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About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 16, 1926)
C VRL VKOOM \N S PLAN PARADOXICAL BIT TRUE A bountiful crop of a valuable agri cultural product means misfortune rather than prosperity to the pro ducer these days. A half crop means mow money and less labor. This fact is being vividly illustrated in the cot ton localités of the south. In 1920 cotton was well controlled by the selling agencies of the south, and the price went as high as 45 cents. This price encouraged greater pro duction and as a result in 1923 the price went down to 36 cents, an in 1925 five million bales were carried over in the hope of holding the mar ket steady, and when this carry-over went onto the market this year with the big production of the year, the market went to pieces with the glut and the price down to 13 cents. Now the south is considering legislation to compel curtainment of fifty per cent and the merchants and bankers organisations are out to control fut ure production by denying credit to panters unless they will agree to cut down the acreage and agree to in- . crease the acreage of food and feed. Carl Vrooman, former assistant secretary of agriculture, in a recent speech in Washinton said that unless some means is brought about to guarantee fair financial returns to the farms the younger generation will disappear from agriculture. His plan is a non-partisan political mer ger of all the existing farm organisa tions to force legislation to give farming to same guarantee that rail roads and other public utilities get. Mr. Vrooman quoted figures from the Department of Agriculture showing the “colossal proportion of the agri culture catastrophe.” In 1920 the total value of the farmers’ products shrunk over $3,000,000,000; in 1921 over $5000.000.000 below the 1919 level or a total shrinkage of $24,- 000,000,000. Silk garments look better when pressed while still damp but not wet. Since leather burns at a very low temperature, wet shoes are safely dried only in a place not too near a register or stove. MXRXRXMXWSKXXXWXKXiIXMXXSKSMSNr.KXSSMXMXMSXXMSMXKXXXKXM I COLLECTION^ NO COLLECTION I - - -NO CHARGE Knight Adjustment Co. WE GET RESULTS Offices at McMinnville. Hillsboro, and 502 Board of Trade Biulding. Portland. Oregon. s "xKXHXKSKXKSKXXgKSKXESKSt Z%SMXK3XEM3WXHXXXXXK3i43NXK3M . ... .............. .. ; . ■ . • • •............ • ................................. .. i An Electrical Christmas • Sensible and Serviceable i __________________ t • : Range, Washing Machine, Waffle | Iron, Vacuum Cleaner. Anyone of : j these makes an admirable present . : : Electric Supplies & Contracting Co. Yamhill Electric Company i “It Serves You Right’ : I • Newberg, ■ PHONE BLUE 34 - Oregon | - WgKXMXKXHXXXMXKXK3K2KXSXWSKXHZSXKXKXMXt4XJ?SM3S3KXXL.%£"- g M 3 H K 3 M g K a M 3 W 3 M 3 M huhsday , PKCEMHeh THE DYYTON TRIBUNE PAGE FOUR Day ton Sand and Gravel Co X Dealers in SAND AND GRAVZL Phone Red 76 u 8 G S X GIVE US A CALL DEEDS OF HEROISM NOT FOR PHYSICIAN Yet Some VVAo Read This Will Have Their Doubts. Day ton Tribune 75c For Six Months $1,50 per Year The President’s Message on Advertising But mhtftHy rp?:3ed, ¡t is the met! by which the desire is ih created for things.” ---Calvin Coolie re F-'-y Sto-y Un-tv-Daze Pontiac SALES and SERVICE Also a Good Assortment ci USED CA Safer Submarines Apparatus to enable the crew of a sunken submarine to rise to the sur face ha been Invented. A series of buoyant w: fety < h.imbers, fdm-ed be tween the ' bmiiidne s bull and super -li net are. I y la- entered from below Each rb: i b r will iici-ommodiifv fifteen men. I hoi., is an apparatus in f|<- al at bl r thrt set It free from tin ■ ubnmrlni'. . ¡’mv Ing it to flout to the -r : . < i,< p * h e Is «aid to work evep win n I he srnken bont Is flooded Ir the h.rnsh'ag water following n ertish Get Our Prices Before Buying Wesley Mode Rock Famous FIRST MOTOR ? McMinnville There are two million sheep in Oregon, the average clip is nine pounds and the annual return is $11,- 000.000. Thia ia an outstanding in dustry of the state. The finer wools comprise about 25 per cent of the production ami they are shipped east while the courser wools are manu factured in the northwest. The loss of sheep from coyotes ami other ani mals is large in eastern Oregon, East ern Washington and in Idaho, runn ing as high as ten ¡ ht cent in some sections. > As a youth hr hnd drvamed of do Ing nt least one heroic thine before It ahould be his time to die. Ente. how ever. never had seemed willing to «v things his way. am) so his life had dragged on with a tlrnb monotony which had cooled, In time, the ardor of his longing. . ~ o Even hl» college career hnd boon Pressing a wrinkled pattern before unproductive of any Incident calculat placing it on the material save ed to arouse In Inter life that retro time in cutting. spective thrill which must, he felt, light up occasionally the fading years of the man who has carried the ball do yards to a touchdown Not only had he been confronted with the ne cessity of putting himself through James “Jimmie” VVtxxis school, but there hnd bet'll others back home to claim the little he could make, nt odd lobs about the campus above bls own living expenses. He did not complain. There were many things he miwed. but he made the best of It Tin* nearest he ever ap proached a member of the varsity squail was when one would drop In for the suit flint had tw*. n pressed between Week after week—fifty-two of them— it will supper and hedr'me. They paid him 33 cents for pn sslne a suit, lie never bi ing into your home all the local neu« of people was able to under -and the unusual warmth of his prob «or< and class and uteris, unit ail the worth-knowinf{ hif>h spots mates the day he was graduated. Tn medical school It was pretty from the wide world outside. much the same. Work and study nnd work. But he found a moment now and then to Indulge in the old dreams AU gtiierously spiced with special features, of high achievement. He found practicing medicine In a stories, nuit’S pit lures and cartoons. I he value to country settlement far from a life of eti«e Pad roads, harsh weather, poor you and every member of the family is great, but pay. As he grew older the night work began to tell on him. But he plodded the cust is practically nothing— on. day nnd night. He realltied now a little bitterly, that not every man can be a her»*. V» ’ It surely couldn't do any harm to <]ream. Sincerity behind a gla«i hand His pulse qu'■ ':en-d momentarily Mid its »ivi.lends to this man—v- ho with the outh-oak of th»* grent war jut recently was selected in a na True, he was w r- nnst the age limit tional search by a hard-hc;ido<l but perhaps ho could arrange for a group of l»o Angeles banker * and base hospital post. But there hnd business men to manage the new been sickness that spring nnd he knew Biltmore hotel there —and at the community ii M h I him. So he $50.o?o r*’ ■ ”r- turned hack to the muddy roads, the night calls nnd the poor pay. After nil. he wasn't young nny more Might ns well admit It. •:« •> ■ The sl.x weeks his daughter was down with tvnhold were tough on him Sitting up wl’h her night after nlcht and cam ng on hl« practice prove«! a strain. Pet he made no complaint I People wore dlsconmclngly slow to pay sometimes, but then there had “Advertising is net cn economic waste. It minis been lots of «h-t-ness an»! he used to say to them with a wrv little smile ters to the trite dcvelopmf nt of trade. it ia, no that they hnd come to love, “It's all right. I know how It Is to he poor doubt, pcctto waste money threugn wrong myself!” Tli" flu «truck the settlement hard methods < f advertisi i^, it* It can be wasted but h<* hnd wen It almost through be fore it rei '-bml out for him. He hadn’t through wrong methods ir eny department of in taken half care of himself. people said, when they heard he was HI. The dustry. way he hnd hurried from farm tn farm, in nil sorts of weather, not get ting nearly enough sleep nor taking time for meals, was downright care lessness. But after lie hnd tiled they didn’t use that word again. Instead, they lookeil strangely nt one another nnd one mrin remembered he hadn't paid Doc for that trip lie hnd made out to see the woman last winter. Tie we« about all In and It was a terrible n' -ht. but he cot there—and he pullet! Ma through, hr golly If he didn't!” There was » il" of having some of the soldier ho"* most of whom he had brought Into the world—come down from camiFto ntt» nd the funeral In a hotly, hid to show the commu nity's up; redtttfon. but the project was abandoned. •‘Dtw wouldn't like It." they con «■billed. “He never gave a <1—n for t'. t hero stuff." -ftniaha WorblHcr At the last stroke of twelve Clnder- elln gazed about her Everything was «•Imngt'd Her coach was n pumpkin: her prancing st“<dM, mice; nnd her flowering t omanct, gone to-set d reality. Realizing vaguely Hint something ha«! gone terribly wrong, she glanced al what a moment before hnd been n bejeweled wrist-watch and then at the town cl< k high above the roofs. Womanlike, she saw her mistake too lute. “Gootlm-ss. gracious. Godmother!’" she explained, as she resumed her sta t:on In the chimney corner; "how was I to know that that hick town was operating under daylight-saving time?" Oakland SHEEP INDUSTRY $11,000.000 There Is a rock near Land's End which Is called “Wesley's Hock." for It Is said that It was there he wrote n famous hymn which contain« the lines; "Lo. on si narrow neck of land twfxt two unbounded seas I stand.” Anyone who has stood on this point of rock will feel the force of those lines.—London Tit-Bits.