Aurora observer. (Aurora, Marion County, Or.) 19??-1940, November 04, 1920, Image 1

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    V
Aurora
AURORA
Published Every Thursday
VOL. X.
Republicans S w e e p
The Country
îh e presidency and both branches of
congress are in the hands of the Repu­
blicans. The electorate has overthrown
the Democratic administration and all
its acts and policies.
The league of
nations has been rejected, and Wilson-
ism utterly repudiated.
Great Democratic strongholds like
New York City, Boston, the Louisiana
“ sugar belt” have turned their backs
upon the Bourbons. Apparently, Hard­
ing and Coolidge have received the
greatest popular vote and majority ev­
er recorded for presidential candidates.
Locally, the only rift in the Demo­
cratic clouds is the handsome vote giv­
en Chamberlain, who ran far* ahead
of his party. The*following are some
of the local precinct results:
AURORA
For President—Harding 134, Cox 34,
Watkins (prohi.) 2, Debs 2, Cox (In­
dustrial Labor) 2.
Chamberlain.67, Hayes 2, Slaughter
1, Stanfield 99.
Brown received 62 votes for justice
of the«upreme court, Van Wjnkle 35
îbi attorney general.
The county
officers received from 127 to 133 votes,
Rozer received 142 for secretary of the
state.
For Justice of the Peace of the Aur­
ora District—Watt 89, Critenden 2,
Geo. Fry 2, Wescott 2, Webert 2,
Miley 1.
For Constable—W. 0 . Fry 20, G. W,
Fry 17, Kinzer 6, E. J. Snyder 1, Shim-
min 1, Arndt 2, Watt 3, Webert 1,
Ortman 7, Gribble i, L. I. Snyder 1,
Wm. Miley 1, Geo. Askins 1.
The Aurora precinct swatted the
measures submitted with its usual En­
thusiasm for “ No,”
Compulsory voting Yes l9,'No 107.
Limiting legislative sessions Yes 30,
No. 85.
Oleomargarine bill Yes 30, No, 91.
Single tax Yes 4, No, 141.
County officers terms Yes 56, No. 80.
'
$1.50 a Year
AURORA. MARION COUNTY, OREGON. NOVEBER 4, 1920
A. S. Thompson Dead
-Portland Dock bill Yes 59, No. 69.
BUTTEV1LLE
Harding 55, Cox 31, Debs 5, Watkins
3, Cox (ïnd. Labor) 1.
Chamberlain 36, Stanfield 46, Hayes
2, Slaughter 3, Svenson 2,
Brown 17 for supreme court, Van
Winkle for atty. gen., 12.
The county officers received from 64
to 78 votes. Frank Davy headed the
legislative ticket with 70 votes.
Napoleon Davis received 11 votes for
justice of the peace.
Compulsory voting Yes 13, No. 57.
Limiting legislative sessions Yes 16,
No. 52.
Oleo bill Yes 18. No? 49.
Single tax Yes, 12, No. 61.
County officers terms Yes 25, No. 44.
Portland Docks Yes 38, No. 37.
Vaccination bill Yes 48, No. 36.
Legal rate bill Yes 5, No. 73.
Bird Refuge bill Yes 15, No. 61.
Market Commission Yes 15, No. 58,
*
School Election For The
2 7 th of November
At a meeting of the school board Sat­
urday evening, a special meeting was
called for Saturday evening, Novem­
ber 27, at the I. O. O. F. Hall.
The meetiug will vote upon the mat­
ter of attempting to redeem the high
school bonds at once, and to make
another effort to adopt a budget.
There will also be a separate vote fipon
authorizing the expenditure of $1800
for a site for a high school building.
Illicit Liquor Deal
Involves Several
John Kraft, who was forced at the
point of a gun, to take two men and a
load of moonshine to Portland last
week, afterward identified one of the
men as Harry Robbins of Portland and
states that the other is known as Chris
Hostetler.
Kraft, who lives on the Larson road,
says these-two men were driving a car
which went into the ditch near the
Kraft farm last Thursday morning
about 5 o ’ clock.
They came to his
house and asked help. He went with
them to the car, but could not get it
out of the ditch. It is said Kraft took
his gun with him but the men were so
polite that when he returned to his
house before starting for Portland, he
left the gun. But once the “ dressed
chickens” (as they duboed the cargo
of moonshine) were transferre* to
Kraft’s car, one of the men poked a
gun against Krafts ribs and ordered a
little more speed.
After unloading the “ dressed chick­
ens” at Portland, the men offered
Kraft a drink and told him they would
bring him a gallon when the# returned
for their car. Kraft did not notify the
officers until Thursday night.
It is intimated that there are several
others of the Hubbard Elliott Prairie
section involved more or less directly
in this matter.
UNION
In Union precinct Harding received
41 votes and Cox 29, with a few scat­
tering votes for the socialist and other
candidates.
For senator Chamberlain received 33
votes, Stanfield 39, Hays 2,
Beatie for county judge, Mass for
sheriff, and Stepp for district attorney,
all of them“ Clackamas county Demo­
cratic candidates, carried the precinct,
something very unusual,
HUBBARD
The combined vote of the East and
West Hubbard precincts were as fol­
lows:
H arding ’ 83, Cox 43, W atkins 9, Debs
8, Cox (Ind. Labor) 3.
Chamberlain 80, Hays 5, and Stan­
field 149.
For Justice o f the Peace—Calvert 33,
W att 5. For constable, Kinzer 32,
The measures were all beaten by a
decisive vote except the Portland
Dock Bill, which carried 119 to 68.
Single tax went Yes 22, No, 190. The
legal rate bill, Yes 19, No. 189. There
was, however, considerable anti-vac­
cination sentiment, that measure hav­
ing 79 for to 134 against.
City Election
Only 67 votes were cast in the Aur­
ora city election. For mayor—G. A.
Ehlen 58, G. R. Watt 2, J.W. Sadler 3,
Louis Webert 1, G. W. Fry 1.
For councilmen—J. G, Wurster 67,
Zeno Schwab 64,, Elmer Smucker 63, A,
C, Snyder 63, and one each for H. L.
Bents, Grover Giesy, Joe Erbsland, B.
F. Giesy, S. H. Stoner, and A. J. Zim­
merman,
For treasurer—A. M. Fry 61, and A.
W. Keil 1.
Hops Sold At $ 1 .0 0 A
Bale Thirty Years Ago
Justice Of Peace
Makes Moonshine
$ÄTER FIRST At Id SAVES
LIVES GH WEST COAST
A, S. Thompson, who died at Wood-
burn, was buried yesterday at the Rock
Creek cemetery near Needy,
He
leaves a widow and
children. His
parents Mr, and Mrs. Wm. Thompson,
his brother Asa and his sister Mrs.Grace
Popejoy are at Oroville, California.
Another sister Mrs. L. I. Simpkins,
and a brother Alvin live at Needy, ar.d
Andrew Thompson another brother
lives at Myrtle Point, Oregon. His
sister Mrs, F. W. Will lives here,
Mr. Thompson was about 50 years of
age. He had been ill for some time,
and confined to his home foi several
weeks, His bereaved family have the
sincere sympathy of all who knew him.
Vaccination Amendment Yes 22,
No. 123.’
Legal rate bill Yes 9, No. 137.
Divided sessions Yes«24, No. 101.
Market Commission Yes 22, No. 115.
r
Observer
Justice of the Peace Owens of Killen,
a few miles east of Hubbard, was tak­
en to jail Monday charged with violat­
ing U • federal prohibition act. It is
j said that several gallons of moonshine
ani prune mash were found at the
Owen’ s place.
Frank Robins, one of the men who
forced John Kraft to carry them and
their booze to Portland, is said to have
obtained his liquor from Owens.
Owens is the father of four small
children whom he has cared for since
his wife’s death. It is reported that
his main worry, however, is the effect
his arrest will have upon his re-election
as justice of the peace.
The federal officers found a still up­
on the place and it is believed that
Robins took it there and that he made
the mash.
Red Cross first aid activities
in the Northwest division this
year have been chiefly devoted
to “water first aid” instruction
_and organization. Several units
of swimmers have*been organ­
ized and trained in communities
on the sound and western rivers,
and rescues have already result­
ed from the Red Cross'work.
OXASTER RELIEF PROVES
BEST MATSORAL INSURANCE
When the man on the street is ask­
ed" for his annual Red Cross dues of
$1 during Roll Call week, November
11 to 25, he will know that half of
that dollar stays in his own communi­
ty. If he has done an average amount
of Red Cross reading he will know
that a small slice out of the other 50
cents is appropriated to “disaster re­
lief.”
But unless he is one of the excep­
tionally few be will not know what
“disaster relief” has meant to the
world during the life of the American
Red Cross, nor will he realize what
small slicos of dollars will do if there
are enough of them.
In the Northwestern Division, time
after time the relief organization has
met its crisis and has stood the test.
Twice in Oregon in December of 1919
—at Mosier when fire left families
destitute and again when the Marsh­
field chapter cared for survivors and
recovered bodies of the dead from the
wrecked schooner “ Chanslor” — the
test was met. In 1920 came the land­
slide at Juneau, Alaska, and the hotel
fire at Klamath Falls, Oregon. More
people learned that “disaster^ relief”
means things in the lives of men.
In the 38 years since its incorpora­
tion up to June of lj>l§, the American
Red Cross had participated in 180 dis­
aster relief «expeditions. It directed
the expenditure of approximately $12,-
500,000. Before the organization had
attained its present large membership
funds often were raised through pop­
ular subscription for such large dis­
asters as the Mississippi floods a,ad
cyclones of 1882 and 1883, the Texas
famine, the Armenian massacres of
1893 and 1894, the Martinique volcano
eruption and many others.
A list of all the Red Cross relief
work in times of fire, flood and famine
would take pages. Long before the
organization under the stress of war
and war’s results had grown into the
lives of millions, disaster relief was
one of its foremost activities. The
Congressional Charter under which
the Red Cross has operated since 1905
sets forth as one of the chief purposes
of the organization: “ to continue and
carry on a system of * * * relief
and to apply the same in mitigating
the sufferings caused by pestilence,
famine, fifes, floods and other great
national calamities.”
And now, with its wonderful organ­
ization of chapters, branches and aux­
iliaries reaching to the farthermost
parts of the nation, its members in­
structed and ready for action when
the occasion arises, Red Cross “ dis­
aster relief” has become accident in­
surance for the world.
A copy of the Oregonian for January
11, 1894, which came to the desk of the
Observer has an article on hops, by G.
A. Muecke, tHfen a grower and dealer
of hops on a large scale. He discusses
the cost of production and states that
growers estimated the cost of produc­
ing a pound of hops at 8 to 13§ cents.
But he adds that no one really knew
the actual cost.
Mr. Muecke said
Sonoma county (California) hops were
best and the Butteville district hops
next in rank—in quality.
He writes o f having once bought
hops
in the period from 1884 to 1894 at
DONALD
$1.00 per bale, and many times at 4 to 6
Harding 85, Cox 47, Watkins 1.
cents a pound.. Hop problems in those
Chamberlain 58, Stanfield 70,
days seem to have been very much
like the problems of today—the same
Complete line of Drugs, etc., at uncertainty of cost, ox weather and of
Mçore’s Wooçiburn, Mail your orders price of ttys place.
Local Bank Honors
Novel Draft
Askansas ranks 46th in educations1
matter, but it has at least one com­
munity that wants to rank first. Bear­
den, Arkinsas, is that place. It has
809 boys and girls in the district—but
due to a series of misfortune, it has no
school house.
The people are poor with little tax­
able property, but the prosperity and
developement during the war brought
hope of better things. A bond issue to
the limit was voted, bonds were sold,
and a site bought and paid for by vol­
untary contribution. The building was
erected but a storm completely wrecked
it, and the district is without a build­
ing. In the meantime labor and ma­
terial have gone up, the district funds
are spent, the bonds and interest must
be paid—and no building, no teachers,
no school for 809 children of the dis­
trict,*;
Fo^'these reasons the Bearden school
board has requested every bank in
America to honor its draft for $1.00
for immediate aid, in order that the
“ boys and girls of Bearden may not be
deprived of the school advantages
necessary to make good citizens.” The
president of the Farmers & Merchant
Bank of Bearden, Arkansas, certifies
that the above statements are true, and
adds that it is unthinkable that 800 boys
and girls in one community in the Unit-
States should be without school.
Thousands of banks, throughout the
nation, among them the Aurora State
Bank, have honored the Bearden school
boasds draft for $1,00. To show their
appreciation of the aid, the Bearden
high school's commercial department
will be dedicated to the banks and
bankers of America.
Though Oregon stands near the head
of the list of states in educational rank
none of our communities can surpass
the little Arkansas town in its sacri­
ficing loyalty to educational ideals or in
its efforts to do its full duty to the boys
and girls who will soon be its best
citizens.
Robt. Shimmin has gone to Camp
Lewis for the winter to act as instruct­
or in auto-mechanics. About 1100 men
are being instructed in the various in­
dustries in which the army schools are
giving instructions. Mr. Shimmin is
in the civil service (not the military),
and will return to his business here in
the spring.
Mrs. R. E, Keefover, assisted by
Miss Madge Walker entertained a few
friends Tuesday evening at cards. The
receiving of the election news by phone
from the Associated press office at
Portland, and delightful refreshments
were other features of the evening.
The guests wereMesdames Malo.Watt,
L. L. Gribble, Albert Ehlen, W°scott,
Foster, B. F. Giesy, Blosser Morris and
1 Hisses 5eqts, Jofiqs and Watyq;,
NO. 35
Liberty Loan News .! Red Cross Officials
Visit Aurora
The Fourth Liberty Loan TEMPOR­
ARY Coupon bonds cannot be ex­
changed for PERMANENT
coupon [ Messrs. Meyers and McDaniels of
bonds until February 1, 1921, because j Salem were here Monday in the inter-
o f unavoidable delay in printing the per- j ests Gf the Red Cross Annual Roll Call,
manent bonds. The only Temporary j represen ting Willamette Chapter, which
Liberty Loan Coupon bonds being ac- jjjas made a fine record both during the
cepted by the Twelfth Federal Reserve jwar and afterwards. During that time
Bank are the following:
lover 3000 families in Marion and Polk
First Liberty Loan—4 and 4i par | county-have been aided by the Red
cent.
Cross.
Second Liberty Loan—4 and 4i per
The fourth annual Red Cross roll call
cent.
begins November" 11 (Armistice Day)
Third Liberty Loan—4¿ per cent,
and lasts until November 25 (Thanks­
giving Day). During that period you
are invited to renew your Red Cross
membership in your local auxiliary.
The annual membership fee is $1.00.
One half of this is retained by the
Forty-three were in attendance a t ! chapter and one half goes to the
the Tualatin Sunday School Sunday National organization,
morning last and the Pastor is pleased I The officers of tha Aurora Auxiliary
with the interest being shown both at I are Dr. B. F. Giesy, president; Miss
Wilsonville and Union Hill Sunday j Lizzie Will, vice-prqsident; Mrs. Diana
Schools and church services at the" Snyder, secretary; and Zeno Schwah,
treasurer.
three points,
Sunday next the Sunday Schools will
meet as follows:
Wilsonville and
Two high school girls of Spokane,
Tualatin at 10 a. m. and Union Hill at j Birdie and Mickey O’ Brien, passed
2:30 p. m. The pastor will preach at through here election day, hiking, en-
Tualatin at 11 a. m. and at Wilsonville route to Tia Juana, Mexico. They
at 8 p. m.
were appareled in khaki, caps and
Church News
boots.' They were selling their own
pictures
to pay expenses. They ex-
O.G. Morris carried the returns from
! pect to use their experiences as the
the Aurora orecinct to Salem, and M.
of short stories for magazines.
N. Crisell the returns from Union pre­ basis
They were carrying their mirrors and
cinct to Oregon City. He was accom­ powder puffs, wrapped in their blank­
panied by Geo. Gray.
ets.
These A re
Good Blankets
If blankets are on your list m ake
your selections from our extensive
line of wool and cotton blankets.
They are luxuriously warm
and soft and durable to the
extent that they will
serve for years.
Nice warm comforters too. Exten­
sive line of cotton and wool
bats and comforter m a­
terials at reduced prices.
SADLER S KRAUS
-THE BEST FOR THE PRICE-
Loveall A t Guam
With Marines
Service in Guam, our most strategic
outpost of the Pacific, is the lot of A b ­
raham R. Loveall, the son of John E.
Loveall of this city. Young Loveall
joined the Marines at their recruiting
station in Portland on February 6th of
this year, Before sailing on the trans­
port for far-off Guapi, he had served
at the big Marine Corps Post at Mare
Island, Calif. Guam, where the first
shot of the Word War was fired by an
American, is known to the Marines as
“ The land-without a worry” . A squad
of Marines accompanying a prize crew
under a command of Commander W.A.
Hall, U, S, Navy, fired at a motor-
launch of the German ship Carnorran,
interned at Guam, on the morning of
April 6th, 1917, This shot was fired a
short time after the United States had
declared a state of war, and Corporal
Cordery will go down into history as
having fired that historic shot.
M tthew s- Mishler
Mr. Samuel Matthews and Mrs.
Gussie Mistyer were married Monday
of last week and have rented the J, B.
Mishler farm for a year on Elliott
Prairie and have taken possession.
Best wishes attend them.—Hubbard
Enterprise.
Store will be closed Armistice Day, Nov. 31th
Butternut Bread
Fresh from the bakery every day, it is uri-
equaled.- Its rich flavor and its nutriment
make it ^unsurpassed. If you have not
tried it, it is your loss.
Fresh cake and cookies every Saturday and every
W ednesday Gold and silver and cocoanut
cakes. Try them.
Tru-Blu
Crackers and cookies are our specialties—
Tasty and crisp. Ask for Tru-Blu. They
are the best made.
WILL-SNYDER CO.
THE STORE OF MERIT