The Santiam news. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1897-1917, October 19, 1916, Image 2

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    Scio Takes Firàì Prize Federated Church
The Scio school captured first
Sunday School at 10:00 a m.
prize at the Industrial School
Preaching at 11.
Fair held at Albany in connec­
Christian Endeavor 6:30 to 7:30
tion with the Round-Up. This
Song tervlae from 7.30 to 8:00
is a signal honor in the face of
Preaching at 8 o'clock.
keen competition from all other
Prayer meeting every Thurs­
parts of the county.
day evening at 7:30.
In Domestic Science the Scio
H. B. ILER. Pastor.
school took second prize, which
speaks highly for this depart­
ment. in compet'tion with Al­
Do you know that a free dress
bany, Lebanon, Brownsville and
pattern is ineluded.with the club
Harrisburg.
of four magazines that we are
Nobody Woika 1 hese Days giving in combination with the
Santiam News fur only 25 cents
How much mor« tim«* have you tn extra. Send your order by mail
which to eucceedY
Although their or cull at this office.
Stop, Look
and Liiften!
We are in the market for prac­
tically anything you have to »ell,
having an Hazelwood cream sta­
tion working in c<>njunctiin *>th
uh in the bame building.
Bring uh your eggs. poultrv,
hides, veal, drtrxed |x>rk, cas-
eara bark. ('HILA M . etc.
Our Hazelwood representative,
Mr O R Turner, who cann- here
from Nortn Y mihill. leaving
many satisfied pnIrons. who re­
gretted his leav.ng them, has
charge of the handling and test­
ing of cream and will treat you
right
New Undertaking Parlors
Mr N C Lowe is the only li­
censed undertaker and em­
balmer of Scio.
All work
guaranteed satisfactory. We
have a large stock of cas­
kets on hand and a nice
hearse. All calls promptly
attended day or night.
A lady’s services will be
furnished if required.
N. I. Morrison and N. C. Lowe
OREGON
SCIO,
have boon many uotabl« excrpUof.a.
thr average man deteriumea hi* ulti
mala position m thr world by hia activ­
ities between the age» of 26 and 10.
Twenty-five year» s»rm plenty of time,
••prciaily during thr Ural half. Hut 1»
it’
John Nr. ley handa tho th-mocrat a
statement whereby ho proves that no
body works. Herr is th« way it is fig­
ured out.
Each year has 366 days You sleep
sight hours rach day, which equals 122
Successors to
day a. This leaves 243 day a. You rest
Scio Cash Produce Co.
eight hours each day. which also equals
122 days. This leaves 121 days. There
are 52 Sundays that you do not worii,
or &2 days. This leaves ft* days. You
have one-half day off each --aturday,
or 26 davs, which leaves 43 days. You
have one and one half hours off for
Wi»etn««r nr i» tv tas ss* lunch eah day,
nr 2H days, which
to tw on tbv ntuinp nr up one».
leaves 1& days You get 14 days vaca­
pub ished every hursday by
tion in th* year This leaves one day,
If the
«h-rtnge becomm mu< h
L W. CHARI.ES
more • -rien« the ,ir»t thlnr we know and this being the Fourth of July, we
lb* nmchlhery of ihr Hint* iMpart clos» on that day, so you've done no
•urlìi will l.r coming to an abrupt atop. work at all.—Albany Democrat.
enter«! st lb* poatoflu-» at Scio, Or« .
Th n. too. according to Ihr Demo-
as wcund-cla*. mail matter.
cenile <*nui|«lgn book thril ninons th»
more ItnfM.rtnnt <-ii.-ictnieni* of thr
Wllaon Administration »tiny bo men­
HVIMt HIITH >N 14 A I'K-.
tioned Magna ('hurta mut ilio Ten
• '»intiinnijinriif»
-IÏ
(fihe Snntiam flrirs
;
T
ONE YEAR STRICTLY IN
ADVANCE. ONE DOLLAR
Advertising
rates made
application.
known on
ASHLAND PRESIDENT
FAVORS PENDLETON
Secretary Redfield converses glibly
In terms <>f billion* until it comr-s
time t<> make a campaign rotilrlbu-
lion when It Is disclosed tluit all
he really knows about mathematic*
Is »ItMI.
SOLILOQUY AT SHADOW LAWN.
Ferv thing has g.-ne up under Wll­
aon except the price of dead Ameri­
ca tut
Where are they gone, the old familiar
faces»
I had a friend McCombs. but he left
ms.
Left me slowly but surely, when I did
not Med him.
Ail, all are gwue, the old familiar
fa era !
Senator Jlmhain Lewis has pur-
chased n new volume of "I'tifnmlllar
Quotations and expects to In* ulde
any day now to give us the claudml
derivation of "pun. •.« publicity'' and
"strict iK-eouutablllty" lu the original
Babylonian.
Oner I had Bryan . hr was my friend
Io my hours of struggling In that grml
couveutlon.
Hut now hr's gonr. Left me with "God
blesa you !"
I'poti bls lips Gone, are the old fa­
miliar farra.
1 had a friend; a truer friend had n<*
man.
Uks an Ingrate, I wound.il my friend
acutely;
And hr. g.MMl Colonel Harvey, left me.
Left me
To muse on th» old fnmlllnr fares!
Add famous sayings of history: "1
will surrender mi thia line If It takes
all summer!"
The In-mocrntlc revenue bill, a»
Completed Is regarded ns so |M-rfect
that the chance-. are that tlie tax
pavers of New York. Massachusetts
and Illinois will lie able to build A.ISS
more miles of g.~«l roads In Alabama
next year.
Mr Hugh«* .'a tnlklng to the worn
en of the land tn thr homely Ian
gunge of the fireside and we expect
to witness an ImprrssHe rallying ot
the sex on the first Ironing day aftet
the first wnsh day In November.
Al my right hand sat my friend
Who wan the aiming inn of my Ad
ministration—
Garrison, upright and honest—but hr
too has left ine ;
Left me. when I deceived him—gone
are the old familiar faces!
******** * ** ******************
WILSON STRIKES WHEN
THE IRON IS COLO.
President Wilson rsfused to
aprak In Independence Hall »n
the one hundred and twenty­
eighth anniversary of the sign.
Ing of the Declaration of Inde­
pendence in that hall, and he so
refused because Inasmuch ae
over one hundred of our men,
acmes and chddren had Juet
been murdered on the high seas
he regarded it as "the very mo-
ment when he would not cars
to arouse the sentiment of pa­
triotism." Mr Wllaon has a post-
tive genlue for striking when
the iron ie cold and fearing to
strike when the Iron is hot. If
one hundred and twenty-elght
years ago Washington and Jef.
ferson, and the other men who
eigred the Declaration of Indo-
pendenco had felt the same way
about patriotism, and the earns
way about fighting as Mr Wil­
son does, we would never have
had a country. Had Lincoln
felt the same way. there would
be no auch thing ae the Amari
can Republic now In ssistence.—
From the Speech of Colonel
Roosevelt at Battle Cree«, Mich-
gan, In Behalf of Mr. Hughes
At Shadow lawn, whrre new friends
swarm around me.
Earth seems a desert I am bound to
traverse,
Reeking to And the friends who've
left me;
Rut all. all are gone- the old familiar
faces !
CHARLES LAMB. 2d.
In New York Sun.
Editorial Comments
If the l*em<M-ratlc leader who ad
vocal»» putting dyes on the free list
to enrourag» the Industry were a sur
geon his method of setting a broken
limb would be to amputate the pa
tirat e leg at the neck.
Optimism Is what makes the Demo­
cratic party, which has fooled some
of the people only three times In fifty
years, and has never yet fooled «II
of the people some of the time, think
that It can now fool all of the people
all of the time
‘
Kraal.'em
Wilson hasn't beao able
i
-LED
OF
CASTERN
OREGON
SCHOOL FULLV SHOWN BY B. F.
MULKEY, FORMER HEAD OF
ASHLAND SCHOOL.
Portlaud. Oro The Honorable B. F.
Mulkey, ex Pres.dent of the H >utt < ru
Oregon Normal School at Ash.an.1
says, concerning the «atabllsbuient of
an additional Normal St huol at Pen
die ton
I shall support Ute measure
heartily for the reason that the pr «ent
Normal School, though one ot the beat
in the country, cannot be adequate to
meet the ueeda of so large a sial« as
Oregon There la no institution that
louchea the masses ot the people so
closely as does the Normal School and
the benefit derived from the taxes paid
by the peoplo ot th« alate for the main­
tenance of such schools returns direct
ly to the man and woman who paid
he taxes and la conferred directly up
on them and their children The ex
pc use of maintain ng a good Normal
Hchool tn »astern Oregon to a tax pay­
er on an assessed valuation of It >00 pu
would ca--h year be under the coat ot
1 good I la« ana cigar I sincerely hop*
that the coining election will grant to
the people of I astern Oregon the re­
lief they seek In a Normal School "
v>
5
0
Ö
-Û
fi
BUSINESSMEN ARE
FOR NEW NORMAL
PORTLAND CHAMBER OF COM.
MERCE STRONGLY ENDORSES
BILL FOR SCHOOL TO BE LO­
CATED AT PENDLETON.
Portland. Or» —The Portland Cham
ter of Commerce, which stand» at the
head ot th« businessmen • organisation
ot the state. recently endotaod the
measure proposing a .N.-rmal School at
Pendleton in a resolution, giving the
following reasona
"We believe that Pastern Oreg >n 1»
r.«sonable in Its demands that such a
school be located east ot the C m . ad»
mi úntalos, hence »• r*ci.mtn»ud II*
location at let.Jletun as the moat Icgl
cal for the following reasons
"First. It Is a city of some six«, ha»
Ing an enrollment of over 1.000 grad*
pupils.
"Second. Pendleton Is very aee»»«1
bl«, having over twenty paaaenv
trains each day from five directions
"Third. Its location la as near ccn
tral as could bo expected, making It
easy of access at a moderate cost to
the students
"Fourth. It la our understanding
that th« cltlaeM of I’cndleton propcs*
to donate a very favorable alt» for th
school
"Fifth. many ether advantages are
A
good
public
library.
several
| -hurcbea. pure waler and a live. Int< I
llgent community that will take prtdv.
la th« progress ot the school.'*
<1
W hen in town do not fail to call at our etore,
where you will always find a good line of staple
metchandiae to select from Our prices ar« the
lowest and our go<xls the b*at
M • tek* eggs and butter in exchange and pay
th« highest price fur eame.
!
M-ke our store your Headquarters.
F. Prochaska
J
!
SCIO, OREGON
*
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