Image provided by: Independence Public Library; Independence, OR
About The Polk County post. (Independence, Or.) 1918-19?? | View Entire Issue (Sept. 9, 1921)
> terson sitting beside the product o his peach orchard at a waj* side stand. He oisposes of his peaches in this manner to people who travel to or away from Sa lem. His orchard is at Eola and he is reported to have had a good crop thi< year.—Monmouth Herald. Time and Tide Was Never Put on the Waiting List It isn 't what you W A N T that makes you plum p and good natured— I t ’s what you EAT. If you keep you r digestive apparatus all sm oothed out with pure food groceries sold over the counter in this establishm ent, you w on’ t have anything to worry about except the incom e tax. How to Make Home Brew Try Once and Your Trying Days Are Over. J. G. McIntosh Grocery HOME OF GOOD GROCERIES Courteous and Intelligent Service INDEPENDENCE, OREGON SHORT STORIES OF TOWN AND Benson Polytech this coming year. Mr. Huntley will also go to Portland, leaving here next week. J. E. Buck, a Buena Vista Jess Whiteaker has just re turned from a voyage to China rancher, was in town Monday. with many interesting experi Mr. Buck reports farm work moving along in splendid shape ences to relate. in his neignborhood. ailENOS AIRES UP TO DATE R e sid e n t« of G ay S o u th A m e ric a n C a p ita l R ig h t ly P ro u d of T h e ir B e a u tifu l City. Bueno* Aires believes strongly in public utilities competition. It has fpur telephone companies, with re sultant cut rate* to subscribers. Au tomatic telephones are being in stalled, and it is »aid the South American metropolis is likely to beat New Vork to the use of these •per capita. In many ways Buenos Aires is as up-to-date a< any city in the world. It has all electric street ear lines and also an honest-to-goodness subway, where the passengers have to hang to straps and are [»acked in like sar dines in a box. It maintains a com plete communication system with all agricultural, industrial and com mercial (enters through South America and handles a large pro portion of all the exporting and iin* porting trade south of th? equator. It su|)[Hirts grand oucra. and it> women are <> smartly and e\|>cii sivelv dre-sod as any who can ■get the fashion news from Paris. But the horse has not been su|R>r- sedud by the automobile. There are four times a- many horses and car riages on the street as private mo torcars, seven times ns many horse- drawn cabs as taxis and thirty-eight times as many wagons ns auto trucks. Believing the following article is apropos to the season, The Post readers are given the bene fit gratis: The Ocheyedan Press gives the following recipe lor making ¡home brew: "Home brew, its qualities and how to make it, is one of the things that worrits ; the mind of many a person, ai.d lor the benefit of those who have not been enlightened oh the sub ject we publish the following re cipe, whic; has been invented!?) by one of our local sports: Chase a bull frog three miles and ga ther up the hops; to the hops add the following: 10 gallons tan bark, 1 half pint shellac, a bar of home made soap; boil INDIAN MARINE CAME FIRST mixture 36 hours; then strain through an I. W. W. sock to H o n o r T h a t H a s S ie m e d to Be lo n g to A u s tr a lia n N a v y M u st Be keep it from working, then bot Su rren d ere d . tle and add one grasshopper to The belief that the Australian each pint to give it the kick.” H. Hirschberg, Ira Mix and Miss Hazel Seeley, who has Dr. H. C. Dunsmore of the been much feted during the past Nationa Bank holidayed in week as the house guest of Mr. Portland. and Mrs. R. Monroe Gdbert and Miss Dorothy Steusloff, left Sun Petitions are in circulation day for Corvallis where she will FISHES HAVE -‘SIXTH SENSE” among the farmers o f ' Polk | visit with friends and relatives E x p la n a tio n of Pre se n ce of the “ H o m county asking the state game; ing In s t in c t ” S o S t ro n g in the for a brief period before return commission to close the season F in n y Tribe. ing to her home iin Independ for hunting Bob White quail. How salt-water fish that at cer- ence. —Salem Statesman. taiu periods in their lives migrate to fresh water always find their way Mrs. McManama and daugh into the same rivers is made clear Alva Craven threshed 32 ter of Kansas City have been by the investigation of experts who visiting Miss Arbuthnot and bushels of clover seed from 4J have recently been studying the re Miss McManama The inter acres of land recently, which is action of salt-water fish to various esting guests received many so a pretty fair crop with clover conditions of environment. It appears that herring can de cial attentions. They were en seed worth in the neighborhood tect differences in heat and cold as tertained at dinner in Monmouth of 15 cents per pound. In ad little as a quarter of a degree or less. last Saturday by the Kreamers. dition to its natural use for seed They also know when even the for fresh acreage of this nationa' slightest trace of acid or alkali is present in the water. Some scien forage crop, clover seed is used tists have even proposed that herring Mrs. W. Huntley and son, in the dyeing industry........... H and other fish be used to detect the Marshal, left for Portland Sun W. Copeland, who six years ago presence o f chemicals in the water, day. Marshal will attend the taught school on Weston moun just as during the war canaries were used to discover traces of poisonous tain and is well known there, gas. was in that town Saturday re The investigators sav that salmon find their way into rivers by means newing his friendships with local Manicuring, Shampooing, Electro lysis. Hair Dressing, Permanent Wave, people. Mr. Copeland will be I of the presence of acids or alkalis, which, of course, varies in different Scalp Treatment, Wrinkle Treatment. superintendent the coming year streams. Even when they are a Electolytic Massage, Bleaching and Tinting. Special Acne Treatment, of the high and grade schools at long way out at sea they can discover M a rin e llo Preparations and Hair Goods. Arlington. Last year he served the trace that will lead them to the HAIR 600DS SWITCHES MADE FROM C0MBIN6S in the Airlie schools...........One bay and the stream they seek. It thus becomes unnecessary to appeal of the sights of the road to Sa to a “ homing instinct” to explain MRS. IRENE SCOTT the return o f certain salmon to cer lem these days is Senator Pat- Phone 1«90 SALEM 125 N. High St tain rivers or the “ running” of her ring to certain localities. N B iin iia H a ia im iw ia iiim in in iiiw iH m iw ia iiiB iiH iiB iiiB M a H n iiB ia w m ir Marinello Cosmetic Shop 1 g I i Camp Cooking Will Be Complete s i Pleasure if You Buy Your i i Utensils from Us I 9 I i Í g i I g g g I and cam p eating will have just the right Havor if you buy you r knives, forks and other table necessities here. i f i Spoons, too, must not be lorgotten. i i i We have them. 9 9 « A projection lantern which photo graphs directly from the object it self. dispensing with slides altogeth er, has been inAnted by a French physicist. A remarkable feature of the apparatus is that it operates in broad daylight, there being no lum inous cone and darkened room nec essary, as in the case of the ordinary magic lantern. Any object of suitable size may be introduced into the lantern— an open book, a stone, a set of beads, or a text, rolled and unrolled on a couple o f spools. By means of a set of condensers of one or more lenses, and reflectors at the back of the source of light, the object is photographed upon the screen with microsoopic accuracy, it is claimed, the whole force of the light pouring upon the object and reflecting through the lenses to the screen, or any place in the room, from a mir ror which swings on an axis.— Pop ular Mechanics Magazine. D R Y .LA N D i WILLARD E. CRAVEN HDW. IN D E P E N D E N C E , OREGON Rev. J. R. Wilkie of Emporia, Kan., is pastor of the Bethany Con gregational church, manager of the city market, director of the city em ployment bureau, superintendent of the Welfare mbociation, executive secretary o f the Red Cross, pastor of another church at Upper Dry Creek, instructor in psychology at the State Normal school and a member of the police force. E MAGIC LANTERN IN DAYLIGHT & # F re n c h In v e n to r H a e D evieed A p p a r a t u s W h ic h D o e s A w a y W it h the N e c e s s ity fo r Slid es. BOAT. A Belgian is tjie inventor of a boat that can mount and run astride a monorail railway with it* own power when water too shallow for it to navigate is encountered. C IT IZ E N . g 'J £ x $& x & + We can gi /e such good service and such good meat when there is such a rush in our market. It’s because we are p ro vided with plenty of help and plenty o f equipm ent to alway- give oui custom ers the best. City' Meat Market Phone 6 1 1 GUS MILLER Main Street ■ n n * n a H “H e r e ’s R e a l T o b a c c o ” says the G ood Judge That gives a man more genuine chewing satis faction than he ever got out of the ordinary kind. Smaller chew, lasts longer —so it costs less to chew this class of tobacco. A nd the good, rich to bacco taste gives a world of satisfaction. A ny man who uses the R ea l T o b a c c o C h e w will tell you that. Put up in two styles W -B C U T is a long fine-cut tobacco R IG H T C U T is a short-cut tobacco yVeygnaOrBi utor> C o m p a n y . HÖ? B r oa d w a y , N e : n w y was the first branch of the royal navy thrown out by Britain in the outer waters apjicars to rest u[ton a misunderstanding. The honor belongs to the Indian marine, which was originally founded at Surat in 11! 13. It was once main tained at the eost of the East In dian company. It protected the company’s merchantmen from the depredations o f pirates, of whom Joasmi, Cutch and other bold free booters gave the navy the most trou ble. When the naval tide of wai swept into the Indian ocean, the In dian marine was as much a part of the British navy as the Hoval Aus tralian navy was in the great war. But if the Australian navy cannot claim the distinction of priority, it may, none’ the kss, take heart. In these days, with disarmament in the air, it may claim, the world will hope, the distinction of being the last of the British auxiliaries needed to win a definite place on the sea.— Christian Science Monitor. BU SY ..You Wonder Why.. I Restore the Usefulness OAC To worn, injured and sick casings and tubes 1 Expert Tire Surgery Oregon's Higher Institution of Our “ cure” Is always a perfect one. TECHNOLOGY A lso New T ires fo r Sale M . J . O ’D O N N E L L Eight Schools; Seventy Departments F A L L T E R M O P E N S SEPT. 19. 1921 Shop in building formerly occupied by Williams barber shop For information write to the Registrar Oregon Agricultural College C O K V A I. I. IS Butter W raps— The Print-8 ’ em. 1’ ost, For Butter Wraps try The Post. «c S fcw S tw : P R IC E S CU T TO T H E B O N E | Smashing Reduction EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 3 1921 O v e r la n d New Prices M odel 4 Touring.................... $ 7 0 7 M odel 4 Coupe ................. $ 1 0 4 4 M odel 4 R o a d s t e r ................ 707 M odel 4 Sedan................... 1099 F. O. B. INDEPENDENCE New Series O verland. E lectric lights, D em ountable Kirns, 3-Speed T ran im iaaion, Baked Enam el finish. Averaging as high as 25 miles per gallon of gasoline. Famous for low upkeep. W i l l y ’s = K n ig h t Reduced $370.00 M odel 2 0 T o u r in g ........... $ 1 7 8 0 Model 2 0 Coupe M odel 2 0 R oadster ..... 1 7 2 5 .M o d e l 2 0 Sedan PRICES F. O B. INDEPENDENCE THE CAK THAT IMPROVES WITH USE S H R E E V E S $2485 2705 S O N DALLAS, OREGON : :* ♦: « ^ « • erük w wx * »