Image provided by: Friends of Jacksonville's Historic Cemetery; Jacksonville, OR
About Jacksonville post. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1906-19?? | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1919)
I I » I : JACKSONVILLE POST-: A wj.’kly newspaper published every Saturday at the county si at of Jackson D. W. B agshaw , Editor and Publisher Entere! as second-class matter June 22 1907, at the pout office at Jack t i.iu'i Oregon, under Act of Congress of Marcj^x, lb79. S.4 7Í//Í/MF. JULY 5, J.9/.9 — --------- ,---------------- -——-------------------- ---------------- t----------- SUBSCRIPTION: One year by mail $1.50. Advertising rates furnished oi application. — PRUNES I ! ini n-, Between Syracuse an. Rc-.h iter, N. Y., Make Lxquis.te B.t of Scenery. O.hcial Paper of the Ciiy of Jacksonville Crtgon County, Oregon. BRING PRICE. of rollio hills Synieiise nnd Roeh»*^t?r a rutin try <>f lulls. known us drit r • U's. whirl* is on*» of the oitist brniHilu! •»’•d unique bits <»f scenery,. In tue ui'Orrn United Slates. . The term drumlin Is an Irish <»no • nd is applied to low. rolling hills of .'L.« :al origin which exist in that rmtn- H and :t!s<» in parts of New York .aid New Etighind. This section between S? racii.se and Rochester is the very heart of the American drumlins. Most American m aintains and hills were formed by violent disturbances of the earth’s surf tire. ant! ibrlr rude origin Is reflected in their riiciredness. But the drumlins were Imilt by the great ice sheet which once covered all of North America. The materials of which they are made were pushed to- get her slowly by the crawling glaciers molded and tamped and smoothed by ihe great ice fingers as a child makes mud pies. The drumlins look as though they had been designed by some great in telligence with a sense of beauty, for they rise in .smooth, gentle curves, like «hose of a perfect human body. They are remarkably uniform in height, usually a little less than 200 feet, and so smooth and lenient are their slopes that many of them are culti vated to their summits. Some of them are as round as half an apple, and oth ers are long welts or rolls. Scattered among the hills are a num ber of small lakes and ponds, clear and pretty, and there is good fishing in many of them. The drumlins are a favorite playground of the people in Syracuse, Rochester and other nearby towns, but they are little known be yond the counties in which they lie. HIGH Accept l\o More Recruitr for Army After this IV -ek. i Portland, Ore., June 3J. Major Vancouver Business Men I General C. II. Martin, in ch irge of tl e Organize to Advertise 1 Pi rtland army recruiting office an nounced today that he had been noti- Product. I tied by the war department to accej t no more recruits for the American expeditionary forces in France aid Vancouver, Wash., July 1—The Germany aft»r the end of this week. Oregon Packing company in ti.is city, which recently enlarged its local plant, Klamath Falls to Pave. has started operations and is paying In cents a pound for Royal Anne cherries. Klamath Falls, Or, July I.—Con This is the highest price that the local tracts for live units of paving in Kia growers have ever received for their ' math Fa have bee , ,t.t t0 th ..te War product. The company will employ > ren Construction C1)m|)any at a tota 5'X) people when operating at full ca- cosl of 003. p icity and will continue until long after Christmas. River Residence The price of prunes this year in I Clarke county is said to have reache i Destroyed By Fire 2 > cents, though many of the gtowers j[00(j River, Or., June 28.—The roof ■old around 14 cents a pound. | and setond story of the home of J. L So important has the prune growing , Blont on Twelfth street was burned industry in Clarke county become that vester lay afternoon. The fire, it is an association composed of the leading thought, was started by burning so< t business and professional men of the j falling from the kitchen flue. Tie city and county has been organized and i George Mellon home on the opposre will be known as the Prunarians. The 1 side of the street and the residence i.f CHARM OF “MERRIE ENGLAND’’ object of this organization will be to I J. E. Law and Tel. W. Bio it adjoin make known to the world the luscious What It Was in the Days of Old Can ing were endangered but uninjure I. Clarke county prune. Still Be Discerned in Spots Today. i i I SUPREME COUNCIL TO SILVER IS KING IN ARIZONA RULE. Old and New Mines Are Being Opened ** Two Delegates From Each of Great Powers Included. After Peace Brought Slump in Copper. Sliver Is king again In Arizona, says C. I*. Relnlger, president of the As sociation of Arizona Mining Men, ac cording to the Philadelphia Ledger’s Phoenix correspondent. With the cop Paris, June 30.—The council of the per market stagnant ns a result of the peace conference, it is understood, will cessation of war requirements, the de- h i llinmls for white metal are pouring In again take the form of an i • , from all quarters of the globe. Many supreme council, in which each of the J of the producers tire replacing their great powers will be represented hv ( copper with handling equipment two delegates. According to the Temps plants to turn out silver. the cuuncil will be formed as follows: "There Is a big demand for silver Premier Clemeneeiu and Foreign in Chinn mid India.” says George D Minister Piehon for France; Secretary Bethune of Globe. "The I'nlted States of State Lansing and Edward M. House government is filling it nt $1 mi ounce, fat the United States; Foreign Minister the smne price nt which it Is supplying 21 >0.1 it io,o< 10 ounces of the metal to the Balfour and Viscount Milner or Andrew British government on contract.” Bonar Law for Great Britain, Foreign Years ago, when Tombstone was nt Minister Tittoni and Guglielmo Mar the height of Its fame, Arizona was a coni for Italy, and Baron Makino and great silver producer. Then came the slump. Copper was discovered. Last Viscount Chinda for Japan. year, according to the estlinntcof the I'nlted States geological survey, Ari zona produced $192.000.000 worth of copper. "Give us copper,” was the cry from the I'nlted States mid the Eugene, Or., July 1.—That the road nl I les. With the armistice conditions up the Willamette river from Eugene to Oakbridge, 45 miles distant, is now changed overnight, one billion pounds in first class shape for motor travel, of copper, more than a third of which was Arizona production, are estimated except in two places, where there is a to be uwniting sale. So copper is short stretch of a few rods each which down mid silver Is tip. are a little rough, was the statement Surveys of the state indicate that In of M. H. Harlow, county commissioner, the Prescott and Tucson mines sliver who with J. R. McKay, county road predominates over the other metals; superintendent, made a trip yesterday, In Bisbee, Jerome, Globe mid Ajo its values as a b.v-produet run heavily. as far as Landax. From the neighborhood of Prescott The rough places are being smoothed come reports of the revival of old sil out, said Mr. Harlow, and in a short ver mines. Battle Flat, scene of a time this will be one of the best mount sanguinary Indian fight In the seven ain roads in the county It is said that ties, Is reported to have yielded new the scerery along the Willamette on discoveries of silver, and two frosh this road cannot be surpassed in this rumps have been opened on tills spur of the northern slope of the llrad- state. shuns. Road in Good Condition Pacific Air Trip IX Set DID SEEM LIKE PROFANITY Miles City, Mont., Joly 1.—Several British airplanes will start across the I Pacific on August 15 from San Diego, Catlf., bound for Australia, according to a statement made here yesterday by Captain William McDonald of Mel i bourne, formerly in the Canadian fly ing service, who is here on his way to southern Californir via Seattle. While full details of the trio have not been decided upon. Captain Mc Donald said the date for the start has been set and the trip would be made with stops at Honolulu, Gutta Perche, a small British island near Guam, and Nagasaki. He said he would pilot one of the planet* himself. Colonel Robert A. Miller Elected President. Portland, July I.—Colonel Robert A. Miller was elected president of the association of former residents of Salem, at the annual picnic held in the Peninsula Park Saturday afternoon About 100 attended the celebration. A lunch was served in the main hall of the recreation building and following thi> a rumb< r of addri s ■ s wen made b ns who at one time mi e heir ho" • ir the Capital city. At the election J. D. Lee was chosen yiee-president; Mrs. W. D. Palmer, aecretary, and Scott Bozorth, treasurer, i i I But Really, Prospective Bride Was Merely Trying to Tell Marriage License Clerk Her Name. C. M. Kennedy, who issues mnr- ringe licenses In Seattle, \Vash„ is an exceedingly polite mid withal ii proper young ninn. When ii prospective bride and groom approached Ills desk re cently here's what happened that shocked Kennedy: "Name, please?" said Kennedy to the sweet-faced young thing before him. "I I el nin heart Hurts," came the unex pected reply. "Er—I'm sorry." said Kennedy with ii frown. Turning to the prospective groom. Kennedy asked his name, think ing to give the coming bride mi oppor tunity to recover from her evident at tack of heart trouble. "George T. Halliday.” snlil the man. "And now your name?" said Ken nedy to the apparently recovered bride to be. “Helmnhenrt Hurt«,” she repented. "Young Indv," said Kennedy severe Ir. “I am n married man mid n father, and It grieves me to hear such lan guage from a girl getting n marriage license. If your heart hurts I'm sorry, but profanity I’ wholly unnecessary." "What the future Mrs Halliday Is trying to tell you." said the young man "Is that her name Is II e-l-m-n H-a-r-t H u r-t-z." Kennedy apologized.—Cin elnnatl Inquirer. * I' The Canning Season Let us send out what yoy need in Economy, Kerr Self-sealers and old style •/ Jelly Glasses, Jar caps anà Rubbers Jno.M. Wil Hains Co f Phone 142. 7 he People's Store Oregon Jacksonville, Of our forefathers, nine out of lived in the rural parts; and the nndnder, the busiest and the tithe of English humanity, in towns whose darkest lane was never a mile from the orchards round the town, so that the recreation of the city d' oiler was by the Iteilgerinvs ami river banks. . . . The spring mid the winter came unsought into every man's life, Elma, Wash., June 3*'—This week not as they come today, wayfarers Im- wandered mining the housetops, feebly Postrna er W. F. Roleits received ice that the Elma postoffice would whispering of unknown things in far salubrious Imids, but fresh with burst be ra:sed to ;■ second-class office on tl e ing bough or strong in glowing frost. Ist » f .Julv. This mean« t1 at the | os - The thoughts of the “Allegro" mid "11 m st r will receive a raise ir. sale y Penserosiz” are indeed the thoughts of a d that the office will be permitted to a rare mind, but the most vulgar slave | have one mure clerk. of custom enjoyed In the days of King Charles the conditions of daily life Public Virtue. which Milton there described; the That patriotism which, catching its sweet Influences of the seasons, had their effect. . . . Windber they knew inspiration from on high, and leaving It or not, the Cavaliers drew their I at an immeasurable distnnee below charm from the fields, mid the Puri nil lesser, groveling, personal inter- tans their strength from the earth. ests and feelings, nnimates and self-sacrifice, of . . . What this old England was can prompts to deeds of . . that Is still be seen mid felt In the combes valor, of devotion, public virtue; that is the noblest, the mid on the round hilltops of Somerset sublimest of all public virtues'— mid Devon, in the wooded lands over Clay. which Malvern looks to the west. 11 nd In the broken valleys that lead I lie lake mountains down toward the sea. —G. M. Trevelyan. Post office Gets Boost When you ’re hot and thirsty—say At any place where |oft beverages arc sold. BolUcd’in 3 sizes THE HENRY ^EINHARD PLANT Bottlers atid L'istribufors, PORTLAND. OREGON JV/ fining to b? t erg ID;?- Prizes for Pigmanship. Every year a pig race is held nt Crone-sur-Mmiie, In the north of Frmiee, a prize of 2,000 francs being awarded the lucky rider of the win ning jilg. This nice Is held In accord ance with the terms of the will of a wealthy tradesman of the village, who died forty-two years ago. lie ordered Unit amongst the amuse ments of the minimi fete should be in cluded a race with pigs, to be ridden either by men or boys. The prize, however, was not to be handed to the winning jockey except on condition that he wore deep mourning for the deceased for two years after the race. The municipality accepted the eccen tric bequest, mid these singular races haie been held regularly ever since. Felicity a Necessity. The presence of a wise population Implies tin1 search for felicity ns well as for food; nor can liny population reach its maximum hut through that wisdom which "rejoices" In the hiibt- table parts of the earth, The desert bus Its appointed place mid work; the eternal engine, whose beam Is the earth's axle, whose bent Is its year, and whose breath Is Its ocean will I still divide Imperiously to their desert king- I donis bound with unfuriownble rock, i mid swept by unarrested sand, their : powers of frost mid fire; but the zones mid lands between, luihitahle. will be loveliest In habitation. The desire of the heart Is also the light of the eyes. —Ruskin. Question of Opinion. The late General Booth of the Sal- vntlon army \vns conducting a big tn cetin which lasted unusually long, mid toward the dose a newspaper re- potter left Ills sent mid gained the aisle. General Booth (minted a tiager at him mid said: "Whoever leaves this auditorium will be damned by God. Tie? reporter nnswered: "If I don't leave this auditorium mid hurry back ■ i.my otliee I'll ho damned by the city (filer " "God I* above the city editor, 'orted General Booth. "Yes. | think he Is." piously respond ed the retnirter, "but ihe dly editor LEGION FOR AMERICA I'armer Killed; Money NISM. Missing. Thug Escapes Cheyvnne, Wyo., June 23. —A'l it. t >xieants left in the han Is of Cheyenne | liquor dealers et midnight Monday will e declared contraband and seized by Oregon City., June 30. —With a .38- the state, according to a statement to- caliber bullet through his temple, D. da tr, m Fred L. Crappe, new con- McNicl ols, a farmer ape 62, was found missioner of prohibition for Wyoming. ■lead this m ruing in his house on the Mr. Crabbe said he would instruct Sunnyside:roaff tn Clackamas county on his demtiis to enforce literally the Portland, .Tune 30.—Takin" an unre •he E'ighty-.seconn street road to Oreg tat i bore dry law from the momsnt served stand for ’<’0 per cent Amene’- on Citv. The man is known to have t becomes effective at midnight ,Von- nism, the Ameri-nn legion, the organi had a large amount of monev, which he ! day. zation of px service men, ye«terdax kept on his person. This money was sent out it’ first Fourth of July m"s ■ missing this morning and robbery is sage - a telegram from national h»ad given as the motive. quarters in New York. It va’ sort McNichgls lived alone in the small t'> each of the state headfrirter« of house. His body was found this morn- th-> legion, pledging the sutinort of the I ing about 10 o’clock by a laborer who Reÿ. U.S.Pat.Off. na'ional organization and asking each t worked on the road in front of the state chairman to telegraph a similar house and who had stepped into the Is our Registered and Common-law message to the governor of the state. hou’e to borrow a saw. McNichol» Trade-Mark and can only be right The f. Hoving tres’atre was received foot protruded through the front door fully used on goods made by us. bv Captain Eivers, state chairman: and held it open. His watch had stop- Koveralls are garments for “The American l egion stands for ' ped at 11:25 o’clock last evening. A children I to 8 years of age. 110 ner ci nt A morican'sm hase I on law ; milk — pad stood by Jhis side ar.d a lamp If a dealer tries to sell you, under and order. Nationally and ir every I was burning on the table. th.- /^overalls name, any garment state these responsible for good gov not of cur manufacture, you may be ernment and th" maintenance of sure he has an article that he is and order should be assured of Hogs Attacked by Cholera. trying to market on Koveralls unreserved support. The national Wheeler, Or., June 30.-Cholera at reputation. e-utive committee recommerds 1 tained Rudolph Zeriefel’s herd of hogs Unless made by Levi Strauss & Co. the American L-gion take this at Mohler the first of the week, and to they’re not KOVERALLS. partunity to express nation-wide date he has lost 170 out of 382 head, stand and to pledge it’ support to with a money loss of $4000. Dr. Glas- nation and the state.’’ yield of T llamook has been there vac Captain Elvers sent a me’snge to cinal.ng the the remaining hogs, and G Vi rno- Olcott, ntedging th" support cleaning up their yard be burning the of rhe O-eeon association for good gov logs and stumps. After finishing this ernment, law and nrde-, and the main the yard will be thoroughly disinfected, anew if they suit rip tenance of those ideals for which the and a new yard provided. The disease men fought. KOVERALLS are made only by Levi was brought in by a carload of un Straurs A Co., San FiancMO and bear this vaccinated hogs. Further spread of the disease is not feirad. koVERAl.LS Ex-Service Men Back Up National Government. Koveralls Keep Kids Kleen $1.50 the Suit U nDrr KLL Allies leit Turks to Go. LEV! STRESS «.Cfi SAS ’¿A« SCO. CAL I Pans, tune 30. —A note will he sent the Turkish delegation today by yie council of four, advi-’ing the member» to rctu-n to C 'nsfnntinonle. The m"S- SRg< will say there is no reason to be- li ve any agreement can be reached in the ip a- fit’T’ because of the great difference between the demands of the Turks and the concessions the .al/igs are willing to grant. i eterans to Orpaniz?. ’fAshland, Or , June 30. A call has been sent out bv a committee of world war ’-eteran« for a meeting of men who have served in rhe army, naw or marine’ during the war for the pur1-* pos ■ of o-ganizing a local chapter of th- American legion. The meeting* will b<j hyld Tuesday evening at the Ashland armory* s