Image provided by: Friends of Jacksonville's Historic Cemetery; Jacksonville, OR
About Jacksonville post. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1906-19?? | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1920)
JACKSONVILLE POST nions. R. J. McCafferty vs.- Ekron McCaff erty. Divorce. Complaint, summons. Official Paper of the City of Jacksonville Orepon Gao. Iverson vs. Ada L. Iverson. Di vorce. Complaint. A weekly newspaper published every Saturday at the county seat of Jackson Mav Reger vs. Roscoe K. Reger. Di vorce. Complaint. County, Oregon Henry G. Enders va. Annie B. End Tom W. Fulion, Editor. era. Divorce. Complaint. En$ .-red as sec in i-class matter June 22 1907. at the post office at Jacksonville Oregon, under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. MARRIAGE LICENSES VVoiild like f°r You to See Neil W. McEacherm and Rose Uovo. lilo Ellery Lamb and Leia A. Peart. SAI URDA Y. JUNE 26. ¡»20 J. D. Bradbury and Geraldine Ruck- SUBSCRIPTION: One year by mail $2.00. Advertising rates furnished on er. application. Lester G. Warren and Donna Bach- teil. Enos Wold and Rosalie E. Jenks. FOR PRESIDENT FOR VICE-PRESIDENT Amil Schlip and Mina Carter. Edward V. J. Hansley and Salome F. Morse. HARDING The Reaper C 0 0 L I I) G E Warren G. Harding, the Republican party’s choice for Jackson t’ountv president, now nearing the end of his first term as United Library Aids Blind. The Best Work Shoe States Senator from Ohio, is called a self-made man, says the Chicago Tribune. He was in turn a farmer boy, The development of library service for the blind, in which the Jacksen at the Lowest Price member of a railroad construction gang, country school County Library is interested, was urg teacher, printer’s devil, linotype operator, publisher, busi ed before the recent annual conference of the American Library Association by ness man and banker before he became a commanding! I I one of the only two American commis sioned officers blinded in the war. Lieu figure in the political life of the nation. tenant Frank Schoble, of Philadelphia, He is descended from two pioneer American families, I whose optic nerves were severed by a shot that pierced his skull in the Ar hardy Holland Dutch on the one side and liberty loving! gonne fighting in October in 1918, told The Peoples Store Scotch on the other. He was born on his grandfather’s! the several hundred librarians from the Phone 142 United States and Canada assembled farm just outside the village of Blooming Grove, Ohio., at Colorado Springs that 5u,000 blind Oregon Jacksonville, the country depend upon public li Nov. 2, 1865. His father, Dr. George T. Harding, still a I in braries and ths A. L. A. to help them practicing physician in Marion, 0., despite his advanced out of darkness. Only thirty-five per cent of the 75.000 age-76 years- was then a struggling country doctor. 1 blind of the nation have learned to1 Young Harding attended the village school until he re< due to the exc essive coit I of books in raised type and the be- * was fourteen, when he entered the Ohio Central college l , wildering diversity of types in use, an removed by the adoption of a at Ibera. He worked his way through school by cutting i obstacle uniform, simple braille type The 200 corn, painting his neighbor’s barns and helping to grade blinded service men returning to civil life were aided by the American Li the road bed of the T. & 0. C. railroad. He also played a brary Association, said Lieutenant cornet in the village band and was editor of the college Schoble, through the printing of about •Notice of final Setti:ment Weather Report ! forty books in the uniform type, chief- paper. j ly books on trades and vocations suit IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE STATE for the sightless. The A. L. A. is OF OREGON, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY Upon his graduation from college he went to work in able Following is the report of U. s. Vo'- OF JACKSON. aiding all blind in the Urited States by the village printing office. When he was 19 his father promoting the publication of books in unteer Cooperative Observer, E. Britt, In the Matter of the Estate of | the uniform type on a non commercial Jacksonville, for month of May. moved to Marion and aided him in acquiring control of basis, thereby bringing the price of the Latitude 42 deg. 18. min. north; longi Benjamin F. Adkirs, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned have filed their final account the Marion Star, of which he is still publisher. The sena books within reach of individuals and tude 123 deg. 5 min. west. as the j lint admistratrixs of the »»state of libraries. Small public libraries will Beni imin F. Adkins,deceased,in the tor learned to set type himself and when the linotype was be able to serve their blind patrons by Date maximum Pr j:tp of County Court of Jackson County, Ore borrowing books from the larger li gon, and that said court has appointed introduced learned to operate that. The pocket piece he braries, as books for the blind may be Monday, the 28th day of June, 1921, at the hour of ten o'clock in the forer.o on still carries is the old printer’s rule he used in those days. sent free through the mails. of said day as the time, and the Court Please report to the librarian the Room of said Court in the Court House Senator Harding is a director in a bank, direct >r in names and addresses of any persons in at Jacksonville, Jackson County, Ore- ■ gon, as the place for hearing objections several large manufacturing plants and a trustee of Trin the county who can use these books in to said final account, the settlement i raised type and the service will be thereof and disposition of said es Carol099 ity Baptist church in his home town. started at once. John M. Williams Co « t Court House News Action for money. Default. Judgment. J. C. Power vs. J. E Barkdull. Act ion to recover money. Motion for item ized statement, of account. tate, and the discharging of said joint administratrix* from their trust and the exoneration of their bond, and settlement of said estate. All persons interested are hereby notified to appear at said time and place and to show cause, if any they have, why said final account shoul 1 not be aDproved by said court, said es- ' ta»c be dec-eed to be fully settled, and i a decree mad? for the disposition of i said estate to the persons entitled i thereto, and said joint administratrix» [ discharge.! from their trust and their I bond exonerated. j Dated at Medford,. Oregon. this 'Tst | day of Muy, A. D., 1924. M atilda J. A dkins , O ra L. B arnett , Joint Admimstratriks <f the Estate of Benjamin F. Adkins, De> eased. Some Should Be Broken. '•These talking machines nt $50.95,’ Advertises a Chicago music house, “break all records. After listening to some tecords one simply can't shake oft the conviction that there cannot be too many such machines in »tant use.—Springfield Union. CIRCUIT COURT. Talent Merc. Co. vs. W. T. Estep, Bullock Merc. Co. vs. Clarence Pep per «nd Mrs. Clarence Pepper. Action i Action tn recover money. Demurrer, i Demand for bill of particulars. for money. Default. Decree. Judging Materials. Credit Service Co vs. W. T. Estep. Bullock Merc. Co. vs. Geo. Penland When buying woolen materials and Mrs. George Penland. Action for Action to recover money. Summons. hem up to the light and look through m may. Default. Judgment. «Valter C. Weaver vs. Eathel B. 'them; the best qualities are free from Bullock Merc. Co. vs. J. W. Dressier. Weaver. Divorce. Complaint, sura- | uneven and broken tbrand«. a s r .a» . t. • -,gT-=--------- - - * l - With Money Few men are careless with actual cash, but many men do not stop to think that the checks and notes they give out represent money and that fraudulent alteration of a check may mean a serious loss. Protect yourself by using paper that betrays alteration — Paper. We can tell you more about it and show you how we can protect your cash, your checks, notes, drafts, and receipts. Unusual Tires IRES that are different in their distinctive good looks and in their construction. An extra ply of fabric, an extra heavy tread and generous oversize make a tire of remarkable endurance. T Next Time—BUY FISK PERSONAL SERVICE Pick’s Hardware , Temperature—mean max. 32.12; min. 39.0; mean 55 5; Max 83 on minimum 31 on 25. Gre atest daily vanga, 44. Total precipitation 0 78 Precip. for sensori 13 33. Precip. last taason 22.75 I E. B ritt , Cooperative Observer Crude Tool», Artistic Work. The natives of Terras straits, Queensis.id make numerous ornn- meat« out of tortoise nnd pearl shells. Hair combs, earrings, finger rings, chai,is . d brooches mnde of tortoise shell nnd Inlaid with mother-of-pearl are give“ nn artistic finish. And often the only tool used Is a knife or u piece of broken glass. Ì Forces Within. FISK Trial« without discover forces within. Says Victor Hugo: "There are nstlncts for all the crises of life.” A deep perplexity awakens a Hash nl In-echt: n hitter opposition sets the soul on tire; n brave perl! opens our eyes to horses and chariots of tire; n severe catastrophe evokes n heroism of which the sufferer had not thought 'Htnself capable.-—W. L. Watklnsou. What Canals Can Da. • There are 400 miles of navigable waterways In Britain, yet the actual percentage of craft on them at the moment Is less than one per mile. On rhe other hand. Germany owes much to her highly efficient and economical canal system. Her water roads link up 700 Industrial centers, and goods sent by canal route cost much less than by rail. Miracles in Money A city skyscraper seems a miracle in steel and stone. But it is only a vast number of girders painstakingly placed together —a vast quantity of bricks placed end to end and one above another. Miracles in money are seeming miracles only, You can work miracles in your own life. Saving Wins Success can have a big prosperous farm, own a car, or travel wherever you wish, Men who have really sue- ceeded spell it S-A-V E. You can win the same success. You do not need a lot of money to do it. You need no great education. You need only the determi nation to start n< w and con tinue. Let us he! To Save Your smd Mak® Y©urMow®y$af« BANK WITH US iBANK OF JACKSONVILLE *