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About Hubbard enterprise. (Hubbard, Marion County, Or.) 191?-19?? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 25, 1921)
LOCAL AND PERSONAL FAMOUS LAST WORDS be very moderate. Adults 25 cents FATHER AND SON SERVICE v. and children under twelve years 15 AT METHODIST CHURCH Following the basket ball game cents. I wonder i f i t ’s loaded. I ’ll look last Friday night the boys team and Sunday evening will be observed j down the barrel and see.” some o f the girls gathered at the ‘ ‘ They say these things can ’t pos On Monday o f this week Mrs. | as - a Father and Son service at the h om e'of Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Scholl Judith Miller o f Portland, formerfy Methodist church to which all are in sibly explode, no matter how much to enjoy an impromptu cup o f cocoa o f Aurora, died at the Good Samar vited. A general invitation is ex you throw them around. ’ ’ • and sherbet. Music and games were itan hospital “ I wonder whether this rope will in Portland, after a tended to the fathers o f the city to enjoyed by those present. short illness. The deceased had been attend with their sons. There will hold my weight.” “ I t ’s no fun swimming around in in this city not over two weeks since I be several short addresses by Hub-1 The little two year old son o f Mr. visiting with her brothers Messers bard citizens which promise >to be j here. I ’m going out beyond the life Consider yourself in lines. ’ ’ and Mrs. Ben Casto bumped his George and William W olfer. Mrs. interesting. “ Which one o f these is the third head in a fall recently and the bruise Miller was widely known in this part vited. For the morning sermon tfie developed an abscess, which was o f the valley, and are sorry indeed to subject will be “ The Resurrection.” rail, anyw ay?” ' “ That firecracker must have gone The funeral Sunday sch o o l' at 10. You are lanced last Saturday afternoon. The learn o f her death. ou t.' I ’ll light it again. ’ ’ little fellow stood the affair much services were held Thursday after ■welcome. “ Watcli me skate out past the better than many o f his elders may, noon at the old Miller home in Au ‘ Danger’ sign. I bet I can touch it .” and seems to be getting on all right. rora. More\ complete news will be_ “ These traffic policemen think they given next week. Fish’s Nest in a Clam Shell. own the city. They can ’t stop me. Clark W ill was an arrival in Hub Tile goby (of which there are many I ’m going to cross the street now. bard last Monday evening from kinds) selects the clean valve of a Bremerton, where he has been work FINEST OF EARTH’ S CHURCHES clam and uses this as the ready-made Let the chauffeurs look out fo r me. ’ ’ “ What a funny noise that snake ing in the electrical supply depart nest. The pair (for the goby mates ment at the navy yard since return Men of Genius Through Many Cen with but one and is jealous of any makes, I think I ’ll step on him.” “ I ’ve never driven" a car in traffic ing from overseas; resigned that job rival) hover round an inverted valve turies Aided in the Erection before. But they say i t ’s perfectly and came home to help lpok after a f and then the male scoops out the sand of St. Peter's at Rome. from underneath it, forming a cavity, simple. ’ ’ fairs; just to keep busy Clark says ‘ ‘ I think I ’ll mix a little nitric acid The history of St. Peter's at Rome, the shell being slightly tilted and he is going to help at the Enterprise one of the world’s most interesting pressed into the sand. The female with this chloride o f potassium and office, which is good news to us. Dorthy Parker edifices, goes back over a thousand, then enters the cavity and deposits see what happens. years, for it was on this spot, the site her eggs on the lower (inner) surface in Life. Mr. David W olfer o f Liberal was of Nero’s circus, within walls ornate of the shell. These eggs are some in town several days this week visit with gold and glistening with mosaic what cigar-shaped structures, fixed at ing his brothers, William and George and marble, that Charlemagne received oiie end by a glutinous network that “ 91” CHRONICLES W olfer. He also spent some time the crown of Imperial Rome from Pope secures them firmly to the shell. Hav with his sister Mrs. Christina Stauf- Leo III., and here was slowly erected ing done her work, the female then ex Miss Cordie Wiegand is spending fev, being’ at the Stauffer farm dur throughout subsequent centuries this changes plaees with the male, who the week with relatives in Portland. ing the sale on Thursday morning. building, called the central cathedral remains on guard, keeping up a con Miss May Hostetler is staying at Mr. W olfer is as optimistic as ever of Christendom. All that man could stant current of water over the eggs do to make St. Peter’s great and beau by movements of the pectoral fins, the home o f Mr. and Mrs. Sam Egli. concerning the progressive develop tiful has been lavished upon that and darting out at the approach of an Mr. and Mrs. John Gahlor were ment o f this section o f the valley. 'splendid church. Mme. de Staël said intruder. dinner guests at the A. L. Headings of. it,. “ C’est le seul travail de l’art home last Sunday. Bert dcLespinasse came home sur notre terre actuelle ÿ qui ait le W ednesday^aftem oon to stay over Sunday. Bert is working with the Northwest Steel o f Portland. He reports that the company laid off a good many men during the past week. Also that he has been one o f the fo r tunate ones being still on the regular force. W e arc glad fo r Bert. He says “ home is the best place when a fellow has a cold.” The Pythian Sisters will hold their High Jinks on March 1st, Tuesday evening, at 8 o ’clock at the City hall. Remember the good time you had at their former High Jinks. This one will be as frolicsome as any that have gone before. Entrance fee will genre de grandeur qui characterise les oeuvres immédiates de la crea tion.” ' (It is the sole work of art on our earth which has the sort of noble ness that characterizes the works of nature.) Marion Crawford puts one’s first impression of St. Peter’s in a nutshell when he says, “ The first sight of St. Peter’s affects one as though in every day streets, walking among one’s fellows, one should meet with a man forty feet high.” - While the interior decorations have been. criticized as being too profuse —ran American tourist once referred to them as “ too much gingerbread” — that great roof covers the work of some of the most renowned sculptors of the world. Rubber Shoes Life Savers. A fact which is prqbably only slight ly known is the immunity from.the at tacks of lightning which is afforded by wearing a pair of rubbers. The person who assumes these cov erings must be careful not to come in contact with anything except the floor. Providing he follows this instruction he can not possibly be injured by the lightning in any way. The explanation' is simple enough. The electric fluid before it can pass in to a human being or animal must first come in contact with the earth. Its passage from the earth to the wearer of the rubbers is, of course, lopped by the soles of the latter. So next time a storm is brewing hurry up and get out your rubbers. M r. and Mrs. Frank Hilton o f Hanby were dinner guests at the Ed. Hilton home last Monday. Mrs. Alvie Deetz and baby Ray mond were guests at the Charles Knutson home in Canby a few days the first o f the week. Mrs. E. J. Bell is employed as nurse for Mrs. 'Katie Beck, who is sick with pneumonia at the -home o f her brother, about four miles north o f Aurora. Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Deetz are be ginning to .enjoy the comforts o f a modern home, having just finished in stalling the water system in connect ion with the electric light. WASHINGTON, OUR WASHINGTON 0 Washington, our Washington! again the rounding year Brings back to us thy natal day, which ever grows more dear. Aye, more j and more we reverence thee, thou who didst build so well. The story o f thy matchless deeds sire unto son will tell. 0 Washington, our Washington! we see thee kneeling there, Amidst the snows o f Valley Forge, with hands upraised in prayer. The God o f Battles heard thy call and succor to thee sent. Through all those weary, anxious years his angel with thee went. 0 Washington, our Washington! be thou ou r guiding star. As thou didst lead us in the past, still lead us from afar; Still Father o f thy Country be, guard and protect thy land; And may the ship o f state e ’er feel thy wise and steadfast hand. 0 Washington, our Washington! on blue Potom ac’s shore Thy body lies in endless.sleep, at rest forevermore. But thy great soul lives on and on; more glorious grows thy fam e; And millions yet unborn will add their praises to thy nama •— Townsend Allen. Giant Eels. It is said there are eels no one can land. Some years ago a giant conger was caught in shallow water off the shores of England. It measured 8 feet 8 inches in length and weighed 148 pounds. Congers half’ that size have been known to bite a man’s hand in two and to have driven their teeth through the blade of an oar. In 1913 Kakanamsku, the champion swimmer of Honolulu, was attacked by a giant eel, which dragged him under , water, apd held him there for nearly two minutes. He escaped at last, but at the cost of a finger from his right hand. Eels attain an immense size in the rivers of New Zealand and have been known to attack bathers. In fact, many cases of drowning have been proven to be where eels have dragged the bathers beneath the surface of the water. VISIT BUSICK at WOODBURN We have opened a store for the convenience of the people of this community. We are here to sell you Groceries as cheap or cheaper than any place in the northwest. Bring your list to Busicks at W oodburn and be convinced. Present this ad and we will allow you 2 5 c on any size order. J. L. BUSICK & SONS L a rg e st R e ta il G r o c e r s in O r e g o n O u ts id e o f P o r tla n d W oodburn Salem Albany Corvallis