Image provided by: Scio Public Library; Scio, OR
About The Scio tribune. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1919-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 10, 1924)
f. ' e S • Fv e* > i - ■* '.•**!■ ■ * wk ’ -r t~ ■ * ' •»«* • • -i: ‘ I", 1 < ’r >’ '* •» •' -,?7* A Rat That Didn't ^m*l1 After Being I>*od for Thr** Month* I "I «*w" wa»4m4UwwaMtk»." *r»« Mi J. VrUatX l>. ' ta-ltaiilmi, in ret was ■ • bami MaaUoWwmot, wy ti»«*» I tke ton*« TV.— H *•» ■* ■U> la Ou— • I-« >W. SX. »I JS. Md tad s«M«*i«ni by Kelly’s Drug Store. Scio, Oregon. Capona F.ggs Veal Hog> Poultry 40 years in the busi ness qualifies us to give you prompt, efficient service and get you highest prices. Write us. PAGE & SON, Portland, Oregon I mi H5|>AY. Jan 10, 1924 ’ Ott?oii Mi<!« Ham» ImltlM -------- not knowing it and aometimes wil the two headlines to this stnrv is a fully. We think something ought difference of ten years in point of I time. to be done along thia line. The dairy output of the slate increased 46 per cent in the decade. George Parker paid the penalty Oregon bought 4 million pounds last Friday st the state penitentiary of butterfat a year at the beginning for the murder of Sheriff Dunlap ■ of the decade, according to f«-deral last May It is said an effort will census rep >rta She supplied all be mads to repeal the death penalty | her needs and had million pounds by referendum vote at the May ! to sell outside at the end of it. primaries. We hope this will not Oregon has proved that it is a carry. If the attempt is made, unless there be a safeguard thrown around I great dairy state, capturing most of the proceedings prohibiting pardons the high production honors and or any other freedom for those holding many of the work! champ- convicted of murder. Without the i ions aa breeding slock. Query: If death penalty, every one convicted i this increase in output goes on as of murder would have hope« of the cows, feed« and climate favor, I eventual freedom, if nothing is how is the ever increasing surplus * to I* sold ? j provided to keep the murderer in solitary confinement. Dr. E. H-1 The best answer will be Sought Hobson, formerly of Scio, was c n«- at the agricultural economic confer ence to be held at the state college of the atU-nding physic ans. Jan. 23 to 26. A great surprise for the home knitter* of Orvgm. but still a fact. Further- ( more, this yarn is absolutely virgin wool yarn; the wool was grown In Linn rounty, sold by Mr. Senders to the Un AoQl’AlNTANCE has a good deal to gun Worst«*! Company (milb located st do with our community life. With Sellwood), made into worsted yarn by out knowing one another, we seldom Roy T. Bishop, son of C. I*. Bishop, proprietor of the Woolen Mill Store of A -«cistion Membership No. 6011 do business with each other. Th«- propoiied federation of <• n.’> .• ti Salem. Oregon knitters try this varn out. All colors. 4.«- per ball of 2 ozs ! clubs is the drive wheel of commun ERA JUST ARRIVED Samples sent on application. Add»«-. <• ity interests and will work wonders C. F. iHshop, Box 7ft, Salem, Oregon. Will the United State* slop build in the growth of Linn county and ing motor cars, ck-se ut> its factor- each community. The more we it« and return to horse-drawn ve know each other the better we Will hicles? feel toward our community and man DR. A. G. PRILL Abiurd question! Yet there is kind in particular. We will learn I PMüciai asi Soncoi only one alternative; if we are not thus to circulate our dollars in our to lose the economic and social be- own county and thus keep the whirls Calle Attended nefits of motor transportation, we of industry moving the year around, Hay or Night must supply roads upon which the and each of us will be that much richer. Cooperation is spreading all power vehicles may run. It is impossible to M-pcrate the over the country, and it is good that water from the wave, the gold from Linn county is one among them. E. H. Hobson M. D. the bracelet, or the track from the locomotive. It is equally impossible Hollywood is again in the lime Physician and Surgeon t<> asperate the road from the truck, light. This time it la an attempt Salem, Oregon or the ¡»aassnger car from the high at murder by the chauffer of Malx-I Hank of t'ommcrcv Building Office Phone 1.*». Re«. Phone PJtiHW way. They are halves of a whole; Normand on the person of a man transportation is never vehicle alone, named Dines. Until the stars and or highway alone; it is both together. near stars of the motion picture Our roads were planned and built industry purge themselves of the for a means of transportation which odiousneas of their acts, the public is gone. The earliest highways will soon become tired of patron STAYTON. - - • OREGON were for horse riders, the stage ising them. It is just aa easy to Calls answered bay or Night coach came next, after which we keep morally clean aa debauched, Tuberculin Testing had the buggy and the wagon. The1 and a whole lot better. narrow road, the steen grade, the I soft surface were aU admiseablo for Again have the Albany patters be these; none of them are economic come entangled in an editorial war. for the swift and powerful motor. The management of both patters We have ’’improved" our high are evidently sane enough to realize Fresh and Cured Meat way* some of them —and widened that the public does not care an Bacon— Lard - Sausage a few, but we still build a road with1 iota about tiie personal difficulties We buy your Veal and the idea that it will "last" but al of the editors to read the stuff. Dressed Hogs few years, and need "constant re-i Let each attend to giving the news pairs." We still build in widths and the public will render sufficient Holecliek Bios , Props. predicted upon slow moving vehic-1 support to each to make their busi Seto. Ore. les. and we still wind our highways ness a paying one up hill and down dale and around devious curve« tiecause it is "easi The happiest people we know est" and "cheapest’’ so to do. day are the ones who hsve but Ths*, era is gone! The new one eenlly installed the electric line to Such as Ham, Sausage, Roasts is fairly h«-re. We must either build their homes in the country. Thev —served cold. etc., always our roads for our modern vehicles, ! claim they are now in the light, make a welcome meal for a or «ciap motor transportation. As when before they were in the dark. hungry man. Order from us if the latter is unthinkably absurd, it And we rejoice with the Cracker you would be pleased. m < ms logical to believe that the era Neck folks and West Scio. of the wide, expensive, permanent, hard surface road is here. WHttJt the cold weaher is with us and wr have nothing else to do. SCIO, OREGON W k >fti-n wonder if the politician, so to speak. Is a good time to enroll <>r of.. u-eker, really feels down your name on our subscription list deep in his heart that he is for the —you will tnus gel the news of your W. A. Ewing. T. J. Munkcrs, He may when he is a can community and keep posted on what President Vice Pre«. people E. I). Myers, Cashier didate. but after election the action is going on at home. The price is I.« reverse. Seldom is a law benefi SI.76 per year. cial to the people passed. and if one is. it is a<> worded that the supreme A couple wii married in the dome Court can declare it illegal. There Does a (renerai Banking of the alate capitol the other day. BusinctM. Interest ¡»aid is a growing belief among the electo Probably aa near heaven there aa on time deposita. rate that too many lawyers are in they ever will be during married life our law-making bodies, hence the laws are made so that lawyers will The firm of Nelson & Rsv. pub have more business, thus adding to Real Kiialt Broker lishers of the Junction City Time«, the coat of living and litigation. A and Notara Public has been dissolved, Mr. Nelson tak good plan would be to repeal all ing over Mr. Rev’s interests. yi tal ratti Obtained. ¿lamined laws now on the statute booka, and jClO - - « OREGON pass laws more in keeping with the Ten Commandments—there would Butter Wanted—Oregon Hall's Catarrh Medicine be so few laws then that none of us Butter To Sell— Oregon TMe who ar« tn a "run-«town • eoi.ti. would be law breakers and not know Uon will nolle« «hat I'atarrh bothera then, much mor* than when th*y ar* In «—»I From buying nearly b million Today every person breaks some beam. TMe fact pre**« that whti« it. Cstarrlt Is a local SI smiim . tt Is «rnatty on«- <>r more laws and does not know pounds of butter in 1910 Oregon WA u aarwd by constitutional ».nSttma« Mtt.i.w catarnm wrnit tvr i. a Even stepped into the butter selling class CWmMned Trmtawnt. both local and la- it until haled into court t*mal. aiwt has be*n ful in th* some of our law enforcement offi with a surplus of nearly 3 million sa 1WW. The ddf cers are law breakers. G. F. Korinek Veterinarian Scio Meat Market ; J Í Cold Meats SHELTON BROS.. The Scio State Bank Riley Shelton I The Scio Tribune Editorials Page 2 » •*, Nette« il Fiati SittlHiHt Net» 1 i» Hereby Glven That thè un>¡ersi k ned a-lministrator of thè estate ■ >f II I Cary. .ieceascd, hai filed in thè - dv Court Lino Couuty, Oregon . t ■■ 1 thè Judgs of sa»d ( ,,urt >»• fixed thè 11 ih dav of Febru- ¡MS "( l :'JU o'clock p. m s* thv lime for heanrur objectiona, if »'<>. to ssid Amai account and thè set Ile meri! thi-reof. Alì persona hsvtng and interest in «aid r*t»t< are bereby notiAed lo be and ap- I .. tn sai-' Court at said lime lo show e. il «nv. why said Anal accori ni «OouM noi be allówed and aaid estate •ettled. bau i this 24th day of Oecember, isrzs. Frank G. Carv. Adn In.tralor of estate of H J. Gary, deceased Weatherford A Wyatt, Att-r • v« for Administrator Albany, Oregon. 2t>-ftt On Mi« M nd Motori«’ Vea. It took me about «It week«' hard work to learn to tirile luy n>a<-hlnr. I’e-te-trian And what have you for your paitiaf , Motorist—Llnlm« nt-—Ix>n<i.>o A» suers. CORN F/’ in need of CORN. I If “/ • now and save money. We will have • e«r ot rday, J»n. 12th, and will ■-« II in 100 ¡V u I qicka at $37.00 per ton in ton lots at W- t bring sacks. flJti less if you