Jacksonville post. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1906-19??, June 28, 1919, Image 2

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    F
; JACKSONVILLE POST
HAD HIS DESIRE REALIZED
Official Paper of the Cilp of Jacksonville Orcgt n
A weakly newspaper published every Saturday at the county stat of Jt.tk: 1
County, Oregon. D. W. B agshaw , Editor and Publisher
Entered as second-class matter June 22 1907, at the post office at Jacksi nvilli
Oregon, under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879.
SATURDAY. JUNE 28. 1919
SUBSCRIPTION: One year by mail $1.50.
Advertising rates furnished on
application.
In dependen t Ga rage
Oregon City Sold.
at
r
Oreg >n City. June 25. —Hundreds of
picnic partita lined the banks of the
Clackamas river yesterday. and autos
by the score Were packed near the
river. The Clackamas river road has
been recent Iv graveled, and is in fine
shape, making a fine jaunt from Ore­
gon City or Portland for a day’s
pleasure.
Oregon City, June 25.—The Inde-
pen lent garage of this city has been !
soli to I.ee and O. E. Hall, of Ashland, I
and the new owners have taken pos- I
session of the business. The garage
was formerly owned by William Weis- ’
mandul and Chester Elliott of this city.
Electric Company to Buiii
The Halls have for the past five years I
Kelso, Wash., June 24.—The con-
owned the distributing agency for the
Ford at Ashland. William McFarland, tract for the new brick substation to
’ for the • be built in K-tlao by the North Co ist
expert mechanic, employed
<
past year by the former owners, will Power company was let yesterday to
ba re-ained by the Halls. Weismandel N. A. Strand of this city.
----------- ------------------
will leave next week for an extend»d
t ip over the country with his famil .
Summons
Umpqua Fruit Union to Con- I n the C ircuit C ourt of the S tate
of O regon , for the C ounty of J ack -
g'ruct Concrete Packing House. son .
Roseburg, Or., June 23.—Umpqua
Valley Fruit union has decided to erect
a concrete and hollow tile fireproof
packing house in this city, 60x100, to
cost $10,000, and work will begin at
once.
&The building will be finished in time
to handle this year’s fruit crop. Ap­
proximately 40 persons will be employ­
ed at parsing during the season, which
will last from tour to six weeks. One
hundred car loads of Douglas county
fruit will be handled at the local plant
and will be shipped to the eastern
markets, Apples and pears will be
the main products handled.
Canyon Creek Road
Now Open to 7 rathe
Roseburg, Or., June 25. Tourist
travel is now experienceing no trouble
in getting through Canyon Creek can­
yon, and the road is open for travel
day and night. According to Roseburg
business men who inspected the can­
yon, there ts part of the road that it-
rough, but it is all very passable, and
beside from a few minutes stop for
blasting by the road crew, there will Li­
no delay in getting through the can­
yon the rest of the season. Tourists,
however, will experience new roads in
all parts of Douglas county for the
rest of the season, as there are four
different sections of the new road be­
ing built or graded, and these places
will be passable all the time, out it
will necessitate small detours at times
for the road bed that is torn up. The
road will be hard surfaced or paved i
through Douglas county inside of two
years.
14,588New Autos
Cp to June 20.
Priscilla Knapp,
Plaintiff,
vs.
James (). Knapp,
Wireless vs. Wire.
Bend to Hold Wool Sale.
Picnickers Drawn
By Clackamas Drive, i
i S____
i
On one occasion when Premier
Clemenceau visited the French army
at the front, says a contributor to
Jo Sals Tout, the general who was Ills
host stiggesteff a sightseeing trip, but
the premier declined the Invitation.
•'General," he said. “I did not come
here as it tourist; 1 have only one
purpose, and that Is to come into di­
rect personal contact with the private
soldier. I wish to see him us lie faces
the enemy.”
“In this aector." was the reply, “it
Is easy to do that. At post 8 there
lire only four meters between the
poflti and his adversary.”
“Very wed,” said Clemenceau. “I
wish to go to post 8."
Complete silence reigned In flip
trenches where the soldiers stood, gun
In hand, ready to go "over the top.”
Their faces were tired and deeply
lined; in them were the traces of
suffering and of anger. These tnen
usked no favors, hut they forgave
nothing. In their eyes shone a de­
termined resolution to win. and then
to punish. When the party reached
the covered passage leading to post 8.
the guide told M. Clemenceau that for
the remaining distance he would have
to crawl uiion his stomach, and In
that fashion the premier advanced
until he met a sentry. There for an
instant he forgot that he was not In
the tribune of the senate and, speak­
ing loudly, said:
“Well, my friend, what----- ”
A hard slap cut the sentence short,
“Shut up!" hissed the sentry. “Can’t
you hear that Bodie coughing?”
The soldier never doubted that hls
blow had saved the man who was
destined to lend France to victory,
lie had treated M. Clemenceau like a
comrade. The premier bad been near
Indeed to the private soldier; he had
come into direct personal contact with
him. 1!« desire wits realized.—Youth's
Companion.
Defendant,
To the above named defendant,
James O, Knapp:
IN THE*, NAME OF THE STATE
OF OREGON: You are hereby sum-
moned and required to appear in the
above named court and cause and ans­
wer plaintiff’s complaint on file there­
in against you within six (6) weeks
i
after June 28, 1919, the date of the
first publication of this summons.
! CAN WIN DESPITE HANDICAP
You are further notified that if you
failtoappiar «nd answer sail c >rn Wounded Soldiers Not “Out” in the
plaint within the time aforesaid, plain­
Battle of Life and Do Not Ask
tiff will apply to the court for the re
to Be Coddled.
lief demanded in said complaint, a suc­
“I have found that you do not
cinct statement of which is:
For a decree of said court against hands and feet, but you do need
defendant dissolving the bonds of mt- age nnd character. You must
rimony existing between plaintiff and the game like a thoroughbred,"
defendant, and divorcing plaintiff from Michael Howling nt the international
conference on reconstruction.
defendant absolutely, and for such
“You fellows know how it Is in a
other and further relief as the court
handicap nice. A handicap Is put on
may deem just and equitable.
the horse that has proved liltnself, so
Date of order herein, for service of that he may not bent the others too
Summons by publication is June 27, i enslly. But the horse with the handi­
1919.
cap Is the one to bet on.
R awles M oore ,
"You fellows are handicapped, but
Attorney for Plaintiff we know you can win the fight, You
Medford National Bank Bldg., have been handicapped by the Finn.
Medford, Oregon. who could not win the fight, For
most of you it will prove to be God’s
greatest blessing, for few men begin
Night Air Not Dangerous.
to think until they find themselves
There Is still a prejudice among up agninst n stone wall.
some against night air. For that rea­
“And you other folks—don't treat
son some foolish people sleep with
these boys like habit's! Trent them
their windows closed. Night air Is like «hat they have proved them­
not dangerous. (In the average It is
selves to be—men. Don’t spoon-feed
more pure than that of the day. In
them.
Don't coddle them.
They
malarious sections exposure nt night
would rather get their own faces
may be dangerous, not because the
down Into the blueberry pie nnd eat
air Is bad but because malarial mos­
it for themselves."
quitoes bite only at night. The dan­
ger Is ip the mosquitoes, not th# air.
Will all the telegraph ami telephone
Salem. Or., June 25.— Simple com­ poles, wires and Instruments connect­
putation, after a perusal of the records ed with these methods of communica­
tion be simply so much “scrap" in a
in the automobile registration depart­
year or so? Representative Steener-
ment of the secretary of state's office, son of Minnesota, ranking Republican
brings the astounding revelation that member of the house post office com­
more than $26,000,000 has been spent mittee. predicted "Yes," If the progress
for new automobiles in Oregon since now being made In wireless communi­
cation continues. Mr. Steenerson, a«
the first of the present year.
This estimate is on the basis that quoted In Tl.e Wireless Age, says:
“Radio communication Is the coming
new registrations represent new * auto­
mobiles and that the average amount thing. It 1.« making such rapid strides
Hint before the eml of the jear the
paid for a new car is $1800. It is said nvernge American will not he bother­
at the secretary of state's office that ing much about the transmission of nn
new registrations in the majority of ordinary message over an ordinary
instances represent new cars. The telegraph or telephone wire or ns to
state records do not show the valuation whether the ordinary telephone or tel
of cars, but automobile dealers pace egrnph wire 1« owned or controlled by
the average at about $1800. The esti- j government or private Interests.”
mate here given embraces pleasure and
Spoiled Sarah’s Great Scene.
commercial vehicles and excludes motor­
During a performance of "Hnmlet."
cycles.
The total number of n >w registra­ In which Sarah Bernhardt was Imper­
sonating the melancholy Dane, the
tions from January 1 up to June 20
grnveynrd seem- was entirely ruined
this year is 14,581, while the regia by the nnfortunnte appearance on
stations number 27,404. These figu-es, the singe of n ent. which walked In
of :ourse, cover some transactions from the wings and began to wash
msde prior to the first of the vear. Its face. The Divine Sarah, «omewhnt
Registrations for this year began in disconcerted, stamped her foot, and
November and the totala, including the ent. Inking fright. Jumped—Into
the open grave, the resting place of
November and December, are 16,358
“poor Yorick!" Madame withdrew
new registrations and 55.409 regis­ nnd the etirtnln
descended. A cat
trations.
enn look nt a king, but not nt a queen
—of the drama I
Bend. Or., June 22. Preparations
have been completed for the sale ar­
ranged by the Central Oregon Wool­
growers’ association, to be held here
Tuesday. In anticipation of the sale.
450,000 pounds of wool are already-
stored at Bend, and more is expected
before bids are received, i A majority
of the fleeces art fine wool, A special
meeting of the association will be call­
ed following the sale.
Clemenceau Wanted to Come Into Con­
tact With the Private Soldiur,
and He Did!
Lift In Other Planets.
Marconi truthfully says that many
of the planets are much older than
ours; therefore, b-lngs who dwell
thereon ought to possess vast fund*
of Information that would be of In­
calculable value to us poor mortals.
He makes this reasonable statement
In n recent Interview: "It Is silly to
assert that other planets are uninhab­
ited because they have no atmosphere
or are «<> hot or otherwise totally dlf-
ferrnt from the earth. If there wera
lit fl- I) n -he sen w>> would maintain
io . t Inst breath that life therein
That la a reason-
WHS Impossible,
•ble nssertlun.
t>.i
$
I
We Are Ready
For
The Canning Season: Are you?
&
Let us send cut what you need in
4(1
Economy, Kerr Self-sealers
and old style Mason’s
Jelly Glasses , Jar caps and Rubbers
«
Jno.M. Williams Co.
Phone 142.
7he People’s Store
tàk
Jacksonville
Notice of Sherifi’s
Oregon
Sale
By virtue of an execution In Fore
cl >sure and Order of Sale duly issued
out of and under the seal of the Circuit
Court for the State of Oregon, for
Jackson County, dated June 20, 191!',
in a certain suit therein, wherein
Lincoln Savage, as administrator of
the Estate of Margaret Savage, de­
ceased. as plaintiff, recovered judg
ment and decree against W. D. Hodg-
son and D. G. Scobey and others at
Defendants, for the sum of E ghl
thousan 1 ($8000.00) Dollars principal,
with interest thereon at the rate of 6%
per annum from March 15, 1916, less-
the sum of $30 paid on account of saiii
intere.it, to-wit: the total sum of $9502.
00, also, the sum of $800.00 attorney’s
feet and $12.17 costs and for other re
lief, which judgment was enrolled ant
docketed in said Court June 4th, 1919.
Notice is hereby given that, pursuan-
to the terms of said execution, 1 wiilon
Monday, July 28th, 1919, at 10 o’cl ck
A. M., at the front door ot the Court-
The United States Fish Crop.
h>use in the City of Jacksonville, Jack
The total value of the American s m County, Oregon, offer for sa'e and
fish crop. Including that of Alaska and sell at public auction for cash to tl.e
the insular possession«. Is estimated
highest bidder, to satisfy said ju Ig
now to he .$150.000.000. allowing for
the advances In value of the hist year. men’., with the costs of this sale, sub­
The capital Invested In the fisher­ ject to redemption as provi led by law.
ies of the United States, Including ves­ all of the right, title and interest tha
sels and the land establishments for the defendants, jointlv or individual y,
hnndllng the fish, Is estimated nt about had on March 15, 1910, or have since
.<75.000,000, and the number of per­ acquired, or now have in and to th»
sons employed Is 220,000. The value following descrioed property, situate I
of the sen products turned out by the tn Jackson County,
State of Oregon,
canneries is $50.000.000.
to wit:
Food experts did well during the
The West J2 of
wnr times to urge Americans to cat
th» Northeast 1A
more fish, not only because this helped
of Section 30, and the Northwest '4
conserve the supplies of beef and pork
products but also because eating some
of the Northwest ’4 of Section 29,
good fish frequently means a change
all in Township 36 South. Range 4
III the average man’s diet which is to
West of the Willamette Meridian in
Ills benefit, The same argument holds
Jackson County, Oregon.
true in regard to vegetables and green
Dated at Jacksonville. Origen, June
things, of which many people In clt-
les <lo not eat enough for their own 24th, 1919.
C. E. T errii . l
good.
Sheriff of Jacksor ('out tv, Oregon.
By F lora T hompson ,
Ghost Altogether Teo Real
Deputy.
One of the most amusing mishaps
flint ever happened In nnv production
of Sir Henry Irving was In --Hamlet.”
Red ('ross Fetes Heroes.
during the first appearance of the
St. Helens. Or., June 23.—The wo­
ghost. The actor Impersonating the
dead king of penninrk was suddenly men of the Red Cross entertained 120
seized with n violent fit of sneezing, returned s. ldiers at a public reception,
but sought valiantly to go on with his dance and supper Saturday night. 1 he
line«, thereto^ giving n new and curi­ programme included an address of
Eitg.’ne, Or, June 25.—Harvesting
ous rendering to the words: "Hnmlet welcome by Mrs. James E lison, re­
of the largest loranlierrv crop La te
—nelioul— I am—achou!—th.v father's
- -deboli !—spirit!" The house was In sponse by J. H. Wellington of the county evir produce! begin this week.
an uproar, and when next the ghost United States navy, aol >3 and orchestra Sunny days and a.i abut la it supply of
appeared a elioni« of sneeze« resound­ selections.
moisture have been reapiraible for the
The supper was served by the git is
ed from the gallery anil another epi­
fine quality and heavy yield of the
sode of the great tragedian went from of tl.e honor guard. After supper, lie
berries. J. O. Holt, manager of the
the sublime to the ridiculous.
so.eiera and their friends returned to
E tgene Fruit Growers' association,
the dancing pavilion.
s'ates
that the crop is more than 25
Planting Trees on Wall Street.
p-rcent heavier than last year when
They lire preparing to plant tree«
Pendleton Has Boom.
40.000 boxes of berries were handled
along Wall street for soldier« from
Pendleton,
Or., June 24. —Building through the body. The crop in the
Denmark, but this Denmark Is n town
In Wisconsin and while then» tuny be permits issue! bv the city since the c >untv br. uglit the growers more than
bulls nnd bears nlso on this Wall first of the year total, to dat $277.965. $30,000 in 1918 when the price paid the
The
street they nre not the ones usually This amounts rent -.•■••’La at leust two producers aver iged six cents,
««»elated with that thoroughfare new homes ei-ch mo"th so f
so isti
I' se berrv fa-m- « in h.
"b s,- memorial trees are helm: nine
of th
by John Jorgensen. aceord'»
Holt, ¡‘rice hr»»
ti c
port to the American l’»r- .tr>
t yet
Al auch a flj-
street
T. B. annuli tun. dlhl 111. íoOUO been J .-tt .t;«|y
..■elation of Washington, which
ure, the producers will realize $40,000
bungalow
to
be
constructed
bv
Mrs.
registering on a national honor roll
from their crop.
Annie McLeod.
i
i
N ext T ime —B uy F isk
"^FJRES that are built right and
are sold right.
Price of 30 x 314
FABRIC
Non-Skid
Casing
RED TOP
Non-Skid
Casing
Fits all makes
of casings
$19.i5
$25.75
$3.65
TUBE
Prices reduced proportionately on all sizes
FRED .1. FICK
FISKCrriRES
Lane's Loganberry Crop
Biggest Ever.
Oldest Chehalis
Indian
Dies.
Centralia. June 24.—William Choke,
the oldest Indian on the Chehalis reser­
vation at Oakville, died Sunday night.
Choke was 120 years of age. In the
early days he was a friend of the whites
fighting with the forces of Governor
Stevens against his own tribesmen.
Road Bonds to be Sold.
Salem, Or.. Juns23.—At the request
of the state highway commission the
state board of control todav announced
that it will advertise for the sale of
$500,000 in road bonds, authorized und­
er the Bean-Barret bill passed at the
¡915 legislative session. This money
■s to be u«e I in the building of post
< Is in V i-ion« pirta of the state.
e - ate money is m-itche), dollar
to i-H r. by th- government fir the
o - ructioi of tnese roads. Since the
law became effective the state has sold
$400,000 of this class of bonds.
.