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About The Scio tribune. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1919-19?? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1924)
Supplement to HIE SCIO TRIBUNE Oct. 13, 1924 animals are the kangaroo and wal FOUR HUNDRED PER CENT SPREAD I able«. I think that you hav«- had a hard A Douglas county prune grower job to read my wonderful (?) writ- ' < (> c I hm 4 n letter with a shipment of Ing. so I will leave off until next • fresh prunes asking the retailer to Popular Prices adviw him how much he paid for the time. fruit and al what he would retail it. Your loving friend. John" ¡The grow<r received 3?’» cents for Women’s Misses and Childrens th«- 20 pound bo*«-«. A New England *'l>eai Mrs Roberta C lothing and I laberdashery n-taikr rvcelvvd one of the not«-« and "It's a long lime since I wrote to ! he n-plird that he purchax-d two Salem, you. but i have not forgotten you boxes of prune», that on«- box cost Oregon I am going to the Burnie high school him 85 cents and the other (1.26, anil and board in Burnie The subjects that th«- retail price would be from :» «•Xdl at the school are history, geography, 11.711 to 12.60. Dr. C. H. Bailey of Douglas county mad«- thia report to bookkeeping. business practice. En the Portland Chamber of Commerce. glish. shorthand, physics, algebra, While this inslanc«’ may be an ex WHEN IN NEED OF TRUCK WORE ON SHORT ON geometry, arithmetic, b roach treme one. it illustrates general con LONG HAULS. REMEMBER I AM ALWAYS READY We had to pass an examination ditions. Many products go to the TO DO YOUR TRUCK HAULING before going to the high school, ami consumer at such high prices that the children who got so much per natural consumption i» greatly re- I solicit your business. Licensed and bonded duced, therefore the demand for tho cent could get <150 I got the re product. It Our prices ar« resonable. published that the quired per cent ami was offered the woolen mills of th«- east hav«- raised Phone 2T money, but did not take it tiveause the prices so high that a "buyers* Your Order •trike'* has resulted; that laboring 1 left it to poorer people. iKt» and middle classes are refusing to I like the high school very much. buy wooi.-n underwear and other ar We play tennis and h-ick y. We ■■■■■BóKgSkSKSaeMaWàriMMMMSKHtSMni ticles; that they arc buying the cotton have a hockey maten every Satur lubstitut'-s and the mills arc fast los day afternoon, and I play on the ing their retail trade. Double the team. I am also learning music and business at half the profit would ket, Look Over 1 his Proposition Before Selling Elsewhere double th«- demand for agricultural like that. The salt spo<m we are sending you and other products. I will haul your hogs to Sali m market from your is » sixpence on one en«l and Tasma A. T. Powell ami two daughetrs, ranch at 25c per hundred, Sa • in weight, or 1 will nia on the other. The lines are sum«- Mrs Wm Abbott and Mr« S. Phil weigh them at West Seto and buy at 50c below Salem ot Tasmania's big rivers, including ippi. left early this morning for Cot the River Derwent at the bottom, market price. J. D. Densmore, Jr tage Grove to visit Mr Powell’s sis the Arthur in the northwest, the Gurdon on the west, and the Tamar ter. Mrs Ann Carmical. who is 93 jears of age Mrs. Carmical has on the north. The mly harm (?) done was that I lettera From Australia How is the Cole school getting just recently come from Redmond. had « «wk's hoiida. and didn't on? We heard lhal some of our Oregon, and is at the home of her have to go to school. schoolmates were married. How is d-ughter, Mrs Bell Geer. Mrs, Mary Roberta, who live« on Th«- winter is ju«t starting here, Ida and Ed.’ Has HI got an air- Several members of the local I. O. route 1. is in receipt of letters from plane yet? If he has. tell him to which at firs' w mel very queer to O F. lodge went to Albany last the children of Mr. and Mr«. L come over to Tasmania and see us me. being used to summer al this night to attend the meeting of the Chy til. who until about fo.ir years Are there anv airplanes in Oregon time of the year (May) Albany lodge and witness the work ago lived neighbors to h*r. when now? There has tu-en onlv two in in the second and tiiird degree. I go to the high school in Burme. they moved to Somerset, Tasmania, ! Tasay up this way. They took along two candidates for a distance of 7 miles from here. I Austral.» The letter* follow: Well. I must sav goodbye until j initiation. ride a bicycle and sometimes I spend ’’Dear Mrs. R »toerta: “I w h very pleaded to rective an hour practicing engineering on the next mall comes. Wishing you J. N. Weddle started a crew of your letter, which we have liven ex- the 'mangle.' that is. if I get a are all well. I am. men working east of town Monday Your loving friend. peeling for a long tune. No, I am puncture or the wheel become* puttming in new poles and repair Erna ('hytil." not crippled; fortunately the fall I loose. Sometimes 1 also have tn ing telephone lines. They are work <Erna also sends a page of her had din me no harm. I had gone to practice doctoring if I fall over and ing from the planing mill to the con work in French and shorthand, but a blacksmith living about 3 miles . skin my knees. denses y. Fred Jones has charge of 'these we cannot reproduce.—Ed.) from here to get the horse shod. It Not manv years ago rabbit« were 1 the work. was «lark when I was eotmng back . brought into Australia from England Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Gill and Mrs. and I had a bad headache. The and they nave multiplied so rapidly i Mr. and Mrs. I). C. Thoms spent D. M. McKnight and Mrs. F. L. horse was a lively one, an<! when a that they have become a great pest. Armistice Day in Salem on business, Jones attended the opening of the motorbike of which there are many Poisoning is compulsory. The rab , visiting friends, and attended the un new hospital and the chrysanthemum here) came up the road, the horse bits here are not thoee small 'cotton I veiling of the monument erected on show at the Albany Floral Co. at took fright and bolted. Of course tali»' of the (J. 8., but the Belgian the court house lawn by the War their greenhouse near Albany Sun I, being half asleep and having no hares and black rabbits that are Mothers to the memory of the he-. day. saddle, had no hope of holding on. i tamed in U. S. Occasionally a pure rues of the World War. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Hixson re The only thing 1 could do waa to white one is found here and piebalds fall off, and I did it. I lay on the are common. The skins are not turned Saturday from a week's vis- road in a dazed condition for a few worth extra much, about 3 shillings it at Neskowin, They went to Sa- November 16 minutes until some kind people pick a pound being the maximum price, lem Monday and to Portland Tuea- Good Music ed me up and took me home in a but trappers make plenty of money day where they planned to spend the At Weeely’s Hall Everybody Invited Adm. SI.00 rest of the week. side-car attached to a motor-bike. where they are plentiful. Other Shipley’s Attention! Willie D. Johnston When Your Hogs are Ready for Mar I Dance Saturday Nite