Image provided by: Friends of Jacksonville's Historic Cemetery; Jacksonville, OR
About Jacksonville post. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1906-19?? | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1924)
CENTRAL. F PERSONAL A D OTHERWISE (Happenings of our neEA. ! ! tuvi gleaned by our r ■ \ V _H_____ COOLIDGc AND ECONOMY .. ire Jack Sout! vt , J Ivi. ly, accompanied by (k i i irdman and Snyder, left Tue- ' >\ f joy ed a motor r,p to Wil outing at Brown’s Cabin. liams Creek Sunday. M. F. Hubbard and fami Mis. Kate Hoffman’s ly and Telha Casebeer are friends will regret to learn spending two weeks at D':i- that she is ill and hope that mond Lake and its vicinitv. • she m iy s :. ;• recover. Ed Brown of the Damon Mrs. Kate Stephenson cafe is enjoying a week’s who is cook at Amy’s Place vacation, which he is spend has been olì duty several ing in northern California. d ys on account of illness, Bruce F. Pickett of Port pl t : coverii . land, who is employed by J. L. Roe and daughter, the Pacific Telegraph and Mrs. Ralph H. Ball, and Telephone Company, is ifi Master Sam Ball were din • spending a few days with his parents, Mr. and M s. ner guests at the country L. F. Pickett, in Central h< Lie of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Bixby Tuesday. Point. Mrs. Janies McDowell, A fine new Methodist who had been*a- sufferer from church was dedicated in cancer, passed away Mond iv Medford-Sunday with appro and was buried at Ashland priate services. 1 he church Wednesday. She is survived was buiic at a cost of pne by a husband and seven chil hundred thousand dollar*. 8 dren, also her mother ant Mrs. Grace Merritt has Q Q brothers and sisters. returned from a visit to Q i AMY’S PLACE JACKSONVILLE’S Popular Restaurant A Full Line of Groceries, Fruits in Simon Confectionery, he Cream WHEN HUNGRY, GO TO AMY’S PLACE j Crater Lake and other points if intere.t in southern Ore gon, with a company of friends, and reports a very pleasant trip. Miss Dorothy Chitwood retmned home Sunday from Klamath Falls, where she had spent several weeks w ith her aunt, Miss Apple- gate. Miss Applegate ac companied her home and remained until Monday a guest of the Chitwood home. Godivard Mercantile Co Q Phom llt 8 Jacksonville, Oregon 8 .QOOeÆQOOOCæOaOOOCXL'OOOtJOOaOC X.&OOOOOOCOOOOOOCOOOl O PERSONAL SERVICE Si 1 vertewn Cord Are best in the long1 run DIGNIFY GF MINING INDUSTRY The Republican conven tion at Cleveland included i 1 its platform a plank which is of no significance except that it recognizes mining as an industry to be fostered. Great credit is due to Sena tor Oddie, of Nevada, for procuring the introduction of this plank, even in tile position it occupies—last ex cept for the plank concern ing the territories of Hawaii and Alaskas It says: “ idle mining industry has experienced a period of de D. E. HARDMAN, Prop. pression as a result of tne ab- 1 Main Street Jacksonville Phone 282 norm:d economic condition I! growing out of the war. This administration has ac complished much in improv tx ing the conditions affecting r this great fundamental in dustry and pledges itself to FOR continue its efforts in this direction.’’ This handsomely neutral Also Selling Out Several of Those to Make Room izes a recent unfortunate for Wir ter Stock.’ circular which went out from the treasury depart The W orkmen’s Clothing and Shoe Store ment warning citizens against foolish investments, John Pappas, Prop. including those in mines. This circular was, cf course, thoughtless and drafted by some minor official, while the platform plank is a w ell considered expression of fact. Members of the great fundamental indus- •v” must interest them selves in seeing that the widespread appraisal of the nature of mining invest ments is changed for the better. — Engineering and Mining Journal Press. FICK’S HARDWARE And General Accessories Hardman Garage BETTE . SHOES LESS for Men and Boy» ■riJARi t M'«C.1Ai»DtSr SINCE HMM j MONEY PRUNE GROWERS COMBINE The President in his S|ieech before The prune growers of Oregon and tin Gov : r.t. Lusii v . Organ ••» uthern Washington have combined to tion Meeting, composed of the heads of market their crop through a central the different branches of the govern selling association. Their plan is sub ment made it plain that he was going stantial. It can and should be worked to cut to the bone on all spending of I out to the material benefit of all grow the public’s money. Mr. Coolidge did ers. Local units unite with the central not mince words in his address, he association. The organization builds made it very plain that not a dollar > from the bottom. The organization will have about must be wasted and that appropriations must be kept down to actual necessi sixty per cent of the growers under ties. He pointed out that the busin< > agreement to market through the as- of government had been stablished on aociation, so the managers state. They an efficient basis and that he intended should have ninety per cent signed up. Or.e big obstacle to co-operative suc that it should be kept that way. He emphaised the fact that one of the cess everywhere is that too few co greatest perils of an extensive repub operate, that 25 per cent of producers lie was the disregard of individual buy and hold the umbrellas over the rights, lie said “A government which outside 75. Those on the outside get lays taxes on the people not required the lull benefit of the work and ex by urgent public necessity and sound pense of the too few on the inside. public policy is not a protector of 1 After a time they become discouraged liberty, but an instrument of tyranny. with carrying the expense load and Unless the people can enjoy that rea doing all the work, and they quit, sonable security in the possession of lhen the whole co-operative movement their property, which is guaranteed by gels a set-back. Any producer, every producer, should the Ci i stitution against unreasi i able taxation, freedom is at an end. The be convinced by this time that the only common man is restrained and ham chance he has to compete with the rest pered in his ability to secure food and ot the country is to play the game as clothing and shelter. His wages are the rest of the country plays it, and decreased, his hours of labor are that is by compact organization and lengthened.” The President pointed control of products. There are huge out in most emphatic terms that he profits made from agricultural products, stood today as he always has for the ' but they ape made after they leave the strictest economy in the expenditure ( growers hands, and are made by or of the people’s money. He pointed ganizations that have no part in the out that the fiscal year ending June 30, work of production. Ihe prune industry can be made 1921, expenditures amounted to over $5, (CO, 100, GOO and that the next three profitable. There are abundant mar years under the budget system the ex kets in the country for the entire pro penditures were brought down to duction, but it will never be profitable $3,795,000,000, $3,097,000,000 and $3,- tor the growers so long as they simply 497,000,000 re: pectively. He pointed pick and dump. That is the situation out that the public debt had been re the middle-handlers like—that gives duced $2,722, ('(»., 000 during this same them their chance to make the profits peried and that the saving in interest I the growers should have. alone to the people had been more than ’1 lie production of prunes in Oregoi $120,000,0110 each year. is increasing and will increase for some ------------- o------------- years to come, as the many new Try the new tutti fruiti ice cream at orchards come into bearing. If there Dorothy’s. lp is any profit to accrue to the growers, ------------- o------------- it must come through organization and Put a little want ad 111 a selling plan that will distribute the The Post if you have a dog fruit over the whole country, as the or cat you’d like to dispose localitieslneed it, and in the least ex of. Perhaps some one in pensive way. The crop must be taken from the hands of the middle agencies Portland or Alaska—is and speculators. The organization wanting one. must supplant these. If enough of the growers realize Jacksonville Lodge No. 10,1. 0. 0. F. these facts, the new selling organiza Meets every Saturday Evening at 7:30. tion will amount to something. If All members and visiting brothers are enough of them are selfish enough to cordially invited to attend the meet t link they can stay on the outside, let ings. the organizers pay the expenses and do D avid D orn , N. G. A lfred T. N orris , Sec. Pro-Tern. the work, while they get the same price for their prunes, then will another attempt to help agriculture have failed. Farmers have the, power to make Selling out ranches, $2 per acre up; their industry profitable. They pro 10 years time. Ranches for rent. Gold Ray Realty Co., Medford, Ore. duce what the world must have. By working together, selling together, standardizing and controlling their own RUPTURE bu incss, they can get a large part of Expert Coining To tin profits that others now make off from them, and be contented and MEDFORD I : perous. But until enough of them Will Give Free Demonstration can think this way, and enough of I i MONDAY and TUESDAY them will act this way, co-operative on July 28 and 29 movements will continue to fail, or At Holland Hotel fr iq 10 a.m. to function with little results. It need, 4 p.m. po |..-r c mt of the growers of a product Two Days Only to >• “hands off” to the army ol’ On above date the noted rupture ap mid lie men. With such organization pliance expert, ( . I . Redlich, will give the farmers would be as powerful to a free demonstration. get profit p. ices for their products af- ■•» ze the differ arc to gut ence between his highly efficient, ab the shoe manufacturers I solutely sanitary appliance; and the theirs. I; this time farmers must realize inefficient unconfortable, smelly and I thoroughly un unitary ela- tie. web that let- slation will never restore their I trusses with their bulky, plainly visible pn , i rity. It will take mass action pads and their abomil ble chafing leg straps or the various mail order steel and i I plete control of their products. or wire tru which r ver fit right. When they supplant the hosts of middle All of these unscientific devices make men by their own organization and your rupture steadily worse instead of reach the head of the big chain stores better, {is you ell know. Mr. Red- ai J other big buying concerns for their lich's appliance--, scientifically fitted by an expert in person, will give security market-, they will be getting on. and comfort for years to ciftne, not Ninety per cent organization is needed only to those with recent and small to d; th, kind of business. It is ruptures, but ids > to eld, neglected entirely up to the growers whin this cases. They are by far the cheapest p. e of power shall come. in the long run. Many ruptures are now healed by I OR OVER 40 YEARS these improved mechanical methods w hich formerly necessitated operations; HAT,I • CATARRH METHONE has l„ ' sue. essfully In the treatment but do not delay. of (.'»tarrb. HALLS CATARRH MEDICINE con Children should never carry a rupture sist; < f no Ointment which Quickly into manhood or womanhood, as they Relieves b> local application, and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acta can be easily restored to a normal con through the Blood on the Mucous Sur dition by a proper mechanical method. faces. thus reducing the Inflammation. Sold b all These clean a> J saniUiry devices will I F. J. Cheney drugglete. * Co., Toledo, Ohio» here be most appreciated. It will not cost you anything to be ! shown and a visit may mean a great | Have you subscribed for deal t > you and those dependent on The Post? Don’t borrow you.” your neighbor’s when it’s Home Office: 335 Boston Block Minneapolis, Minn. only $2 a year. Real E tate for Sale.