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EtUtnrial»
Page 2
Curtis Hop Ranch
THE SCIO TRIBUNE
Situated about six mile« North
west of Jefferson or about one and
one-half miles west of Talbot.
30 acres of hope, good camp
ground«, tent« and «hack«, table«,
bench*«, «awed wood and clean
atraw furniahed free.
Groeeriea will be delivered to camp
grounds once a day. Fresh vegeta
bles can be procured from a neigh
bor.
Picking will begin about Sept 1st
and continue about three weeks.
We will pay the prevailing price for
picking
The hop« will run about
2.000 pound« to the acre
Durbin A- Cornoyer. Salem. Ore
We are registering picker« for
thia yard at the Tril une office.
J
’
Oregon Ml H im ImlliH T wm
A great surprise for ths home knitter«
of Orvgie, but «till a fact. f urther-
mor«, this yarn is absolutely virgin
wool yarn, ths wool was grown in l.inn
county, sold by Mr. Semters to the•'re-
gon Worsted Company (mills lucatrdal
Sellwood), made into worsted yarn by
Roy T. Bishop., son of C. I*. Bishop,
proprietor of the Woolen Mill Store of
Salem. Oregon knitters try this yarn
out. All color». 46c per ball of 2 oaa
Samples sent on application. Adilr- ••
C. F. idshop. Box 76. Salem, Oregon,
Th. l»ay of the Knight i« II» KI ’
day in every way the
ts get better, their
owner« ««y.
i«r rocs ■««» i *«
*
WILLYSJUMIGHT
BANTU MOTOR CO . S-1«>. Or.
The Day of the Knight i« II» KI '
Shelton Bros
Wnuts nil your
Poultry
Will Pay Top Prices
SHELTON BROS..
St JO. OREGON
Scio Meat Market
Fresh and Cured Meat -
Bacon laird Sausage
We laiy your Veal and
Dressed Hogs
Holecliek Bi or,
Scio, Ore.
Props.
eeeeeee»*—
W. A. Kwmg.
T J Munk« •>
Prvawtcnt
Vic» l’rr«
E. I». Myer«. Cashier
Does a General Banking
Business. Interest ¡»aid
on time deposita.
Riley Shelton
Real Estate Broker
and Notary Public
^lotrath Obtained. faumtnrd
OREGON
R m H1R12
B us I iwm 117
Notary
Public
H. C. ROLOFF
Auctioneer
iUcur. your date early
Tut rkda Y. Aug. 2. 1923
ALL OUR CHILDREN MUST
HAVE A DECENT CHANCE
Two children are bom aide
by side, free and equal. One
within the city limit«, the other
just across the imaginary cor
poration line. The one will go
to school in the city in a mod
ern, well-heated, well-ventilat
ed school building under the
direction of many profession
ally trained teachers for nine
months in the year. The other
I may go to a little, ramshackle,
one-room school, poorly heated
and lighted, insanitary, and
breathe into his nostrils vile
contagion
from
the dirty
floors; taught by one uncouth,
mediocre teacher, who has 35
recitations per day with less
than nine minutes per recita-
' tion, for a period of only five
or six months in the year. The
one has Sunday schools, soci
ety, hears good preaching and
is constantly in touch with all
the broadening influences of
the entire country. The other
lives like a terrapin, sticks out
his head, looks about and goes
back into his shell to live his
narrow existence.
Where these conditions are
found there is often an es-
tranged feeling which exists
between the people of the
cities and the people of the
rural districts. Such sections
ought to have one board of ed-
urntion, and one superintend-
ent of schools to administer
justly, fairly and equally to all
of its citizens, both within and
without the city.
It is difficult for us to under-
stand how some people now
fight the building of roads,
schools and churches with the
excuse that their tax burdens
are greater than they can bear.
If it is necessary* to double,
triple or quadruple your taxes
today in order to give your
children a decent chance to
■ live a full and happy life, then
\ then* is no way by which you
can sidestep the issue.
GLARING HEADLIGHTS
Proper Protection!
Our lines of furnishing*, for men. women
and children, is the best we can buy. and
we believe you are receiving proper protec
tion in price and quality when you come
here. Our lines include hosiery, work and
die.s shirts, ties, collars, etc. etc. Look
elsewhere, get prices, and we know you
will buy here.
On the face of the opinion as
rendered by Attorney General
VanWinkle, school patrons of
districts of the third class, r.«’h
as Scio, will have no nay in its
budget If the county tax super
vision and conservation commis
sion wishes to levy enough taxes
to keep the district up to stand
ard and out of debt, then it will
be worth while and the law ben
eficial, otherwise the law in bad
and taken away local autonomy.
For freak laws and an abridge*
ment of freedom, thin law taken
the concrete toothbrush.
We are in the marKet for chittim bark, and
are paying the going price. Get your sup
ply of sacks here, 3|c each.
J. F. WESELY, Grocer
All this talk aliout curtailing
production on the farm in order
to bring about a reasonable price
for the produce is the bunk. If:
returns from the labor on the
farm are not soon equalized, no
farmer will be able to produce
he will be broke. Agitation for
greater production with a remun
erative price is both reasonable
and practicable. The farmer is
not a seeker for charity in the
way of subsidies he wants and
is entitled to the fruits of his,
labors, nothing more
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦esse»»
- want vom Cascara or
Chittim Bark, and have
the price to get it.
Parties having large lots will not
make a mitake in seeing us before
selling. We are in the market to
BUY.
No girl ever loved a man so
much that she didn't try to find
out how much the engagement
ring cost.
Sc io Mill & Elevator Company
Hunks of ice seem just as
small in the summer as tons of
coal look in the winter.
Notice !
DAIRYMEN
Notice ia hereby given that in ac
cordance with a petition filed in the
County Court of Linn County. Ore
gon, School District« Ten and Seven-
ty-aix are hereby declared a «pedal
weed contWol district for the purpose
af the eradication and ci nt rol of the
Canada Thistle, and that Anton
Faltu« ha« been appointed weed in
•pector for «aid district.
Dated thi« 2Nth dav of July.l!*23
B. M. I' aynk : County Judge.
D. C. T homs . County Com'r.
I
J. D. IsuM. County Com’r.
Who sell their whole milk gef
get paid for every
ounce of butterfat produced by the cow. No
I loss
om from poor or worn out separators.
se|*aratora. Why
Whv
be burdened with the drudgery of turning
and washing a separator when you can
cun save
money besides time and work.
Oregon Milk Company
Condenaery, Scio, Oregon
Mrs. Jess Rodgers entertained a
numlier of friend« at her home Tues
day evening in honor of Mr Rod
ger«* eouain. Mrs Rernice Wooten
of Phoenix, Anz
A delightful
evening waa «i«ent at cards and oth
er amusement«.
And what has become of the
old fashioned car driver who
The t'aacara market is «how ing a
used to dim his glaring head
wonderful come-back from the «lump
lights when passing another
that began in 1920 and reached the
auto? Two or three years ago
low level in 1M1 and 1922
The
huge sums of money were spent
market today «hoars the greatest
in buying new lenses which
activity known in the history of the
were supposed to prevent
business with the exception of the
glare. Every car had to be
I boom period following the war.
equipped with the new lenses,
The peeling season extends well to
and it certainly sounded like a
ward the emi of September.
sensible idea. It worked satis
The field man for the Oregon Co-
factory to a degree, but the
ooerative
Grain Growers was in
idea seems to have been lost
Scio
last
week
and made arrange
sight of. Headlights are more
ments
with
the
Scio
Mill A Elevator
glaring than ever, and the cus
Co.
to
handle
the
Association
wheat;
tom of dimming has become a
also
to
furnish
the
sack«
to
the
lost art.
members.
Thi«
will
he
good
news
The way it is now, when two
cars pass at night, there is a to the membership, we believe.
certain space during which the
Mr. and Mrs J. D Ih namore and
drivers can only hope that they Mr. and Mr«. Erank Robinson and
are on the road, or that no ob- daughter of Salem drove to Forest
tacle is directly in front of Grove Sunday and visited It*« Ma
them. It seems to ths Tribune
i
The Scio Tribune
that the laws regarding head
lights should be strictly enforc
ed. There seems to be no
reason why the cars should not
be equipped with lights which
will not blind the driver of an
approaching car.
And the
courtesy of dimming might also
be revived with no harm result
ing.
_____________
♦
:
Lumber
Rough and Plain
1. 4, 6, 8 and !<• inch, jier thousand
2. 4. H, 8, 10 and 12 inch, per th«»usand............
1. 12. 14. all legal. |»-r thousand
All sized chargt-d
more
14.00
14.00
16.00
Hrudka Mill & Lumber Co
On the Wain place
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