PAGE TWO THE DAYTON TRIBUNE EXPERT ADVISES BULK HANDLING OF ALL GRAINS Danton tribune «EDNEHD XV, JANUARY II, I |»M months and 33 days old al the time Corn allago Is usually espansivo Annie Em.... . of Portland, visited to produce In the Willamette Val­ Miss Mae Umbanhower. student week at the home of their aunt. ley, according Io the department of farm HIHliagemollt of the experl- in the senior class of Amity Hlghl^’«- R‘»y Edwards. JOHX E. BI ACK. Editor and Pukhtker. Word received from Asa Nichols nient station The average coat In School, la staying with one of the San Francisco. Cal,. Jan. 10— teachers, Mrs Madeline Callin. at states that he arrived safely In lo* 1936 ■ ml 1 • M w m S ; ; I as MM Entered at tke Pott Office at Dai ten, Oreaen, at Second Clan Mail Matter Portland will be the world's leading present. Her mother, Mrs, William wa and that 1t was 18 degrees be- pared with »4 4U tor vetch silage and 3.76 for kulu. Corn growing under tke Act of Marek J, 1879. grain shipping point during 1928. U m ba n ho we r. os suffering from in- low s»ro. Mr. and Mrs. Fay Robinson and may be justified however because of fluensa. This prediction Is made by E Ji son. Robert, of Sherwood, Mr. and its value in crop rotation to control U arehouse Rushed SI BSCRIPTION • $150 PER YEAR SI RICI LY IN ADVANCE Bates marketing specialist and In­ Work on the 40X40 concrete Mrs. Grover Johnson, of Newberg, weeds and Increase the fertility uf vestigator in grain handling for the island und Mr and Mrs. Arthur Robinson the soli United Stales Bureau of Agricul- warehouse of the Grand Cannery Company in course of con- and «on, David .of Dayton. spent THE SMALL T0B X STORE turai Economics, Bates has just It seems to be a [»opular opinion among the [>e«>ple that, as the days completed a seven years' study of construction has been at a atand- Sunday at the home of their mother, It la advisable for fanners in Mrs David Robinson . Western Oregon to look over all roll by, the d recently given hi Kelly’s Magazine in which Northwest. with headquarters in ed uml sister, Mra Robert Uusiin, of are clean so all the surface water to completion. Recently his offices thev re|Hirt that of 300,000 stores m small towns. 60.000 of them retired Portland. Mr. C. O. Hondrlcker. who has Portland, were Munday guests ut the may drain off. This will prevent from business List year and in their places sprang 62,700 btgger and bet­ were moved to San Francisco as he worked on the Morton Tompkins home of Mr and Mrs. Jackman'« water Iroin ■landing on the wiuivr is now undertaking a special study ter stores. And here is the reason why, according to the article. tarin for more than six years, re- daughter, Mrs i. Kirk Walling, nt crops that are already planted of barley and rice tn California. Hopewell. "In spite of the fact that many people are broadcasting the propogan- turned from Portland Bates estimates that a total of when* h« has visited since Thursday Among the county seat visitors the first da regarding the decline of the small town independent retailer, wr find 40,000,000 Best sheepmen allow the ewes to bushels of grain, prin- of October. He returned to begin Saturday were Mr and Mrs J. A that the merchants in small town find their salvation in what is supposed cipally wheat, will be shipped thru ■raw as long as possible during the McFarlane, Mrs Glen the preparation for early planting. McFarlane winter months In Western Oregon, to be their death—competition.” Portland during the next twelve and Mrs. Tompkiua were in and daughter, Marylyn. Mrs A W according to the experiment station True it is that competition is saving the small merchant, because with months. one-third of this amount Mr Portland Io visit Mrs Tompkins' Krümlet, A N Sheldon. Mrs W L. the coming of competition, down go prices, but not in proportion to vol­ being bulk. the other sack grain. mother. Mrs. Lillie Baker, and Mr. Reichstein and sons. Lawrence und Every winter there la ordinarily a period uf from five to 10 days, how ume turnover caused by the greater number of people who trade at home, Most of this grain will be handled by Hendricker returned with them. Wayne, and Mrs R. Q. Hadley. ever, when thu grass la not avail­ Portland port facilities tor ship ­ because they know that they can get in their home town just what they Everyone Is busy preparing cold --------------N------------- able. For a short period the sheep During 1927. Oregon graded 79 4 ure thullti fed hay to supplement want and as cheaply as elsewhere. It may seem unpractical, but it is a ment to the United Kingdom, ac­ frame« and green house« tor early cording to Bates. plums for the large annual crop ot miles, macadamised 138 3 miles, re­ much stronger at lambing tint« and proven thing that competition aids business in the small town. During his seven years in Port- melons and tomatoes, for which surfaced 66.3 miles and widened also preventing a break In Ilie land. Bates, as a representative oD Grand Island Is unsurpassed The 33.7 tulles state highway. wool. 75 DAYTON AT FAULT! the U. S. Burean of Agricultural I regular yearly overflow on fields so --------- M-------------- Recently the heads of the schools throughout Yamhill county met in Economics made a comprehensive much desired for the malntonence HUM REMINDERS McMinnville to discuss several things of "minor importance,’* but as the study of grain conditions on the Pa- i of the high production has been re- ++++4-++-H-H-++4-+4-4-++4-++4-++ meeting progressed it became evident that their principal job was to cific Coast. He estimates that grain ceivad for the coming seasou and Demands for has been censure Day ton for its seeemingly unsporsmanlike attitude to basketball growers would save more than $11,- all streams are back to normal win- strong In Oregon barley LADD’S FUNERAL thia year. Hann | 000.000 annually if bulk handling of ter stage. teams while playing on the Dayton floor. the best Western Oregon , HOME grain were adopted througbout the "Better English Week" was ob- variety, is likely to be scarce next They alleged that the Dayton people would not abide by the decisions To Herve Humanity Beller Pacific Coast area. served in the schools during the of the referees and that the teams would get angry and play unfair spring. Farmers desiring seed are Day and Night I'houe Blu« 90 ¡I "From Investigation» made by past week and proved very interest- laying In a supply before It la all basketball in spite of foul penalties. Ing. and a great deal of good Is ex- tM the United States Department of Such a reaction from other towns, whether called for or not, brings us M c M innville , oregon Agriculture," said Bates, "as to pected to reault by It. The plan to ask—Is Day ton at fault V” After all is said and done, games are the extra cost of handling sacked was to take note of any breach of Flax planted as u seed crop con- just for the sport ot the thing; won or lost there is no glamor in criti­ grain at the Portland terminal mar­ speech and the criticisms were made cism. If our townfolks become angry and make a poor display of ket together with consideration of later. Each scholar joined heartily tilines promising for Western Or«- I does best planted early on themselves .their defeat is doubly regrettable . A loser with a smile is data which were obtained by Profes­ in the procedure which resulted In gon It always the winner. a sor Stirniman of the University of a period of very careful playground medium to heavy well-drained land । DR. O. C. GOODRICH An assured market exists in Port-, If out-of-town teams find that they can make Dayton angry so easily California in his studies of the extra conversation. land, reports the experiment eta-1 Mrs. J Robertson und daugh­ DENTIST they have the advantage of that time worn phrase—"whom the gods Cost of handling grain in sacks at ter. Grace, of Salem, were Sunday tlon. Fiber flax for beat yields In would destroy, they first make angry.” Let us keep smiling in face of the farm, it would appear that on guests of her brother, J. Moth- Oregon la sown only on reasonably ' an average a fair estimate of the loss Offlce Phone RED 49 what we think is wrong and let the GOD of athletics find his victim resulting from handling grain in orn, who Is recovering from Intlu- rich medium to heavy soils that are I DAYTON. . . . OREGON well drained. A fine, firm, dean I elsewhere. Alvin Rockhill. who attends sacks instead of bulk, including the enxa value of the sack and twine, is about high school in Salem. accom panied seed bed is desirable. +++++++++-Í-4-H+++-t-+++++-i-++> 11.5 cents per bushel for all sacked them. Walter Rockhill, also of Sa­ Insects Superior to Then a row or rubber hot water grain shipped to terminal markets. lem. was a Sunday visitor at hia Men in Various Ways bottles was set around the Inside of The grain remaining on the farm or brother. Clarence Rockhill's, home the basket. A bed of blankets was The naturalist knows that the in­ then laid tn and the baby placed on going to local markets, where sacks berg J Moore, president of the New- sect is. far and away, the strongest It and well covered. This proving In­ are retained by the farmer, would gave Electrlc Light * Power plant, of organic creatures in proportion to adequate, an ordinary household else not bear quite so great a loss. Mak­ ity a tne committee from this local- very encouraging report while Its size, but some of the facts would trie heater was set nearby and Its ing an allowance for grain thus han­ FUNERAL DIRECTORS in conference with him Monday, probably astonish the ordinary per­ heat directed against the side of the dled. It seems safe to assume that stating that he would at once order 45TAULISHÍO 1904. - PHOHt WHITt Call 10.5 cents per bushel would be a son. MCMINNVILLE, OREGON basket. This turned the basket into reasonable estimate of the average a survey on the project. The exact A scarab or burying beetle will. In a first-ein ss "Incubator." The tiny route was not tnnde public as there loss per bushel on all sacked grain. about an hour, completely bury a dead baby Is thriving. This would make a gross loss per would be no certainty of Its estab­ vole, a task equivalent to that of a year on 111.000.000 bushels of >11.- lishment until that time. man burying an elephant, for If we Many from this locality accom­ 655,009. Job for Secret Service This enormous sum, if put the matter to careful calculation, expended for building country ele- panied by some from Unlonvale, at­ "Dear Congressman." wrote a eon- the comparison Is not wide of the vators at shlpping points. would tended the play "Ben Hur” given at mark. A horse of average power can stltuent to his representative at Wash­ build 466 elevators of 50,000 bushel the Lark Theatre the first of this pull a load of two or more tons, or, ington recently. “Home say our coun- capacity each at the high cost of 50 week. tie Service in your home, your business, farm, factory, or roughly, five times Its weight, where­ try is menaced by th« Reds, I say so cents per bushel capacity, but ele­ ---------- s---------- industry of any kind, is the ihrajiest servant you can employ. as a bee will pull a load twenty times, toe. We have a hired man and he vators can be built much cheaper some flies a hundred, some beetles a aald he was a Polack, but it appear« than this.” It's value is at small cost . Night and day it is at your in­ PLEASANTADALE thousand times their weights. 1 have b« la a Russian. Evary night wi won- stant command, in a variety of uses. A small heater will take the Bates attributes Portland's domi ­ . . He Mr. and Mrs. J. A. MFarlane and watched a minute spider suspendlug der what wtl happen next chill off in a cold room. The Keleetric Hange is the ideal methml nant position as a grain shipping A. N. Sheldon left Monday for Sa­ Is a poor worker and has never cut his by a thread, for steadying purposes of food preparation. The Kleitru pump for country homes and center to favorable transportation against a wind, a heavy twig out of all hair or shaved. His dirt Is so much conditions, which permit the landing lem. where they will visit relatives irrigation, returns comfort and profit. The iron, toaster, proportion to its size and apparent , that be sleeps In the barn. He can of wheat at tidewater at compara­ several days. They also expect to talk or listen to English when he |>ercolator, waffle iron, washing machine and vacuum cleaner, viait relatives in Albany before re- strength—an act equal to that of a tively low rail freight rates; and save time and effort and afford enjoynirnt in the home. man hauling up, with one hand, a full- wishes It but at other times not. Home­ to the nature of demand which turning home. body should do some detective work Mr. and Mrs. Eitun Haase and Wr are glad to serve you. We make easy terms on the pur­ sized scaffold pule. And auy day in here. Hoping that you can lend aid. causes wheat to flow westward for daughter, Rosemary, of Portland. chase of Electrical .Merchandise. the garden one may make observe- I ete., etc., etc."—Capper's Weekly. shipping hy water from Pacific spent the week-end at the home of tlons to parallel such examples. Radio No. 17, a |>owcr socket device, eliminates batteries and Coast ports. the former's aunt. Mrs. R. G. Hadley. Insects will penetrate or hors en.s cost. I-ong distance sending stations arc easily gotten. Protecting Plante Mrs. H. Thompson returned home through things that man could never Wr wish you to investigate our service, merchandise, and finan­ Sunday after spending ten days In Fifteen states—California. Colorado. hope to pierce or break without blast- cial plans when you figure electric service. McMinnville at the home of her Ing powder. How can they do it, and Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, 1111- Of British Origin brother, M W. Mattercheck .and what is the secret of their marvelous nlos, Maryland, Masacbusetts, Minne­ The gate leg table was first devel daughter, Mrs Elisha Manning. sota, New York, Pennsylvania, Ver­ powers 7 oped during ths early part of the Mr .and Mrs. Uriah Hamblit and The answer Is that these things are mont, Virginia, Washington and Jacobean period, shortly ufter 1000. daughter. Charlcia Ann. and Mr Wisconsin—have passed laws for the “IT HERVEH YOU RIGHT" possible to them because of their Cornelius Batson, of Canby, visited traordlnarily complex system of protection of their native plants. In Monday at the home of Mrs. Ham- ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES & CONTRACTING CO striped muscle working within the In­ other states bills along similar lines blet's aunt, Mrs. R. G Hadley. have been Introduced, but thus far Old Mine Almost Done tensely tough and bard chitinous Phone Blue 34 Newberg or our Branch Offices Ralph Thompson, o f Wauna, Kerkrade, a little mining tillage In mor of their coats. This not only gives have failed to pass. Unfortunately, them tremendous powers of muscle such laws are difficult or Impossible to south Holland, is anxious lest Its coal spent Sunday with home folks. contraction, the like of which, If pos­ enforce, and they have had little effect mine disappear within the next quar­ ter uf a century. Experts have con sible, would rupture and spilt the fri­ on the situation. firmed recent borings which failed to able muscle of man as with an explo­ Worth-While Imitation discover new coal below the present sion, but also lends them Immense lev- •ruge. The bard and horny shells of Springtime Is the constructive sea deepest stratum, and, dug out at the some tropical beetles can scarcely be son of the year. All nature Is en­ normal rate of 700,000 tons a year, pulverized with a sledge hammer. gaged In preparation for production the mine is calculated to exhaust It- Again, If man had the powers of How fitting would it be If all men, selft In 25 years. The Kerkrade coal springing possessed by some insects, not some of them, vied with nature In mine Is the oldest In Europe, dating us the flea and the grasshopper, he making greatest effort to give business from 1115. It Is state projierty, but would have little need of trains or end Industry the largest possible de- In 1840 it was leased to the line motors, and would be able to progress gree of activity —Grit. stricht-Alx la Chapelle Railway <-om- from London to Manchester in a few pany for a period of 90 years. The leaps. Man can normally jump bls company pays a percentage of the High Church Dignitary own length, athletically, three or four value of Its workings to the govern­ The archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. ment Tlie total production of the times, but to match certain springing insects he would need to cover a mile Randall T. Davidson, who recently en- Dutch mines In 11630 amounted to 8,- at one jump.—Dr. Frederick Graves in tered upon his eightieth year, Is the 600,000 tones.—Chicago Daily News. holder of the highest office In the Chambers' Journal. British realm and the most historic -------------- B------------- church office In England, one which NOTICE TO DOO OWNERS Topsy-Turvy dates back for hundreds of years be- The dog tax is now due. After Senator Path Trammell was dla- fore America was discovered, The March 1st. 1928, a penalty equal to cussing disarmament with a Jackson­ first archbishop of Canterbury was Augustine, appointed A. D. 597. The tax will be imposed on all delin-1 ville reporter. "It's putting the cart before the archbishop of Canterbury ranks Im- quent owners of dogs. Deputy As-1 sessors will collect unpaid dog li­ horse," he said, "to advocate physical mediately next to royalty, taking pre- cense fees and penalty and report [ disarmament when you haven’t got cedence over every one of the king's spiritual disarmament. I mean that subjects, no matter whether duke, all delinquents. OPERA HOUSE, 8:15 P. M. Pay your tax now and save this we should first build up the will to premier, lord high chancellor or secre­ peace; then disarmament Is bound to tary of state. Ixa-tor Davidson Is a extra expense. Female, >2.00, male Scot, a rather curious fact when one or spayed female, >1.00. This tax come of Itself. “Our present method reminds tne remembers that he Is head of the applies to all dogs over eight months ' Dr. Ray is the last speaker on the Lyceum of the inexperienced orator. A short­ Church of England. No fewer than hand reporter sat at a table below 25. BAHH. SHINGLES, ROOFING, N. Y., which would have been put la Building Material an Incubator to save It, had the family GLASS AND BRICK been able to afford the Incubator, »11 uf all kinds CONTRETE DRAIN TILE saved Instead by hot-water bottlM, an electric heater and a little IngMV* ' Phone 46x9 Box 177 Ity. A clothes basket was lined with ( DAYTON', O’! EGON W per, which Is a good heat Insulator. | GRAND ISLAND ELECTRIC SERVICE YAMHILL ELECTRIC CO. Dr. G. Whitford Ray (Last Lyceum Number) FRIDAY January 20, 1928 Dayton Lumber Yard D COME! And Bring A Friend 1