< Thursday, February 3, 1927 In the Circuit of Oregon Court of the For the County Columbia State of Alma Urie, (Plaintiff,) SUMMONS. VI. Charles H. Urie, Defendant. To Charles H. Urie: In the name of the State of Oregon you are hereby required to appear and answer the com­ plaint filed against you in the above entitled suit on or before the 12th day of March, 1927, and if you fail to answer or otherwise appear, the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint, to-wit: for the dissolution of the bonds of mat­ rimony between plaintiff and de­ fendant, and for such other and further relief as to the Court may seem just and meet. Service of this summons is made upon you by publication thereof in pursuance of an order of the Honorable J. A. Eakin, Judge of the above entitled Court, made, dated and entered on the 25th day of January, 1927, ordering such publication in the Vernonia Eagle once each week for six successive weeks, the first publication there­ of being on the 27th day of Jan-' uary, 1927, and the last public­ ation on the 10th day of March, 1927. J. Mason Dillard, Attorney for plaintiff,-—-Postoffice address 404 Failing Bldg., Portland, Oregon. J27M10 Classified Advertisement j FOR SALE—Overland six std. sedan practically new. Driven 5000 miles, A-l condition, 1927 model. Will sell for $250 and take up payments. For full particulars inquire at Eagle office. LOR SALE—Ford touring in good I condition, good tires. Will sell for $150. cash. Can be seen at the Square Deal Garage, or inquire at Eagle office. ( LOST—3 xfl truck tire and rim on Vernonia road between Pitts­ burg and Houlton. Reward, Leave at J. W. Allen’s office» St. Helens or phone 177. 1 252 PIANO MUST BE SOLD—Will sacrifice fine piano in storage near here for immediate sale. Will give easy terms to an established home. For full particulars and where it may 1 be seen, address Portland Music Co., 227-6th St. 251 Portland, Oregon, NASH CAR FOR SALE.—Inquire Frank Keith, Riverview grocery, tf. FOR SALE—1923 Ford, in A-l shape, ready to drive off. In­ quire at Hotel Vista. 24tf » 60-GALLON oil barrels, suitable for garbage or rubbish cans for sale at Gilby Motor Co., $1 each. 244 2 ACRES on river road, 3 north of Vernonia, 2 house, spring water; $300. Parker. miles room A. L. 243* LOST—Black and tan hound with some white on chest. Finder please notify Geo. Boerner, Ver­ nonia; box 827; tel. 7F25. 242* TAKEN UP—About January 1; 1 Hereford heifer, white face and a white line over shoulder; one white ring around each hind leg and white spot on left front R'«; white spot on the end of tail, Owner may have animal by pay- ing costs of advertising and board. W. M. Brown. 242* The Majestic < Gilda Gray, the American thea- tre’s most picturesque figure, who some months ago signed a con- tract to star in Paramount fea- tures, has just finished her first Film. It was adapted from “Aloma of the South Seas,” a play which enjoyed great popularity on Broad- way. The picture comes to the Majestic, Saturday night and Sun- day matinee. Feb. 5 and 6. Dorthy Mackaill and Jack Mul- hall scored a decided screen hit in their latest feature vehicle fo" First National, “Just Another Blonde,” which opened yesterday by tht Russian government, and of my duty to avenge him. The Russian gov­ at the Majestic theatre Sunday. ernment had not the least suspicion Two of the most famous animals of my activities. “I went to the garrison tewn «4 in motion pictures will be seen on the screen at the Majestic theatre, Krujevatz, and there, posing as a Rus­ Monday, when the latest Universal- sian countess, engaged in hospital Blue Streak Western, starring Jack work. I had no difficulty In scraping Hoxie, is shown. They are “Scoui” acquaintance with Colonel Repovltch. It was m.v mission to fascinate. the famous horse and “Bunk,” the whom We became friends. Before I had almost human dog, both owned I wormed out of him the secret—and he by Hoxie. In supoprt of the star trusted me Implicitly and believed me will be seen such célébrités as to be a countrywoman of his—I real­ Ena Gregory, Jack Pratt, Wm. ized that I loved him, as he loved me. Steele, Monte Montague, Clark I had never loved before. I Lad been Comstock Marin Sais and Bert De­ too hard, too selfish and too much en­ grossed In my sordid occupation. Marc. "I spent a terrible hour when I In the days when the pirates found myself face to face with my sailed the Spanish Main ancestors destiny. At lust, summoning all m.v of William Austin, who plays pride to my assistance, I won. I Wimbledon in “The Flaming For­ thought of my martyred father and est,” a Cosmopolitan production —and of the hundred thousand rubles now being shown at the Majestic then waiting for me In the pocket of the military spy, Count N----- . theatre Tuesday and Wednesday. "I knew where Colonel Repovltch “Stepping Along,” the latest kept his keys. I took them, opened First National Picture starring his safe, and extracted the model o( gun. Colonel Repovltch was on Johnny Hines, which comes to the the dlity for a week in a distant town. Majestic theatre Thursday and Fri­ When he came back the model reposed day, makes the eleventh feature safely In his safe again, and the hun­ comedy that Charles Hines has dred thousand rubles were in my own directed for his brother, Johnny, pocket. and as Director Hines swears by “The news soon leaked out. Colonel eleven as his lucky number, “Step­ Repovltch was placed on trial. Even ping Along” should prove the fun­ then nobody suspected me, except the niest vehicle to date for Comedian colonel. He knew—and he would not betray me. Instead, he simply sent Hines. me a message by a trusted orderly, to leave the country. “1 went to Vienna, where I learned he had been condemned to denth ns a spy and was to be shot as soon as the czar confirmed the sentence. Why did I place my head within the lion’s jaws again? “1 went back to Serbia because I loved him, and I felt that this trench ery. which had taken a men’s life Dy SCOTT NEWBURY away, had awakened something that had slumbered within me against m.v (Copyright >*y W Q Chapman ) knowledge. I went back to confess— but first I must see Colonel Repovltch. ASE1- Is a little green oasis amid I reached Krujevatz—you know how . the awful deserts of the war. these journeys can he arranged even ‘ The Little, neat Swiss town was In tune of war. The colonel bad not always ovustlowtag w IM j *OM been put to death, but the czar's order engaged la reconstructing what they was expected hourly. By means of my I can out of the chaos of suffering and Influence—for he hud not denounced > desolation. It was packed with Red me—I managed to secure an interview Cross nurses and ambulances, and with him in bis cell. parties of French and German sol- “When he saw me his face seemed diors who were to be exchanged. to light up. In that hour of Imminent M.v officer friend and I enjoyed the death the husk of the man had fallen sunlight together every morning, but away, revealing only the goodness of he spent his afternoons lying down the spirit. He took my hands I d Ills upstairs in his bedroom, shielded from and hade tne sit down. the light by the green shutters. He " 'Tell me how you came to do it.' was still far from strong. Hence he he said, as if he had been a father was not present late that afternoon when the Red Cross nurse made her speaking to a child. “I burst into tears. Something hard confession to me. We had noticed each other from the in me melted also, and I confessed beginning, I believe. There was some­ everything. I told him of my father’s thing striking and arresting In her occupation and his death; bow I had appearance. She was a Russian. 1 come to take up the work of espion­ discovered afterward, and. like all age; there was nothing that I did not Russians who are not peasants, was reveal. When I had ended speaking of noble affiliations. I had performed he said, gently: “ ‘At least my death will not Tiave some trifling service for her, and some­ how she came to tell me this—you been in vain If I have saved Russia the know how often we make confessions services of one of her enemies’ mast trusted agents.' to comparative strangers. “Then he spoke solemnly, because the "I am a spy, the daughter of a spy. I say ‘am,’ although I have not plied I time was very short and the warden my trade for a long time, because was growing impatient " 'I told you that I loved you, Vera,' once a spy always a spy. My father was a general In the army; he sold he said. ‘I had no suspicion of your his country's secrets. Not for himself, occupation. When I discovered that but for the benefit of the Nihilistic fra­ I you had forced the safe I felt that ternity, to which he belonged. That death would have beeD preferable to was his sense of patriotism—perverted the knowledge of the dishonor of the one woman whom I had loved and but not wholly base. “He was discovered, as In the end believed in. You took away my faith. ho wns hound to be, and put to death, Can you give It back to me?’ “ ‘Yes, I would if It were possible,’ lie left me penniless. I was then a girl of nineteen. I spied too— for a I answered, weeping. ’“It is possible, Vera,’ he answered. living. It had been suggested te me “‘How?’ I asked. that, with my advantages, I was cap­ “ ‘By telling me that you did love me able of extracting secrets from Rus­ sian army officers, always suspicion«. and were not playing a part,' said The proposnl came from the foreign Colonel Repovltch. "I fell upon my knees and told him country which my father had secretly served. I accepted It, and It put me in that I had been sincere. I had loved him Indeed, and ft had been the love possession of a comfortable Income, “For years I went up and down of a good man and the knowledge of through Russia, gathering Information, my hideous perfidy that had awakened until I had covered the land with a my soul. He listened till I had done. “ ‘I prayed for that,’ he said. ‘Now network of Intrigue. I had agents un­ der me; I was trusted absolutely by 1 can die happily, Vera. And you the foreign country I served. And then will—7 “‘I shall devote the rest of my life the war broke out. and all this devil’« to trying to atone for my past Ufe,’ I sowing came to the ripening. “Colonel Repovltch was in charge answered. “He kissed me, and then, as the of the arsenal at Krujevatz. The arse­ nal contained models of the new 25- guard was growing very Impatient, 1 centlmetcr gun which wa« to be used departed. I never saw him again. The by the Serbian and Russian force«. enemy entered the town on the second If I could procure a model of this day, and I have no doubt that he had gun, or even the ‘key’ to the breech already been shot In the citadel.” It would be impossible to exaggerate mechanism, I was to receive ■ hundred the horror on the face of tke R.d thousand ruble«, “IT was sport to me, this jesting Cross nurse as she finished speakinc. with men'« live« «nd nation«’ safety; Then I took up the tale. "You cannot be sure that he died,” and If I thought about ft seriously at all I only thought of my father, shot I answered. "Suppose, for instance. halting on his cane, and stretching himself in the warm sunshine, I called to him. ■■Repovltch 1” I cried. "Come here I "He would give himself op," she Boro Is • lady who wants to make i.rnrM with eonvteMoB. "Well, then," I resumed, “1«4 us sup­ your acquaintance." The Red Cross nurse stood still as pose that the order had not arrived. Imagine that the prison was thrown If turned to Ice. “Where Is the lady who wants to open In the face of the enemy, and that he took a rifle and fought like a meet an old cripple?” asked Repovltch. common soldier, distinguishing him­ bobbling gayly toward us. I took the nurse by the hand and self so greatly that afterward the case was reopened. Suppose—just for s led her toward him. I could feel the possibility, which can do no harm— blood throbbing fiercely In her veins "Here," I answered. Thus I left “that the truth came out Suppose he was pardoned and restored to bls them. rank In the army." She looked at me with wide eyes. Machines Employed in “What do you meant What do you Composition of Knots know?" she cried. Successful machines for tying knots “Suppose," I continued, “that he fought through the rest of that cam­ in cords, threads and the like have paign until he received a crippling been Introduced In considerable num wound, which was the cause of his ber. Knotting and tying devices for retirement on half-pay. and that he self-binder harvesting machines were left the service full of honors and brought Into extensive and successful warmly appreciated by bls royal mas­ use a good many years ago. Machines ter." for tying a species of knot in the man She grasped me by the hand. “You ufacture of tish nets have long been have heard something; you are con­ used. The girls in the cotton mills cealing something Do not keep me who tend spoolers and other kinds of In suspense!” she cried. “If you know machines which operate upon yarns anything of Colonel Repovltch, If In­ and threads wear upon one wrist, like deed he does not lie beneath the sod a wrist watch, a little machine called In the arsenal of Krujevatz, tell me. a hand-knotter, which they use in t.v Ing together, “piecing,” us it Is called for pity's sake I" At that moment my officer friend, the ends of yarns or threads which having finished his siesta, came down break in being operated upon, There the steps of the hotel, looking for me. is a rather large machine employed When he was a hundred paces away, in the weaving industry, called a TOE GAME OF A TRAITRESS Real Cause for Respect Never respect men merely for their riches, but rather for their philan­ thropy : we do not value the sun for its height, but for its use.—Bailey. CHRISTIAN CHURCH Large bible attendance last Sun­ day and great interest is manifest in the bible school. We are looking for a greater atendance next Sun­ day. The pastor will preach at 11 o’clock on the “Babtism of Jesus.” The young peoples endeavor meet every Shnday night at 7:30. Great interest is shown in the work. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Kaphammer left here Monday for east Portland, where he is employed until June When he is planning on returning here to resume his former job, hauling gravel. Mr. Wni. Aspland is in Portlnnd on business for a few days. A A Distribution ÿvithout I ‘WctJ’Ze / B FINNEY OF THE FORCE tylniflh machine, wTilcfi liutoiiml Lally selects a pair of individual threads from two sheets of warp-threads, ties them together, selects and ties to­ gether another pair, jnd so on until the thousand or more threads compos­ ing one warp which has been woven up nearly to the end thereof in a loom have been united singly to those of a second warp, preparatory to proceed­ ing with the weaving operations with the second warp. that the order "oT tie ciar fiai not arrt-ed before the storming of Kruj«- vatz, and that bs escaped.” t Friday and Saturday Features FLOUR—Big K hard wheat J 89 per sack ............................... Per Bbl $7.55 2 lbs. for 50c * 99c Sugar, Pure Cane 10 lbs. for....... 63c Cheese, full cream per lb.................. 25c Soap 10 bars white wonder for ...................................... 33 c Matches, 6 boxes for ................... 20c Tomatoes, large tins good 25c quality 2 tins for ............... Per dozen ] BUTTER— per pound $1.48 I Apples wrapped yellow New- Q9c towns per box Beans, Small white 3 lbs for In Our Meat Department Offers You These Prices For Friday and Saturday. We have 500 pounds of bacon squares to sell at 21c per pound. 200 pounds Pork Roasts, shoulder, 22c per lb 1OO pounds Swifts choice frank furters 19c lb 25c 1OO pounds Hogs Liver, 2 pounds for, 1OOO pounds best shortening, Swifts 3 lbs. 50c Store No. 225 Vernonia, Oregon After Thirty-five Years By F. O. Alexander flop-scenss:- PMTfV tdMXV MUMM» KjÛNtD *53.353 successvol THS ttATU Ml MMv* , T MME A. KUN IN IkE- 8R iC K BuSINES“.' ' V