Image provided by: Friends of Jacksonville's Historic Cemetery; Jacksonville, OR
About Jacksonville post. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1906-19?? | View Entire Issue (March 22, 1919)
JA CF SON VIL LE POST : A weekly newspaper published every Siit-ir l.-ii at Lie county seat of Jai-k County, Oregon. D. W. B agshaw , Editor and Publisher i Entered as second-class matter June 22. 1!» >7, at the post office at Jacksor.vi b Oregon, under Act of Contrr. = of March 1'79 SATURDAY. MARCH 22. Hilf) SUBSCRIPTION: One year by mail $1.50. Advertising rates furnished on application. Airpiano Patrols is Plan Cucumber Price is Raised. (Chehalis, Wa h., Marcn IS. Libby, McNeill St l.ibb expect ag ii i to se- cure an acreage of cu-umbrs in the Chehalis section for the year 191), ac cording to worl just received here. Last seas-rn the attempt to grow cu cumbers locally was almost a total failure. The pries q io’it • I this year for No. 1 size, l'j to 3 incies in length is $50 per ton aver the p ice paid la t V 'ar. The district tributary to Chehalis ’3 rapidly becomihg quite a garden snot for growing a varie ty of cr ps and is excepted to give emplnym mt to many Lewis coun’y people for 1919. — — - ------ «•/»--»■ . ’ ■ — Record Alfalfa will be Principal Crop Under Ochoco Project I By direction of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue I am authorized ■gain to station my deputies at various points throughout the state to assist those who failed to complete income tax returns within the required time, and to render any other service that may be necessary or desire... Anv ad justments of income taxes should bi made NOW, as an extensive "DRIVE” for delinquents will soon be under taken. Income Tax Officers Guy R. Harper G. V. Wimberly will be at the City Hall at Medford, Oregon, from and includ ing March 31st to and including April 2, 1919. It is the wish of the Department that every one interested should take ad vantage of the opportunity afforded bv the visit of these officers. Respectfully, Milton A. Miller, Collector. City Will Build Own Pipeline. The Dades, Or., M.ireii 16. Bid for laying s new pipeline in in Mes| lies reservoir to this city, a fistai ce of three miles, were all rejected by the city water commission this week i n the ground they were all too high. Tt- morr ,w the city will begin the work by force account. The water commissi, n declares that it can save about $2iH on the job, which they estimate! will cost between $6000 and $7o'l0. Fall Creek—Linn ’county 348 acres sold for $15,01)0. of Woodburn, Os., March 16.— A farm side was made here yesterday, whi n he J. M. W. Bonney property, con- listing of 106 acres, stock and equir- ment, located near Woodburn, , w. s purchased by P. J. Giles from Minne sota for $25,009. Mr’ Gilles, who wish es to escape the hard winters of Minne sota, will take 'possession in the fall. Meeting of Parent- Teachers Association The Jacksonville Parent-Teachers Association met in regular session at the schoolhouse Friday afternoon at 3 o’clock. There was a good attendance, ■nd evervbixly seemed to enjoy the pro gram, which was given principally by the pupils of the school. The next meeting of the association will be held on April 11th Come and help to make these meeting interesting an 1 valuable to the community. A LUMP IN BRF.fiST W G W i ill ive $100(1 ’ If I FAILtoCUREan, CANCER r TUMOR 'l TREAT before it POISONS deep or ¡ATTACHES to BONE Eight Million Feet of Railroad Ties Ordered. WITHOUT MUlFf, PAIR OR PAY UNTIL CURED. WRITTEN GUARANTEE. NoX-Kayor other swindle. An Island riant Plaster inakesthr cure. A IUM0R, LlirR or SORE on ( > lip. face or body lone , CANCER. 100 PAGE ROOK ^SENT FREE. Tcttimonl.il». > JO OMCUIUO. Writrto < .ne \ Cancerous tore *2_rc_ l<-cs le^$ cured. cnrrd_. I . t > j , Aberdeen, Wash., March 17, Hoqui am mills have an order for eight million) feet of lumber tor rai'road ties, to be delivered on the Atlantic sea I board, it is announced here today. This is the Inrgest lumber order placed hete this year. Six steamers will be re quired io carry it to the east c >ast The first cargo will be loaded within 30 days. The French government is expected to be asking for bids on 75,. 000,000 feet of railroad ties. Paris, .March 14.—It took less than six hours today for a court martial to try Emile Cottin for his attempt on the life of Premier Clemenceau and to sentence kirn to death. The trial began after noon and ended at 7:35 o’clock this evening, wh«n Colonel Hvvert an nounced the verdict, which whs unani mous. Cotrin listened calmly to the presi dent of the court as he read the sen tence an 1 then hi . id: "I am glad 10 ie for ne ca rae the proletariat If my death will bring relief to the down-trodden working man 1 will not have died in vain.'' ranch Woodburn Farm Sold. - Would-be Assassin lo Du. for Logs Exceeding Supply. Portland, March 17.— Resumption of operations by nearly all th- sawmill i of Western Oregon and Washington lias brought a demand for logs which already exceeds the output, lumbermen reported today. Log prices are holding up well, the surplus fir is g ne in m >st quarters and mill men deci ire a real shortage is imminent unless logging concerns speed up. Income Tax Deputies at Medford. ------------- ---------------- Crops Predicted. Spokane, Wash., March IK. Farm ers in the southern section of the Big Bend county in north central Wa’h-I ington have started sowing string wheat for what will le one of the largest crops in the history of tins part of the country, according to I - ports received by former Giv.-rnir Hay, who has farming interests in that 3 ction. Climatic conditions are excellent for I good crop, he said. Prineville, Or., March 18.-Alfalfa will be one of the principal crops sown this spring- by farmers under the Ochoco project, They are now re ceiving shipments of sends and making preparationns for sowing. Conditions are favorable for the successful pro duction of alfalfa in this locality, the great amount of moisture in the ground 'Demand ■nd an abundance of water available for irrigation making the outlook a good one. A (JIMP IH W ü MAN’SBR c AST îs CÂNCEH . ) h poison AXMnr bunds >ni kills quickly CNt WOMAN IN rvilt 7 OIES Of CANCtS — U. S. i ooh costo Fsrr ir cincin it vir mau * «mm DR. S. R. CHAMLEY » 57 SIXTH STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL fitAst utiirwiro soMtioor anywhere Be It Ever So Humble— The heart goes out on leaden wing’ In hopeless longing. The pent-up bent of unspent love fevers the dispirited soul. The mind's eye narrows Its concentrated energy on a single spot. Anguish, sweetly bitter, slows the bent of a downcast heart, A veil pusses over the world—nnd again Is gone, Such fs homesickness» — Milwaukee Journal. The process of preparing sardines Is very simple but requires experience ami great care. I'pon the arrival of the sardines at the factory they nre liun.i dlaiely placed on huge wooden tables about forty feet long, where they are cleaned. This process takes only a seeinid, and a fairly i fficieiit worker cun clean from 300 to -pH) pounds of fish per liny, according to a writer in Fishing Gazette. The fish are then placed In vats of brine, where they are allowed to re main from one-half to two hours, ac cording to size. They are then placed In »Ire trays equipped with prongs In upright position, where they are al lowed to dry for about an hour before they are ready fol' cooking. This Is done by placing the trays in large steam ovens, where the fish are subjected to a pressure of about two pounds of Stenin, twenty minutes being consumed In properly cooking the small fish nnd as much as thirty-five minutes in cook ing the larger sizes. Tills cooking has to be carefully watched; if the sardines are subjected to too inueli steam they become some what brittle and break when being packed. Some sardines are cooked In oil; however, an extra charge is made for this process, and comparatively few are sold. After the sardines have been prop erly steamed the trays are placed on long counters for sorting, which is done by carefully selected and well- paid girls. After sorting, the tins are filled with oil anil placed on shelves, where they are allowed to remain lor about twelve hours In order to insure the proper Impregnation of the oil. Pure olive oil Is used In preparing nio.rt snrdines, especially the grades, but for some markets a ture of olive oil mid high-grade nut oil Is desired. CIVILIZATIONS OF THE PAST f Clover, Rye, Timothy and Blue Grass. Garden Seed— a big assortment in bulk and package. Onion Sets— best variety. Early Sun rise Seed Potatoes, Early Minnesota Seed Corn. These arc some of the good things we have fur you Let us have your order for whatever you need Jno.M. Williams Co. Phone 142. Oregon Jacksonville Nations With High Degree of Cultiva tion That Are Now Only Memory in History’s Pages. Thousands of years ago—long before the grent western nations ot' today, long before even Greek and Roman were heard of—there were more or less advanced civilizations on both sides of the Pacific. China, fur exnm- pie, had grown Into a stable Mon, >1- Ian kingdom perhaps 4,000 years be fore the beginning of our era. A Chinese author writes: “There is no existing nation in the world that lias ti larger past than Chinn. She has seen the rise and fall of the ancient Egyptian dynasties; the extension of the Persian empire; the conquests of Alexander; the Irresistible advance of (lie Roman legions; the deluge of the Teutonic hordes from the north, nnd the birth of nil the nations of modern Europe.” The Japanese also, n people com pounded of various elements, but chiefly Mongolian and Miiliiynn. st.aid stood nt the beginning of our era on ti high plane of civilization, and even then exhibited the tendencies mid tin ndnptlveness which distinguish then today. Then nwny to the east |n Central nnd South America, civilizations waxed and waned, reaching their high est development In the Azlee and In can empires, the latter of which was an extremely Interesting example of despotic socialism. Rupert Brooke In Fiji. FIJI In moonlight Is like nothing else In this world. . . . It's nil dim colors and all scents. And here, where It's high up, the most fantastically shaped mountains In the world tower up nil round, and little silver clouds mid wisps of mist run bleating up and down the valleys and hillsides like lambs looking for their mother. There's only one thing on earth ns beautiful; mid that's Samoa by moon light. That's utterly different, merely heaven, sheer loveliness. You He on ii mat in n cool Samoan hut. and look out on the white snnd under the high palms. and a gentle sen, and the black line of the reef a mile out. and moon light over everything, floods and floods of it. not sticky, like Honolulu moon light. not to bo eaten with a spoon, but flat and abundant, such that you could slice thin golden-white shavings off It. ns off cheese. . . From “Collected Poems of Rupert Brooke: With a Memoir." Marriage. Marriage Is the nursery of heaven. The virgin sends prayers to she entries but one soul to the state of nmrriiijre tills up her of the cleet nnd hath In bor of love and the delicacies of friend ship, the blessing of society and the union of hands and hearts. It hntli In It less of beauty, but more of safety than the single life; it hath more ease, but less danger; it I’ more merry nnd more snd ; I* fuller of sorrows fuller of Joys; It Iles under more dens, but Is supported by all strengths of love nnd charity. those burdens are delightful.—Jeremy Taylor. Brand New Head. “What a good he: d the baby has." ex-liiliiied Aunt Madge, who had come nl' the way from Anderson Just to see tin1 new baby In Ashland avenue. "He'll l>e president, sure." “It ought to be a good head.” put II little brother, whose three-year-old tji.se Is out of Joint, "lie only lias ii «» m ) it two weeks."—lii'llanapulla Star. Be a Good Loser. Don't he afraid of being on the los fng side. Defeat In a good cause I Infinitely hotter than helping to win Victory for a cause In which you .| not i> ’Hove. Stand by your conviction (»tie win surrenders them In order u win Is really on the losing side. '-V’ ('Y?7rr ' Con pa.acvely Simple Precess, but the V/crk Requires Expert Superv sion and Must Be Carefully Done. Oü-jial Paper of th* City et Jacksonville Orejen El Paso, Tex., March 20. —The El Paso Herald received a spe-ial dispatch from its correspondent on the train with Secretary Baker late today stat ing the |secretary of war announced after leaving Eos Angeles fer El Paso that airplane patrols would ¡be estab lished along the Mexican border when the army was reorganized on a peace basis and quoted fSecratary Baker as saying that this was ¡the best possible service to which the air service could be put. The secretary of war and General March are scheduled to arrive here to morrow afternoon for an inspection of Port Bliss and the surrounding army camps and review of troops. They will leeve tomorrow night for Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio. . HCW SAHUINES APE PACKED Notice of Final Settlement. the C ounty C ourt of the S tate of O regon , for J ackson C ounty . I n WOMEN AND THE WAR By MRS HENRY P. DAVISON I In the Matter of the Est ite and Guardianship of Car' Hoefft, an incompetent Per on. Public rotice is hereby giver, ihat the undersigned has filed in the County Court of JacKSun County, State of Oregon, the final account of her guard- iarsi.ip of the1 estate and person ot Carl Hoefft, an incompetent person, and that said court has fixed Saturday, April 19, 1919, at the h< ur of 10 o’clock A. M. of said day, at the court room of said court at the county court house in Jacksonville, Jacsson County, Ore gon, as the time and place for the hear ing of objections to said final account and for settlement of said estate. All persons interested in said estate are hereby notified and required to make or tile their objections to said final account, it any they have, or. or oefore the time aforesaid, fixed for the nearing and settlement thereof. Date of this notice and of the first publication thereof is March 22, 1919. C hristina S mith , Guardian of the Estate and Person of CarJ Hoefft, an Incompetent Person. These centers aro near the canton ments. The Bureau of Social Morality Is an important feature of the War Work Council’s program under the present abnormal conditions. That ignorance is no shield to a girl Is well known to its members. Instead, it is her gravest peril. Any situation shrouded in mys- tery is dangerous. Women can deal only with what they understand, A uue social morality must be built on i foundation of knowledge, and be inspired by high aims. Fourteen women physicians are talking to groups of parents, school tills, and industrial women. These lecturers bend their best efforts to ipreading information on social ideals Colored women at this time musl neet all the problems confronting ahite women, Their situation is fur her complicated by industrial and Notice of Fit al Settlement social conditions, Special clubs art leing formed among colored girls ir I n tiik C ounty C ourt of the S tate of the neighborhood of cantonments O regon , I n and for J ackson C ounty . »Yorkers are being placed in industrial -enters like Louisville, Kentucky, and In the Matter ot the Estate of iopewell, Virginia. Kari Hoellt, sometimes known Immigrant men who formerly as Ci arks Hoefft, deceased. >ored in mines, on farms, and in Public notice is hereby given that the ories. and now serve in our army undersigned has filed in the County hemselves, in need of assistance, Court of Jackson County, Oregon, the foreign men marry young and many, final account of his administration of jven of the young ones, have large the estat.- of Karl Hoefft, sometimes amilies dependent upon them. Be anse of these helpless families, the known as Charlie Hoefft, deceased, >Var Woik Council has translators and that said Court bus fixed Saturd y, vho go into the camps. April 19, 1919, at the hour of 10o’clock The activities of the War Work A. M. of said day, at the Court loom ’ouncil could not be confined to our of said emit at the coui t house in ■«■ii country. Our American nurses Jacksonville, Jackson County, Oregon, n France need the Y. W. C. A. social as the lime and place for the hearing vorkers. Even the most self reliant of ojjectio.is to s-iid final acc >unt ar.d ■ omen must have help at the front vhere women's welfare is a matter of for settlement of suid eataie. All persons inte esteJ in said esta te ninor impo:tance. A central club tn 'arfs gives hard-worked, courageous are hereby notified and required to nurses a home in a strange land, to make or file their objections to said (ranch clubs at all of the base hospi- final account, if any they have, on or als provide relaxation and recreation before the time aforesaid, fixel for the 'or hours off. hearing and settlement thereof. When the French women cabled to ' Date of this notice and of tl e til st he War Work Council, pleading fo ■ -Xperts to advise them In establish- publication thereof is Marcn 22, 1919. S. F. smith , ng foyer cantsens for »omen workers Adndniatrutor of the n munitions and other war industries, «xperts were sent over to have over estate of Kuri Hoefft, sight of the building and equipping of sometimes known as tome of the canteens ».nd act as ad Charles Hoefft, deceased. »lier to French committees A professionally solemn faced but 1er in one of the beautiful homes “I have a place now to spend my where a drawingroom meeting was evenings.’■ said a telephone girl tn being held stood »here he hesrd tbs Waukegan, llllnci’ to the club leader stories of the War Work Count'! ■ "I was so lonely before you came." dans and accomplishments. Af ùau.mu. Il usi!., ai nell 18 Tue » i.y Emergency ho ng for employed the guests had g me he su-Toached i' r i llro.ü ha» uniiounc. •tirls ts closely nnectcd with th” the increase peaker »i h two one-dollar bills nore ‘’eneral wr! re work Centers <ive them for my daughter." be s»' oi luris u> K cent» lor sing, s and 35 -is of Ininie ¡an selected on the I am subject to the next draft. W cents fur blocks ut five, aim the c ty eed. have been 1 sen as de ion t. .1 ' am gone - - t one must look after eon m Sa, i,ei > pUn a pro eat lu the Un grounds to ruow employers how 1 el the liar Mora Cu»u> public SelVne cu.iuiiiaslun. H tu« pro tirl employees should be housed cil will do IL" test fails the new rates will become operative April 10. Within six months after the Unitea States entered the war. the Y. W. C. A. War Work Council had established girls' clubs near more than forty of the canton meats, barracks, and navy yards A trained recrea tion leader was placed In charge o f each club These workers supplement t Ii c efforts of the lo cal Associations. If those already exist. Where the idea is new the workers form club centers, or ganize the girls Mrs. Davison and arouse them to a sense of their responsibility in tills lime of great excitement and eon fusion. No scolding of girls for unwise a< lions and no solemn finger-shakine oc curs in the clubs, instead of dwelling on «hat not to do. these wise leaders urge real patriotism. All sorts of pro jects are suggested that are more In tercsting than the dubious anil danger o-.’s pleasures which appeal to the fg norant and the thoughtless. At parties, for Instance, these wily chaper ones, whom no one ever thinks ot as supervisors, arrange that there shall always be twice as many soldiers ■■ girls. "Twosing" is utterly impossible where there are not enough girls t< to around! Ci.ib leaders do not attempt to bat. sh the gallant soldier entirely fion. the girls' world; they wish only to lirlng him down from glorified height' of glamour to take his place as an every day hero, subject to the same scrutiny as other men. Instruction and relief work «re noi neglected. Among the activities of tered are dressmaking, cooking, knit ting. French, athletics, dancing, sing Ing. Red Cross work. Belgian relief and work for the fatherless children of France. The world contains a num ber of things besides soldiers for a girls imagination to dwell upon Hundreds of clubs for school and business girls all over the country are offering pleasanter recreation than the gaily lighted streets snd the sha dowv parks. Street Car E'ares go to 8 Cents in Yakima