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About Hubbard enterprise. (Hubbard, Marion County, Or.) 191?-19?? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 25, 1921)
HUBBARD E N T E R P R I SE. sbuTids vfffy'niuch like he either wants PUBLISHED E V E R Y FR ID A Y to play the ponies or run a joint o f I L. C. McSHANE, Editor that kind at the fairs or is willing to be the tool fo r some one who does. Entered at the Postoffice in Hubbard Gambling and gamblers have never I Oregon, as Second Class Matter been an asset to any institution and Subscription . .„ ...$ 1 .5 0 in Advance it is well the race track gambling was \ Paid at End o f Year $2.00 put out o f business. Member Oregon State'Editorial Assn. National Editorial Assn. Oregon Newspaper Conference Friday, February 25, 1921 “ I pledge my allegiance to my flag, and to the republic fo r which it stands, one nation indivisible, with liberty and justice to all.” YOUR HOME TOWN OPION IS BEST i 9 HIGH SCHOOL NOTES ____ END OF MONTH SPECIALS FINISH another successful month we are giving T 0 values that will mean enormous savings to you. Come and bring your family with you. At a student body meeting lash Friday afternoon it was decided by | Ladies white waists, embroidered and Olympic Hard Wheat F lou r....................... $2.65 a unanimous vote to give,, some time Crown Flour................................................... 2.75 beautifully trimmed, sizes 40 to 50 in the future, a play for the benefit White Cap Hard Wheat Flour, Our own o f the H. H. S. student body. A regular $2.50................................................$ .98 brand................................................................. 2.19 committee was appointed b y th e ! Best quality gingham Bungalow aprons, Victory Flour ............................................... 1.89 president to chose a commercial farce ! nicely trimmed....................................... 98 20 lbs. White Beans.. ............................... 1.00 which would be best suited for the* 27 inch Gingham................................... 19 10 IBs. Rice................................................... 50 occasion. 32 inch fine Dress Gingham............... 29 10 "lbs. Oatmeal........................................... 55 Mr. E. S. McCormick accepted the 10 cans, No. 2y2 Standard T om a to e s .... 1.00 Apron check: Gingham,and Calico, best position as coach, offered him by 9 cans M ilk................................................... 1.00 quality in light and dark......................... 14 the students/ The secretary was in 9 cans Peas................................................... 1.00 Flannels, 8 yards..................................... '.. 1.00 structed to send fo r , the copies as 30c Coffee in bulk,'SV^Ibs........................... 1.00- soon as the committee reported for Table Damask, 60 in. wide, fine 40c Peaberry coffee, 4 lbs........................... 1.00 action. As a result,. ’ ’The Prairie mercerized, y ard ................ 65 Best ground Chocolate in bulk............... 24 R ose” will be shown in the city o f f 40, in. Turkish towels, heavy weight, 19 bars Crystal White soap....................... 1.00 Hubbard, County o f Marion, State o f ; Special. . ................................................... 25 No. 10 Karo Syrup................................... 65 Oregon, within a short time. 220 weight Overalls, Elastic Suspenders, Net 5 ff>s Lard in bulk .„ , ...... .................... 1.00 On March 2nd, in the High school Size 38 add up, very special.............. 95 5 lbs. shortening, bring your pai l . . . . . . 70 auditorium .the representative^ o f the Soda or Oyster Crackers........................... 15 Heavy weight work shirts. . . ___ . . . . . 79 Hubbard Hi Live W ires and the rep- ¡ resentatives o f the Kappa Delta Pie literary societies will clqsh for cham pionship honors in the regular monthly debate, taking as their sub Special weight, 10 qt. galvanized p a il.. .35 ject Resolved: that Single Tax is* V ery large assortment o f remants, finest more beneficial than our present ¡ Gray and blue granite wear go at half price grade o f white goods. Some were as high system. The affirmative side- will be ! firoehet. thread.....................................................10 as 50c a yard. A ll go at one price per yd. .15 upheld by Virginia Zehner and Sewing thread.............................................. .05 Gladys Tremayne. Opposed to them I A ll Ginghams in remnants will go at Best quality hair ribbons, flowered and on the negative will be Sidney, Jor- plain, per y d ............................................... .25 per yd...................... .............................................. 15 dan and Theoda Gribble. ' This de-1 bate will be held in the evening and the High school hereby extends a cordial invitation to the citizens o f Hubbard and the patrons o f the school to attend' the ceremony a n d ! learn something on the subject of| Single Tax. Friday evening, Feb. 18, the fast i W e refund your fare within a radius o f 25 miles. One-half on purchas o f $15 dry goods Hubbard quintet went down to de and full fare on $25 purchase in dry goods. feat at the hands o f the faster W ood- burn prep'hoopers. The local gym - 1 nasium was packed full o f spectators j and seating capacity was taxed to the R limit. The score was 16 to 7. On j Saturday evening the W oodbum j team plays McMinnville and the WOULD H A V E AUTOS ELOW UP winner will go to Salem to represent I Under our own methods w e treat the district. • Hubbard, Oregon, Feb. 24, 192.1 While our defeat was bad it is , To the.. Members o f the City Council, S P E C IA L L Y , V | wjiat we will do\tO Mil- {•' H u h fe w i ? HEMORRHOIDS, ' " yWnftng Friday.'pA s this ■ without operation, and Rectal Diseases ís'.wie last game o f the season we a r e ! W e are writing to protest against determined to win. A good game is the condition o f the ‘ ‘ Go Slow ” Clinical Gynecology, promised,. Everybody come. signs north and south o f the school- B asem ent Specials There is something the matter with the man who doesn’t care fo r the place he lives in ; who doesn’t come back to it with some degree o f rap ture and relief. The world citizen who' boasts that all, places are alike to him, that any place where he hangs his hat is home, misses one o f the first and strongest incentives to decency and duty—which is the de sire to win the general esteem and good opinion o f the community in which one dwells. No reward in money compares in value with the golden treasure o f’ a good repute. I f a man cheats and lies and steal's and bears false witness, he may build up a great fortune and still be plagued at flight with the knowledge that those about him hold a low opin ion o f his worth and works. Dr. Eliot, o f Harvard, has told us that it is the favorable opinion o f a man’s home town that is worth earning and retaining. One. o f the neighbors É fe á ^ g J a e wrong *s*»t if i° auju^B^ion 0f what many are say,ro/ we probably shall arrive at a just estimate. #:v Merely to live in a place doesn’t house on the Pacific Highway. As make one a citizen. Your heart will SOPHOMORE you may know the letters have been be where your work has been put in The'mew Sophomore pennant smiles worn off by the weather since they to help forward any good thing that is going. O f course, one must be true down from its place o f, honor on the have been put up. This being the to the immediate fam ily circle and assembly room wall. The public is case should an accident occur, no one look well to the rooftree and the cordially invited to come to inspect could be held responsible. W e ,d o not know who is supposed dooryard o f on e’s own household first The Sophs unanimously agree that to keep up the signs nor to whom else o f all. But that intimate indoor de votion, commendable as it is, may the Freshmen are royal entertainers. | we could protest. But trust that you becomes a selfish sentiment. that They will undoubtedly make noble are .interested enough in the protec tion o f the children to take some takes no thot for the measures o f ¡Sophomores. public welfare in whose benefit we all Our English class submitted Mon action. Yours respectfully, share. Fault-finders stand ready day to one o f its periodical checking The Pupils o f the Eighth Grade: with harsh censure and snap judge off o f back themes from Miss St. Lois Rawles, Rudolph Kreofsky, ment upon what the toilers are do Pierre’s black list. Grace Kunkle, Marvin Zehner, ing. The toilers are too busy doing Eda Schwabhauer has left school. the work o f the fault-finders. They We áre sorry to loose one o f our Vernon Keane, Melvin Mishler, Alice Zehner, Ivan Emmert,- Geodge Em- caimot stop to explain. What every class members. mert, Nathan Kromling, Amy Fish. plantation o f human beings is in need Gladys Tremayne, one o f our class of, i f it is to flourish, is. a group o f members, is to represent us in the men who love others better than they big final debate between the two love their own ease and quiet and literary societies. ’ The date o f this Contracts for more than half a who spend themselves in unselfish event has not been definitely decided. million dollars’ worth of road work, endeavor. No man gets the name o f Do the Sophomores like B otany! including construction of six bridges civic patriot by doing things simply and the laying of 15 miles of pavement, for himself. He must serve the pub Ask Floyd. Speaking o f Botany— How old is were ordered entered into by the state lic interest in the general good, not highway commission following the his own pocket; while the range o f Miss St. Pierre? opening of bids upon the proposed his own charity may cover the whole Count her rings. work. Bids on many other jobs were world, it should, in the homely W ho has gone crazy over basket phrase, "c o m e home to roost” in his ball | Surely no Sophomore! ! ! How I opened and rejected, and a second ad vertising of the work ordered. own town. — Philadelphia P u b l i c about it Vesta? Charles J. Schnabel, prominent at Ledger. torney of Portland, was shot in the SENIOR back and fatally wounded by Joseph GAMBLING BILL K ILLED Did you miss the Senior news last C. Poeschl, an ex-client, as he was week ? Explanation:— the 'editor had about to enter an elevator on the the measles. The Senior English third floor of the court house. He Senators Staples and Eddy lead class is taking a review o f grammer. died in an ambulance on the way to the fight against the race track Melvin Newton is absent from j a hospital. Fancied grievances against gambling bill in the senate Tuesday the lawyer, harbored for more than morning. The bill was killed. While school this week. the bill was introduced by M cFar Miss St. Pierre.— (in history) How ten years by Po»schl, furnished the motive for the killing. land o f the house as a state fair was the first train run ? board measure, ; Senator Staples! Gladys.— Off two rails. of Ohio, City of Toledo, asserts that three o f the five mem-; These bright sunny > days have j State Lucas County, ss. bers o f the board were against it. caused Mr. McCormick to give th e ! Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is senior partner of the Arm of F. J. He declared it was a step backwards High school one hour and twenty, Cheney & Co., doing business in the City and he .would not stand fo r that, i minutes noon. His reason is to pre of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said Arm will pay the sum of Senator Eddy, said it was ‘ ‘ one o f j vent the spread o f spring fever. The ONE H U N D R E D D O LLAR S for each the most audacious things ever in - : boys play baseball and the girls play | and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of H A L L ’S C A T A R R H troduccd into the Oregon legisla- j other kinds o f games. M ED IC IN E. F R A N K J. C H E N E Y. Sworn to before me and subscribed in ture. ” Senator Dennis feared they The Seniors are still busy inspect my presence, this 6th day of December, A . W . G LEASO N , would ‘ ‘ prohibit the young men ing invitations. Q. E. D. I A. D. 1886. (Seal) Notary Public. down until there is no red-blooded H all’s Catarrh Medicine is taken in ternally and acts through the Blood on sport left fo r them, ’ ’ and he feared Mucous Surfaces of the System. Send Have a Maxwell touring car in the making ‘ ‘ mollycoddles o f the young tor testimonials, free. F . J. C H E N E Y & CO., Toledo. O. good order to trade fo r stock. In men o f today.” Sold by all druggists, 76c. 46-4.1 H all’s Fam ily f ill s for constipation. The expression o f Senator Dennis quire at this office. PEOPLES CASH STORE 2 Stores in Salem, Oregon Look for our Back-From-Market Sale gP^f Ill DR. SCHOOR’S General Hospital and and surgical diseases of women Maternity Home Tuberculosis in its varied forms Epithelioma in all its variations without operation Edward Schoor, M . D . C . M ., Accessible Cancer Physician and Surgeon in charge W ithout the Knife HUBBARD, OREGON. Phone Main 4602 African Seeds. Sixteen hundred of seeds and plants of African fruits, vegetables, grains and flowers not common to this coun try have been sent to the United States Department of Agriculture for a test as to their adaptability to Amer ican soil as a result of a trip made by Dr. H. L. Shantz, as agricultural ex plorer. Dr. Shantz accompanied the Smithsonian-African expedition which inside a tour of interior Africa from (.'ape Town to Cairo, penetrating the Orange Free State, the Transvaal, the Kongo, East Africa, the Sudan and Egypt, with side trips to other parts of tlie continent and adjacent islands. Among the many new crops, one that is viewed with interest is a gourd two feet long, which contains two gallons of succulent seed about the size of an almond. The meat of these seeds resembles that of the but ternut in taste, and, in addition to their possibilities as a nut substitute, they are rich in oil. Many new kaffir corns and sorghums, as well as grasses, suitable for the semiarld West, as well as the pine lands of the South, some excellent new mangoes, a number of oil plants, some dry-land rice, and a large number o f grains, and grasses are among the specimens. The depart ment has found that several crops which flourish in central Africa are adapted to the southern parts of the southwestern United-. States. The Amerlcan-Egyptian cotton and Sudan grass are among the noteworthy ac quisitions as a result of previous ex peditions. C. B. CLANCEY, Florist 123 NORTH LIBERTY ST. SALEM, OREGON. More than 60 irrigation districts have been organized or are in the process of organization in this state, according to the biennial report of the state' engineer. These districts have a total area of 1,200,000 acres. V I