeolutely re lia b le Pt<(*ur<» 1211 je r rent more l.tat then < Id s ty le burner NEW PERFECTION OflRange G in n , C o le m a n & C o . <-!^ , Summons for Publication in Foreclosure of Tax Lien ' National divialoos are growing more acute ln Belgium, says a w riter In the Living Age The Flemlsb-epeaklng F I F T H A N D W A S H IN G T O N STS provinces, already Innurgent against Ì PORTLAND. OREGON the French «peaking Bruaeels govern ment before the war, and enco u rag ed ln this attitude during the Germsn>>e cupatlon, sre more Insistent upon their rights than ever. Parliament recently refused to erect a Flemish university nt Antwerp. But the minister of education, apparently without the i ndorsement of nil his col leagues, submitted a MU to parliament providing that "nt the University of Ghent Instruct!«» nhnll be given in Flemish ; It shall be give® In French and Flemish la the schools of civil en gineering, art* and manufactures I This bill was adopted by a vote of 8B against 86, with save® abstentions , figures suggeaflhg the equal division of sentiment over a qneetjpp that, K we are to cred« newspaper heedltoee. S P E C I A L R A T E S j has aroused pasalona that have brought the people to the verge <w Koon« with privilege ot beth, «»ng»« violence. >1 00 up; double SI 50 up < The neutral and Protestant Journal Hoorn with prlvete beth. single >1.5*, de Oeneve regards the action of the up; double >2 50 np. < Belgian parliament ns a ".egisftable Auto Meets Trains. Street cars Iron» setback to Latin culture." likely to Union Depot pan our doors. accentuate ’’«llacords o f Tece, langusf*. ' Tranefer at 5th and Gli*en street« Ifiow and even of religion” In that country. 1 North Bank D*go». It wtU be recalled that the Flemings are strongly elfirtffil 4 Seattle, Wash. — Five hours have N r t c f Skwiff M . been cut out of the president’s stay In the C irc u it Court of the State of In Beattie. July 27, because promoters of the Seattle pageant, “Amerlcanue," Oregon for the Chanty of Multnomah. Anna Schwinter, P la in tiff, refused to give up their rights to the University of Washington stadium to allow the president to make his In itial speech on Alaska in the evening. THE SERVICE OF A FAILURE Flemleh-fipeaklfig fflemgnta W in Feint Against Their Countrymen Whose Language le Preneh. T h e * * ^ * 7 advertía«! New Perfection O il Range with S U P E R F E X Burners that for the first rime combines gas- aove speed with oil-stove economy, is on display here. Let us show you this big handsome new stove and its marvelous burner. Harding’s Stay In Seattle Cut. Automatic Steering « M r . The first American passenger ship to be equipped with eatom*tie steer ing gear, swesetly completed a suc- ceeefnJ return voyage to the West Indies, under the guidance of this ap paratus. The instrument, nays Popu lar Mechanics Magaslue. consist« of a gyroscopic compass arranged to open and close an electric Hrcult con trolling the stopping and starting of the rudder-operating mechanism The Instrument la capable of being eat for response to different amounts of de viation from couree, one cade being noted where the departure from the true course was set as does as ooe- elxth of a degree. In the. C ircu it Court of the S ta te of penally the farmers thereabouts got Oregon, for Sherman County. wine to the fact that the .only way H. C. Ginn, P la in tiff The Salem Woman'» club has ar they could get what was coming to ranged for the purchase of the Cot them w a Z to enforce a reliable stand R. J. Ginn, Jennie Holder, Carl , w¡ tage Street Evangelical church and ard of measurement .Bo they put a Holder, Thomas Holder, Mrs. cel good stiff Jail penalty on using a Henry M cC all, N e llie Pike, j g, fake measure, laid for that store M innie Henry snd any unknown keeper with the trick basket snd sent heirs of the Ju lia Holder estate, tb, him to prison. Defendants. ' mi BY J. H. FU E L IC H B R To Minnie H enry, the above named Politicians In Europe have been President American Bankers In the Name of the Stale manipulating the other measure—the defendant. Adeoeletlesi money mdasure—In much the snipe of Oregon: i ii. . .. W hen O ee- Some of them In America wnn- You are hereby notified that H . C. ernor Walton of to tamper likewise with the dollar Ginn is the holder of Certificate of of r Oklahoma signed Here in about the way it would work Delinquency numbered 71 issueu on the paratlon to put important data Into the _ recently the re- out. Suppose, when the farm er bauds of state officials and others who ‘ peal of the bank* brought his product to market, the 26th day of May. I9BU, by the Tax Col sre to tour central Oregon preparatory deposit guaranty basket measure was honest enough lector of the County of Sherman, State to the Interstate commerce commis Oregon, for the amount of Eighteen a ln tkat tate and he got a dollar bill tor each of he performed aa sion hearing In Portland relative to husheL He’d taka hie dollars home and 26-100 D ollars, the same being the th ''' economic aervlee- and nave them. Perhaps ha planned amount then due snd delinquent for railroad development In that part of to the whole coun- to buy some land next his own tor a taxes for the year 1018, together with |n the state. try. I might even thousand dollars, aad figured that 1# penalty, in erest and costs thereon H. Fuelleber say that O k l a « year or so he could make It. The President Harding-flag for an upon the real property assessed to you, M homa ln p*««lnx Increase of not less than 26 psr cent i f which you are the owner as appears of t law, enduring Its evil eonse- In membership of troops has b«*n wen But meanwhile the poHtlelaBi start of record, sithated in said County and co . m cm for fifteen years and than by the Corvallis Boy Scout council, ta mnnlpfilste the base of the cur | • State, and particularly hounded and M reports H. A. Scullen, scout commls has performed an economic service ta reaey. They would change It from the described as follows, to -w it: South >t «loner. Although only a second-cla«« the -nation. There could gold standard to a f l a t money plan east Quarter of the Southwest Quarter cc no more _ (ro m a gold guarantee to the mere and Southwest Quarter of the Southeast q district now, plans are under way to convincing argument against the pan say-so ot the government that a piece Quarter of Section 18, the Northeast aj consolidate Benton county with near sage of similar laws In other states of paper was worth a dollar. The by counties and form a first-clasp dis than Oklahoma’s disastrous expert Quarter of the Northwest Quarter snd M farm er wouldn't be watching the m ent the Northwest Quarter of the North- CJ money-politicians. He would be too The Oklahoma guaranty law was Under the provisions oi ins busy raising things. A t the end of east Quarter of Section Twenty Four jt thd first of R» kind. It was enacted the year he has hie thousand dollars Township Pour Soqgh. Range 16 East root Anderson bill, passed at the last In response to the panic Of 19«7. But He takes them to the landowner and o f the W illa m e tte Meridian. Also «ession of oongress, a company has experience h u only proved again that says. " I’ll buy your land now— here’s Lot« 1, 2. 7, 8, 9, 10 snd 1 1 of Block 2 c< there is no euDstltute tor sounds bank been formed in Redmond known aa the s thousand dollars." and Lots 6 and 6 of Block 3 of Henari- gj Central Oregon Agriculture and Live ing. Relying on the fancied security e e ; e v illa Addition to the C ity of Grata a, stock Loan oompany, which, In the of the guaranty law, people entrusted thklr banking to many who were un But the landowner would say, "That V a lle y . tl capacity of underwriting for ths fed fit for the tru s t Bank failures have Is paper money— my land la worth You are further notified th at said j ( eral farm loan bank of Spokane will been so many that the fund, «up one thousand dollars gold—the gov R . J. Ginn has paid taxes on said be In a position to make loans on live- posed to guarantee deposits, created ernment has printed so much papor premises for prior or subsequent years, Htock snd other staple agricultural In- by assessments on banks, was long money folks haven’t much confidence w ith the rate of interest on said ago depleted. * ■ ta i t But I am willing to take s terests. It 1« estimated that with total liabil chance if you will give me a Jollnr > amounts as follows: Good time credits under the Oregon ities created under the law in the and a quarter in paper money tor - 1 Y e a r’s tax, prior certificate; date j. »late parole law apply to first-term form of warrants and sums owing to each gold dollar's value of my land— - paid, Sept. 2, 1914; amount. >97 80; L I ers as well as to convicts who have depositors amounting to >U 000,000, In other words. I'll glvu you my land I rate of interest, twelve per cent. previously served time in the state there sre in the hands of the Banking Y e a r’s tax, 1916; date paid Oct. 6, fo r> 1 4 M dollars paper.” prison or those convicted of crimes Board uncertain naaeta of nominally 1916; amount, >11.34; rate of interest, £ >1B,9O8,OOO, ranging la value from of fiuch a nature that they are not twelve per cent. «ero to only th irty or forty oenta wn eligible for parole, according to an I Y e a r’s tax, 1916; date paid. Oct. 6, i the dollar, resulting In a deficit of opinion written by Attorney-General many million dollars. Bound, well-man » 1917; amount, >12 02; rate of interest, Van W inkle ln response to an inquiry aged hanks have been boavlly taxed 1 twelve per cent. by Johnson 8. Smith, warden of the by assessments to the fund, and the Y e a r’s tax, 1917; date paid. Oct. 6, maximum emouat that could Da aa ¡ 1918; amount, >12 83; rate of interest, state penitentiary. ■eased on solvent b a n k s Is Insufficient twelve per cent. Twenty-five years ago two young to cover the deficit. ' Y e a r’s tax, 1919; date paid, Oct. 6. - men pledged each other that whoever It ha« been well said that guaranty 1920; amount, >20.79; rate of interest, should die first the other would preach laws make for looseness In banking twelve per cent. the funeral sermon. Friday, at Cor methods, snd saddle en the com ’ Y e a r’s tax, 1920; date paid, Ofct. 6,s vallis, that pledge was fulfilled. The petent aad honest the sins of the In , 1921; amount, >21.90; rate of interest» competent snd dishonest. Let ns have only laws that raise I twelve per cent the standard of banking. Let ua have , Y e a r’s tax, 1921; date paid. Oct. 6, no laws that debase It. e 1922; amount, >24.40; rate of Interest,-^ TONGUES CLASH IN BELGIUM New Invention Now on Difiplay Britain Faya U. S. >4,800,000,000. Washington, D. C — The blggeaCT- nanclsl deal In history was completed when Great Britain handed to the United States her government bonds to the amount of >4.800,000.000 aad re ceived in return the cancelled I. O. U. fdr >4,074,818.388.44. which she gave when the huge war borrowings were made. Tbla exchange of definite B rit ish goyernment bonds for the demand note was made In accordance with terms of the 'debt funding agreement reached heje some time ago. i. tw elve per cent. 1 • Said Minnie Henry as the earner of | a the legal q tle of the above described ( b property as the same appears of record, , and each of the other persons above , named are hereby further rtotified that | H .C .G inn w ill apply tothe circuit court , of the County’ and State aforesaid for a decree foreclosing the lipn against , n the property above described, nod,,; »- mentioned In said Certificate. And you, , are hereby summoned to appear w ithin , >y sixty days a fter the first publication « r. of this summons, exclusive of the day , of raid flist publication, and d e fe n d , thia action or pay the amount due-as above showq, together.. With costs and b. accrued interest, pnd in fbse of your ts fa ilu re to do eo. a decree w ill be ren dered foreclosing the lien of said I; taxes and costs against the land snd premises shove named. IS This summons is published by order of the Honorable D R. Parker, Judge, t j; of the C ircuit Court of the 9t to of Oregon for the County of Sherflikn, and said order was made and dated thia 21st day of May, 1928, andjthe date of rn t>e first pohlieatlon of this summons ,r is the 26th day-of May, 1928 ’ ) All procese end papers in this pro- seed i ng may be served upon the under signed residing Within the State of Oregon a t the address hereafter K. mentioned. I. M. Peterson, Attorney for Plaintiff. II Address Moro. Oregon. 7mMju>