Image provided by: Friends of Jacksonville's Historic Cemetery; Jacksonville, OR
About Jacksonville post. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1906-19?? | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1923)
fe A A A A A A w w w w f a . f a . a . a a V a F w A ▼ A W w w Y people often dress the most Incon ' splcuously.” Susan smiled her sweetest when she took his order and Torn drank the BALL BLUE tea and wafers she brought as If they ts needed in every department of house- ■ had been nectar, because of the sec keeping. Equally good for tow. '< ♦able H ond even sweeter smile with which linen, sheets and pillow case«. || Silverton.—The four L organization they were served. » A A A. A at Silverton has already begun plans When site returned with the check, on which was written twenty-five for a large Labor day celebration to Lgg Waste for Poultry cents, Tom cautiously took his wallet be held at Silverton. Is Recommended by Ohio from his pocket, glanced at it as he Crater Lake.—Crater Lake National held It under bls coat and then count park opened Sunday, July 1, with over Egg w-aste from Incubators Is rich ed out $250. 70 guests registered at the lodge and In protein and, after boiling and grind ing, can be profitably fed to poultry by “I don't want any change," he said 327 at the park entrance. mixing It with a dry mash to form a with considerable embarrassment. Eugene. — The Willamette highway •lightly moistened, crumbly mixture. "And please don't say anything. You In tests at the Ohio experiment sta see—” between Goshen and Lowell has been Susan had sat down beside Tom, be closed to through traffic on account of tion, Infertile and dead germ eggs cause from her sheer surprise she grading operations, according to an were boiled for «n hour, passed really felt unable to stand. Then she nouncement of the engineer in charge. through a sausage mill, dried, regrouud •nd mixed In the dry mush as a fat noticed that his suit really was shab Reedsport.—The Umpqua Mills & tening ration for young cockerels. The by, and that there were mended places on bls shoes. Perhaps he was unbal Timber company mill, which has been average gains from this mixture were anced—yet as she looked Into his under construction for the past two 9 per cent greater for the egg product clear, straight-browed eyes she knew months, will be operating about Aug than for skim milk, supplying the same of protein. this conjecture was wrong. ust 1, according to Robert Archley, su • mount For feeding market broiler» In So Susan took the money with a perintendent. crates the following mixture proved little gasp of surprise and promised to say nothing about the amount un Salem.—An increase in the volume excellent: Ground corn 40 parts, standard wheat middlings 20, and til after he had left. of business handled in the corporation moist egg product 40, with enough "I still want to spend $175,” Tom department during the last three water added to make a batter that said. “What shall I do with It?” could be easily poured. "Oh, there’s a crazy quilt that poor months of $23,713.51 over the corres Like nil moist mashes this mixture ponding months last year was reported Mrs. Hawkins made over at the do should be led with great care to nv<>'t| mestic table. Nobody In the world by the department. overfeeding, as the egg material is a will buy It, and she’ll be disappointed. Mill City.—Effective July 4, the concentrated feed and la greatly rel It’s marked $50, I think.” Hammond Lumber company raised to ished by the birds. Tom handed Susan the balance of minimum wages of common labor in hfs roll of bills. their mill here from $3.40 to $3.80 per Cholera Is Contagious "While I sit here, would you go and Among Chicken Flocks get that quilt and leave this money day, falling in line with other mills in the northwest. A few good men are Fowl cholera is germ disease which for It? But don't say anything.” Is very fatal, says Harry Emblem, Susan kept her promise—she did needed here. not advertise Tom’s generosity until Baker.—A discovery of free gold ore head of the poultry department of the after his departure. Then she told has been made on the Brooklyn quartz Oklahoma college. A fowl showing no somebody, who told somebody else, property on Snake river. The property symptoms of the trouble may be found dead under the rosst the next morning. and then was noised abroad the fame of the fairy prince. By those who had belongs to A. P, Callahan, and the ore All affected birds do not go In this seen him It was agreed that he was is said to assay $15 a ton across two way. Some may linger a few days, one of the best looking of men, that feet of the ledge. Tills Is the first free showing a great thirst, due to fever, bls manner« were perfect and that it gold ever found on the Brooklyn prop also a loss of appetite. The bowels was perfectly obvious that he wus a erty. Mr. Callahan has been develop will appear very louse, the bowel dis charge being of a greenish-yellow man of great fortune. ing It for copper. color. Gradually thereafter Tom found Salem.—The California state public Tlds trouble is contagious and can himself a much-sought-after young man. Dowagers who recognized him service commission has been asked by be carried on the feet of fowls and as the mysterious young philanthropist the Oregon commission to be its proxy man. If this trouble Is apparent a bowed to him as they passed and on at the hearing of the interstate com thorough cleaning up of the j remises two or three occasions he was hailed merce commission on the subject of should be made, and the house thor and Invited to take a place In the Pullman car surcharges to be held in oughly cleaned and disinfected. The limousine of one of those dowagers, San Francisco July 10. The Oregon ground around the house should be who expressed her surprise at seeing commission is unable to send a repre plowed and cultivated. All affected birds should be killed and burned. him on foot. It was Mrs. Fellows— Mrs. Daniel Fellows—of well-known sentative at that time. social prestige—who beamed upon Roseburg.—The rainfall experienced Development of Chicks Tom and asked him to call and the in the Umpqua valley during Friday Comes From Attention call led to a dinner Invitation. Tom and Saturday has done little damage. Best development of young chicks did not wish to explain his own pov erty because he was bound by his It will prove of much value as it Is comes from close attention to the word not to let It be known that his followed by warm weather. The rain brood coeps, cleanliness, proper feed aunt had really been ao liberal to the has not been heavy enough to do any and water, shade and free range. Keep Day Nursery. Besides, he rather en great amount of damage to hay, al a good mash before them. Watch for joyed playing the role of a young and though it will produce some discolora lice and mites. They multiply rapidly eccentric millionaire, and all nn occa tion, Fruit has been benefited greatly. during warm weather. Clean and spray houses and coops. sional fling In society would cost La Grande.—Before winter sets in, would be the running expenses of hfs evening clothes—which he had already La Grande, now considered one of the acquired when he played In the co) most beautiful cities east of Portland, lege glee club. Then this was an op In the state of Oregon, will be a veri portunity of seeing Susan, for Mrs. table city of paving. Construction has Fellows explained that she would be begun on the first Improvement dis one of her dinner guests. By way of trict to be paved, with the installation giving a meager explanation of him of concrete sidewalks and curbing in The eggs of ducks retain their self Tom snld he was studying law. Yes, he belonged to the same family connection. This section embraces sev hatchability for a shorter time thun the hen eggs. The fresher the eggs as Mrs. Gerald Travers. He did not eral streets. are when Incubated, the better. explain that he belonged to nn en Salem.—The state fair board mem • • • tirely Impecunious branch of the fam bers believe that this year’s fair will If your turkeys are wild, make ily, and that with his aunt’s fortune friends with them. It Is cheaper and •heady bequeathed to women's col be the greatest in the history of the easier to handle birds that trust the state, Fred Currey, secretary of the leges In the Orient, and with some caretaker. twenty cousins and some ten or a board, said Saturday. Preparations are • • • dozen aunts and uncles to be consid being made with this prediction in Experimental work by the bureau of ered first, In case the will were bro inind. Reports from the entire north animal Industry, United States De ken, he was quite without prospects. west say the people this year are tak partment of Agriculture, shows that Tom knew he should at least have Ing more Interest In fairs than for good egg yields and economical results made bls position clear to Susan, but several years. can be secured with a wheatless ration he didn’t. And this made It awkward for chickens. • • • La Grande.—Marie Shaw, 16, Union, a month or so later when Susan, con Lice, overfeeding and filth kill two- fident In her own radiant beauty and was injured, dying one hour later, the admiration that was very appar when an automobile In which she was thlrds of all turkeys that die. The ent In Tom's eyes, told him In a round returning to Hot Lake from a dance, other third die from too close confine about way that the reason why she alleged to have been driven at a speed ment, accident or Inherited weukness. ’ ’ * I had decided never to marry was be of 50 miles per hour, was wrecked. Let turkeys roost In the open air, 1 cause a certain young law student of Three other occupants of the car were but In a high, dry place. If turkeys ] her acquaintance didn’t seem to want to make her his wife. Tom said noth slightly injured. Sidney Turner of roost near a swamp there is almost from roup. ing. There was nothing he possibly Union, the driver. Is facing a charge sure to be trouble • • • could say. Not for Ove years would of manslaughter. Young ducklings nnd goslings must he be In any position to support an Portland.—Construction of a sawmill be kept from the dampness the same ordinary wife, and heaven knew when of 30,000 to 40,000 feet capacity will as chicks. They grow fastest If kept he could support a girl like Susan. That night when Tom arrived at start at once near Oak Ridge in the on soft mash feeds and only allowed his aunt's house after one o'clock the Cascade national forest, according to enough water to drink. old woman was sitting up for him. Colonel George H. Kelly, successful bld Reflection on Great Cities. She ordered him to sit down beside der for the 685,000,000 feet of timber her and rated him soundly for his just marketed by the government in If you suppress the exorbitant love late hours. And then she said: that section. Colonel Kelly has gone of pleasure and money, Idle curiosity, "Tom, you have surprised me. I to superintend operations. A party of iniquitous purpose, ami wanton mirth, thought you were an ordinary, self engineers is to leave immediately for what a stillness would there be in the effacing young man like the rest of the scene. greatest cities.—llruyere. your tribe, “willing to grub along with Moro.—The 30 hours’ fairly contin your law books, permitting poverty to Concerns the Trades People. cramp you ana keep you back. Hut I | uous rainfall here, beginning Thurs have noticed that you have been go- < day night about 6, gave a total precip John Selden—Of all the actions of Ing out much of late, and through a itation of 1.28 Inches, according to th<- private detective I have found out j federal experiment station. It cannot a man's life his marriage doth least where you have been going. You have I be termed a storm as it was a gentle concern other people; yet of all actions of our life it Is most meddled with by apparently been taken up socially by really worth-while people. You are persistent downpour with practically other people.—Boston Transcript. clever enough to do a little social no wind. Wheat north of Wasco and climbing. I like that In you.” Then for a short distance south of that city! Swiftest River. she dismissed Tom and told him not Is damaged, but to what extent Is hard The Amazon can lay claim to being to keep her up any longer. But as to estimate. the largest river in tho world, but the he was leaving the room she called Pendleton.—Seven plots of wheat In swiftest flowing Is the Sutlej, in India, him back and with much embarrass ment told him that she had decided the Umatilla county wheat nursery which rises 15,200 feet above the sea to mttko him her sole heir. have been harvested by Fred Bennlon, anil falls 12,000 feet in 180 miles. “I like you. I admire you. Marry county agent In charge of the nursery ! a rich wife If you like, but don’t feel The seven plots are chiefly Binut r<- The best way to get along with some that you have to. And you needn’t Blatant wheats, being tried under field people is to ask for more than you ex wait until I'm dead, either,” she j conditions by the state. One variety is pect and then compromise on what you laughed mirthlessly. ‘T've planned to 1 Florence, the earliest ripening wheat want. give you $200,000 now. We’ll make known. Two of the varieties are se arrangements In the morning.” And arrangements were made, and lections made by D. E. Stephens of Are You Satisfied? very soon afterward other arrange- | Moro experiment station from hybrids i.-t the biggest, most perfectly equipped Training School in the North ments to Tom more Important. For developed by Dr. E. G. Gaines of Pull Business west. Fit yourself for a. higher position he hurried to the home of Susan and man. The early wheats ripened two j with more money. Permanent position* our Graduates. offered his heart and hand, and was weeks ahead of hybrid No. 128, which | assured Write for catalog—Fourth and Yamhill. accepted even before he had had time Is planted in the field alongside the! Portland. to discard the old patched shoes for nursery. P. N. U. No. 28, 1923 new. a PORTLAND FOR YOUR PRODUCE Portland, Oregon VAUDEVILLE PHOTO-PLAYg Complete Change Saturday. Adult», Week day Matinee. 20c: Evenings. 3#c. Continuous 1 to 11 p. m. Children 10 cents ail times. ACHERMAN &HARRIS I Northwestern School of Commerce Hasa Good Position for You o n 11 ... XV * The Progressive Business College of the West PORTLAND. OREGON.t ÍKEE book Moving Your Future For- ward” tells vou aLuut it Write Today. No Obligation Hot and Cold Water and Phone in Every Room. Comfortable Accommodation at Moderate Prices. HOTEL MORRIS European Plan Free Garage MR. AND MRS. H. M. BRANSON. Proprietor«. Tenth and Stark. Phone Broadway 1270. HOTEL ALOE R Cor. 4th and Alder, Portland, Ore A HAÜ REOPENED AND NEWLY FURNISHED Fairness, Courtesy, Good Service. European Plan Exclusively. Rates fl.Ou, Si.60 and $2.00. Most Central Hotel in Portland. FRED SMITH, Mgr D ¥ TD \Jr¥y KUÒ1A UK AIM 1 Z71 ò /i Portland. Oregon /I A guod Place to Eat »nd Live Well “Ie ñ A JOB WITH A FUTURE WE use men between ages of 18 and 50. pay 40c per hour as minimun wage, give best of meals at 35c each, supply beds for 25c, 30c and 40c. have FREE hot and cold water baths, advance employees rapidly, give positions FREE on application, have Employment offices at West Linn, Oregon, Camas, Washington, and 209 Commonwealth building, Sixth and Burnside, Portland, Oregon. Crown Willamette Paper Co. INFORMATION DEPARTMENT, ATTENTION LADIES Sanitary Beauty Parlor«—We fix you up, ! we make all kind» of Hair Goods of your I combings. Join our School of Beauty Culture. 400 to 414 Dekum Bldg., Phone Broadway 6902, Portland, Oregon. FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORKS Commercial Iron Works. 7th & Madison.__ CUT FLOWERS & FLORAL DESIGNS Clarke Bros., Florists, 287 Morriaon St FOOT CORRECTIONIST Featherweight Arch Supports made to order. J. E. Tryzelaar, 618 Plttock Block, Portland, Ore. PLEATING SPECIAL Cut, seam. hem and machine QC ph-at skirts ready for band. VCI11D PERSONAL Marry If Lonely; most successful "Homs Hemstitching, picoting and tucking. Maker*'; hundreds rich; confidential; EASTERN NOVELTY MFC. CO. reliable: years experience; descriptions 86V4 Fifth St. Portland. Or. free. "The Successful Club," Mrs. Nash, Box S56, Oakland, California. mechanicalneek Protect that Idea with a United Wedding Bouquet« and Funeral Piece« States Patent. Others have made fortunes Lubliner Florists. 348 Morrison St. out of Patents. Why not you? Thomas MONUMENTS— E. 3d and Pine Sts. Bilyeu, 202 Stevens Bldg.» Portland, Ore. Otto Schumann Granite & Marble Work« PATENT ATTORNEY Wanted! PILES Timber Fallers and Contract Buckers. Near Coast. work Apply 209 Commin wealthbuilding, Port- land, Oregon USB no knife, anaesthetic, clamps, ligature*, stitches, burning er other disagreeable or dangerous methods, and GUARANTEE to permanent- % ly cure your Pile«. Write today i > for my FREE illustrated book. I DRrCHAS. J. DEAN 2ND AND MORRISON PORTLAND,OREGON MENTlO/UTHIfl DAPÇR WHfN WWlTlNO When a Girl Is an Old Maid. A Hopeless Job. She Isn’t really an old maid until Ever since the world began men have tried to invent something that she begins to dream of a cute kitchen women would refuse to wear. Thus Instead of a handsome knight.—San far they have not succeeded.—Out Francisco Chronicle. look. A tropical fish, whose fins become Placing studios on the roof of New- bright blue in moments of excitement, York warehouses may be taken as evi and whose young hang from aquatic dence that Industry is elevating art.— plants by hooks on top of their heads, is now exhibited in the London zoo. Boston Transcript. An interesting device—that motor truck which "walks like a man.” Now for a pedestrian who can run like a motor truck. — New Orleans Times- Picayune. It is not only difficult to say the right thing in the right place, but, far more difficult still, to leave unsaid the wrong thing at the tempting mo ment.—Anonymous. GATHERED FROM ONE BIG TREE e----------------------------------------------- Innumerable Products Derived From product that was once given over to lire In order to get rid of It. Wood Pulp, Through the In Of course, all the wrapping paper ventive Genius of Man. and paper boxes you see, as well ae My wideawake railroad friend, the page upon which this Is printed, George D. Ogden of Pittsburgh, was were once trees of the forest. talking to some lumbermen. Boards, shingles, planks, lath and Earth's Climatic Condition-. Joists were once the only output of a Coal Is pretty evenly distributed log, he said, but now behold what a over the world. Neither the equatorial forest tree does for you. nor the polar regions are unduly Your cravat was very likely a Ca favored. This means that for most of nadian spruce or a birch, and so were the time the differences between the your wife’s silk stockings and under torrid and the frigid zones haxe been garments, writes “Girard” in the Phila slight At first sight this e.ipears delphia Enquirer. stranger, because we are accustomed We see carpets, rugs, tnpestries, to the passing of seasons and changes dishes, phonograph records moving of temperature with latitude. We find picture films, paints, soaps, rope, It difficult to picture In our minds an twine, disinfectants, dyes and celluloid other state of affairs. Nevertheless, all built upon wood pulp. When Penn It seems that our time Is the unusual sylvania was still the leader of lum one, with its extremes of climate. ber states, sawdust at the mills was a Fully three-quarters of the time that the earth has stood, mild weather haa nuisance and a dead loss. Many of the articles mentioned prevailed from the equator to the above are partially made of this by poles. Shanghai Plant Owners Reduce Cotton Output Shanghai.—The cotton mills of ’ Shanghai have agreed to a reduced pro duction schedule for a period of sixty days, that will cut their output by 50 per cent. This was brought about under an ; agreement approved by the Cotton Mill Owners' association, and was caused by a weak and falling market for yarn at ; a time when high pricea were ruling I for raw cotton. j It was es'lniated that stocks of yam In the hands of mills and merchants In Shanghai ran to 100,000 bales. Thia Lobster a Freak. An ordinary sized lobster was taken In one of the traps during the lobster season In Nova Scotia. But Instead of the dark shell common to lobsters when alive it had a blue shell. ♦ I ♦ Generosity i r» by Proxy i ------------- By JANE OSBORN t ♦ ^♦♦4,4»4,4'4»4, ++4,4, + *fr4,4***+*S******** (-5). 1S83. by McClure N»wspap»r Syndicate.) Seventy-year-old Mrs. Gerald Trav ers certainly had no expansive repu tation for liberality, but when Tom Travers, her long-departed husband's nephew, found himself at the end of his meager resources the autumn of his last winter in law school, he did not let any lack of favorable reputa tion In this regard stand In bls way. She had no end of money—this his old sister had told him—and after all he was not going to ask charity. So he had put false pride In his pocket and had gone to call on his aunt by marriage—though, of course, he never dreamed of calling her any thing but “Mrs. Travers.” He wanted to arrange to live In the garret or somewhere In the old house so as to help pay expenses that last season In law school. In return he would prom ise never to make himself more ap parent than she wished, and would be glad to take on any household tasks— tending furnace, shoveling snow, even scrubbing kitchen floors, If she wished. Mrs. Travers had not been unkind, but she proudly said that no Trav ers need stoop to menial labor. "You come here at once, and occupy one of the small rooms on the fourth floor,” she had ordered. “You’ll have meals here, too, though not with me. You can have them when yon like In the breakfast room I never use. I’ll find enough for you to do to square our score—” “But I don’t want to accept char ity—” Tom protested, and then old Mrs. Travers had laughed, not alto gether pleasantly, as Tom recalled later. “You’ll earn your board and keep, never fear,” she said. “I'm not In the habit of being Imposed on.” Tom soon found that it was true that he really was earning his way. Every evening he reported to his rela tive for orders and the tasks she as signed him were always well planned out before his coming. They did not take so much time—but they would have taxed the resources of any one less persistent than Tom Travers. One day she wanted to Invest $10.- 000 that had just come to her In a matured bond. Tom was given orders to look up the best possible way for her to reinvest that money. The next day her pet dog needed to visit the veterinary surgeon’s; would Tom take him In the morning and see that he was well treated? Another day a friend landed from Europe, might have a little difficulty with the cus toms; Tom was to do the meeting and the smoothing. Then once, when the dressmaker was coming, there were countless samples of ribbons and silks to be matched—but Tom didn't even balk at that, nor on that other occa sion when Mrs. Travers asked him to go to the milliner’s with her “to see that the fool saleswoman didn’t try to give her anything unbecomingly youth ful.” So Tom paid his way. One day toward spring Mrs. Trav ers handed him $500 In bank notes. “There’s a fair for the Day Nursery this afternoon. I detest such things. I’d send the amount in a check only I don’t want to give any one of the women managing the affair the satis faction of bringing In all that money at once. But I would like to help the good cause along a little. Now your Job today will be to go to that fair nnd spend this money—a little here and a little there—without letting any one know I'm responsible.” At first tills did not seem like such a herculean task—at least not so bad as the trip to the milliner’s or some other of his recent errands. But Tom Travers had never attended a fair be fore. He had the money changed Into five and ten-dollar bills and carried a fat wallet In an Inside pocket to his afternoon lectures so that he could stop at the fair in mid-afternoon. First he went the rounds system atically. He bought a flve-dollar doll at the doll table and left twenty dol lars without taking any change. Then he passed on to the fancy table, where he acquired something all covered with embroidery and lace, the purpose of which he did not know, and left twenty dollars for that, though It was priced but ten. At the candy table he left five dollars for a pound of adamantine fudge, left twenty dollars for a single rose nt the flower table nnd had little difficulty In getting the young girl at the grab bag to accept a ten-dollar bill Instead of ten cents for his chance. But Tom so far had spent only $75. He had $425 still to dispose of nnd he found that he had already attracted considerable attention. He took a seat In the tea room, hoping here to derive Inspiration for the rapid spend ing of the rest of his money. Tom was Interrupted In his reverie by tlie appearance of a very pretty young woman clad In what was In tended to represent the costume of a Dutch peasant It wasn't at all au thentic, but It was very becoming The girl was Susan Dodge—of the old, aristocratic, Immensely rich Dodge family. She had come to ask for Tom's order. “Smile your sweetest,” some one had whispered, “and maybe he'll leave you a ten-dollar bill. He’s shabby enough, but seems to be ■ millionaire In disguise.” “I don't think he's shabby," Susan Lad answered. "The most arUt'xrstlc NEWS t Red Cross r L STATE IN BRIEF. : I