Image provided by: Santiam Historical Society; Stayton, OR
About Stayton standard. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1915-1917 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 7, 1917)
— *: Jar- ' ■■■■tel S to y to n S ta n c ’a r d D a n t » i V. Mie ia te rM ta o f S lajrta« a lui ______ e lja « * a t U nlO ory. E n te ra d aa second-claaa m a tte r M arch a», 19 l i , a t th a post-office a t Stay tu O ra., under the A ct o f M arch 3,187 C. E. DAUGHERTY, Editor. P ortland Office :-G. Sherm an Botsford, B roadw ay Building, B r o a d l y and M orrison S treets. Phone Mar. 4487. to EVERY WEDNESDAY O i l s Y c a r . . . . . .>»»•«» $1*00 S ix M o n th s .................................50 Advertising rates on Application • fairly MOST POWERFUL ORGAN. M aterial of1 Which N ative H sasee In la Pi ngelKy PraeMaelly a Lest A rt.In Berm ude Are Built. | T his Country f * <v»' . W hen a native o f Berm uda decide« ! W s are undoubtedly the moat waste- th a t ho w ants to build a house he goes ful people la tbe world. In America to some quarry w here th e s o f t rich, 'fru g a lity la alm ost a lost art. Count- cream y «oral sandstone bus been atrip- . leas man and wouieu are actually suf- psd o f ita thin e a rth covering and be- i faring, both physically and meutally, gins saw ing. He o r so mo one employ- j because they do not know bow to atop ed by him. with a loug. coarm toot bod w«ato In th eir ow n homes, saw , cu ts out blocks o f stone m easur- | W aste la a devastating tblug. It tag about tw o feet long, on# foot w ide t°* a on under our «you; It goes ou and sis Inches thick. Aa soon aa be I *}***• wo sleep—It Is alw ays going on. has quarried enough o f these blocks bo 1 *• “ “ « * «Mffarence between allow s them to stan d In the open a ir b°ue#t w ear and te a r and w a its aa for a tow weeks to harden, for when «• betw een an honest m an and a first cut they a re aa fuH of hole, aa a WM‘* ° Ur M“ ** °*,r Sw iss cheese and alm ost aa so ft, T ha , , «.* n . . . . . . . . __ . . placed ooe on top ^ . n o t b s r t o form Quf chllÍPM> u k e ^ tbe walla and ono h f - » e anot er on a M t "W **** tbty c„ w aste the rest. But before we framework, weeriappty • \cornct them w, , bould look „ our Uttle a t th e ir upper su d low er edges. ' ow n platM . T be am ouut o f a , w u tr to m ake tb e ro o t t d in je ts unnecessarily kept burning W hen tbe building baa been erected In a tingle day all over tb e United A ncient Babylon Seam« to Hava Boon th e Berm udian covers his outside S tatea would. If wo could com pute I t th a P iao tar In th a Aft. Br+Lre building la one of th« ancient walls and ro o t with a thick c o st of bo a staggering Indictm ent of our folly. T he A m erican business m an goes on « rts . though no definite record of a per. w hitew ash, which hides all the cracks m aneot bridge «appears liefora 2200 and join ts and holes In the stone and th e principle th a t It la easier to r him B. C. T his wan the tim e of Nimrod, gives th e house a sm ooth, beautiful to m ake m ore money to pay for the th e th ird ruler a fte r Noah. T he river finish which Is very pleasant to th e w aste In his borne th an It Is to “ w aste" E uphrates flowed moat Inconveniently eye and ju s t aa pleasant to th e aenae his tim e in try in g to stop I t His w ife of touch. Even the big chimneys, the la unconsciously Influenced hy his ex th ro u g h th« city of Babylon, ao the « 8 « c m w ent forth th a t a stru ctu re bo de porches and th e fences are built o f tbe ample. W hat can wo do about it? Some vised to cross the stream . T he result sam e stone. e ra s an arched bridge of brick tidb foot T hem white roofs have another Im thing. anyw ay. We can talk shout U. long and 30 feet wide. p o rtan t office, for tbe rain th a t tolls gesticulate about It. think about It and Some thousand years later N'.tocrls. upon them as it ruus off Is caught and m ake up our m inds right now to fight th e n queen o f tb e Babylonians, seek In a led Into cisterns. It Is easy to under It la every w ay possible.—U f a som ething now to occupy h er mind, de stood how Im portant thla la when one cided th a t another bridge was needed learns th a t there a re no stream s or IT WAS TURN ABOUT. t o haudle tbe east crow ds which wells In Berm uda and th a t the Island thronged to th a t city of mystery. Her ers are th u s entirely dependent on A fter th e Form er Got Through th e engineers w ere consulted, sud. marvel these cisterns for th eir a s t e r supply.— Blacksmith Had Hi« Bay. •ot marvels, a wooden bridge resting on Joseph L auren to S t N icholas W hile the village blacksm ith tolled stone piers m ade Its appearance, tb e m anfully over the old fa rm e r's plow- tb e history o f the shar e th » ow ner u f th e H ijr r e « YA N K EE CURIOSITY." world! T he stones in the plerfl w e n a t sum s length tbe wonderful success fasten ed together w ith huge chains of Iron, w ith melted lead poured Into the How Bon Franklin Uaad to Save Time be bad bad with th ree Utters of pigs be bad m arketed th a t day. and A vert Question«. c re v ic e s While th e pra Mtaa to th a a re a o f the Tha Yankee la proverbially Inquisi ^"T bem fltg* were less than eight wiodern engineer would appear triv ia l tive. and C harles H. Sherrill recalls m onths old." tb e farm er ran on. “and I t w as a v ast undertaking in those In “ French Memories of Eighteenth they brought m e 10 cents a pMind. or d ay s, ao marvelous. In fact, th a t tb e C entury A m erica" som e am used com a little more th an $400. Why, a few co u rse o f tb e entire river w as changed m ents reported by tb e M arquis d s years ago those sam e pigs would have I n order th a t the engineers m ight view C bastellox. which show th a t tb e repo- brought m e only half aa much. .1 tell t h e foundations On which th e arches ration w a . well draeryed more than a f ,r m e r ta hav1“ * bl* h,,rT“ 1 w ere to r e a l Herodotus records th a t century a g o T h e sm ith, having finished aharpen- Che bridge w as of equal magnificence "H e says." declares Chastellnx. re tog th e share, banded it to bis custom w ith th a rest o f tb e buildings o f Baby- peating a trav eler’s tale, “th a t tbe er. From a well worn prime tbe farm Americans a re th e m ost tnqulsltlvs e r took tw o dimes, the u s u a l price for - A side from tbe-e. no bridges o f im people he has ever seen. T heir curios the job. and dropped them Into the p o rta n c e seem to hove been built to ity la pushed alm ost to Impropriety. sm ith's hand. , A sia Minor, w ith one possible excep “ You'll have to come again." said the tkm . T b e fabled Colossus of Rhode» When be asked bis way they ouly a n fa thought by aome historians to have swered. 'You apparently come from sm ith, still bolding the money to his been a bridge, but a s uo rem ain s have Philadelphia.* W hen alm ost fam ished i outstretched palm. “I charge 30 cents «fear been found t i w e is only theory to he asked for food- Instead of serving t »ince the first of the year for sharpen- him they said: ‘You seem to be to a i^g th at alae plow «qpport th e claim .-E d iso h Monthly. g reat hurry. Is there an ything aew W hy. how now?" tbe farm er ex in tbe north f claimed testily. “That'S an outrage. A SERVIAN BARGAIN. “ H e also relates th a t Mr. Franklin Why have you raised tbe price on m e f (who |*o8sessed a sense of hum or la “T o bay some of th a t high priced tm T h is 8 a 1« th a B uyar H ad It A bout addition to th a t habitual calm which pork you w ere tel I In’ me about." w as All H e r O w n W ay. f a h er I took “Experiences of a Wom ao surprised tbe Enro|>eaust. whenever the sm ith’s calm reply.—Y outh's Com a n Doctor I s Serbia" Dr. Caroline be w as traveling to Connecticut, n sec panion. M atthew » tells bow »be bad w>t her tion noted for Ita curiosity, w as accus A R o y a l 8u parstitfon, B ead on acquiring one of th e gayly tomed on entering an ton to call all the C anterbury cathedral. England, like -embroidered canvan hags use»I hy the family together and announce lit a load -Seri* |<eaxjiut girl» for m arketing. They tone: ‘I am Benjam in Franklin. I was most C atholic cathedrals. Is d^-orated could not lx* I »ought a t a shop, and the bprn In Boston, and I am s printer by with Innum erable niches for statnes. country folk were not tempted to su r trade. I am coming from Philadel At C anterbury a series o f th ese niches phia.) and 1 am going back there a t Is occupied w ith statues of kings and re n d e r them for any ressonsbie price. in c h and such a time. I do not know queens of England, sod there are ouly “I met a m au leading a pack home, a n d on th at borne were atruug some an ything new. and now. my friends, four niches le ft unoccupied. An old Bags, and one o f times bags was a glori will yon tell m e w h at yon can give me tradition baa It th a t when all tbe niches are tilled tb e throne of E ngland will o u s color, new and fresh. H ave th at for su p p erT ” come t o i n end. Queen Victoria was t » c I would! So I w ent into tb e mid approached w ttb a view to a statue of d le of th e road and quietly stotiped tbe M o d e st Blackm ora. herself being placed to one of tbe four m are.'- ' T h a t th e antbor o f “Lorna Doone” rem aining niches, b u t her late m ajesty “T V m an eeemed am azed and ra th e r was one of tl»e best fru it grow ers to was aw are of tb e old tradition and re In'-' »ed to resent Iteiug brought |**r- England Is brought out by Ulldegarde fused. One wonders w hether tn tbe fu en . »rily to s standstill. I launched H aw thorne to an article on B Lac kin ore tu re there will be four m onarchs of forth, to very hattlug Servian, on tbe which she contributes to St. Nicholas. England sufficiently indifferent to su w eather, on tb e pony, and then out Indeed, it was of bis fru it th a t he perstition to defy tbe tradition and al ■came my cigarette case aud we were loved m ost to talk, according to Miss low tb elr effigies to fill tbe unoccupied friend*. ‘Only one of tbe mad Eng H aw thorne. O f his w ritings or of spaces. lish!' 1 suppose th e fellow thought. him self a t all It was very difficult to “T h e m om ent was ripe. I raised the < Peafow l. bag. emptied tbe parcels on tbe sad get him to say a word, fo r be Was shy Tbe origin o f the peacock was In In and m odest to a high degree. If you d le and. placing some money beside dia and Ceylon, and this Is why we see them , looked a t tbe man in a friendly tried to m ake him talk about bis books way. H e smiled. ‘A new kind of tie would alw ays slip quickly away to 80 frequently the bird on the a rt ob ®f these countries. Peacock gam e.' be th o u g h t W ithout a word I som ething about peaches or nectarines held out my hand. In K erris when a or plums, or be would ask you to come shooting is still a recognized sport to bargain la concluded In the selling of out to see bis garden and w ander there *ome p arts of India, but Its former -a horse o r ca ttle th e men shake bands happily, pruning shears in hand, point- ¡popularity as a table delicacy basceas an d so m ake the bargain legal. It is Ing out bin prize fru its and telling you ed. though tbe flesh is white sud la q u ite a little ceremonial. My new Just w hat m ust be done to bring each sa'<! to resem ble u pheasant In flavor 1 l'L c eggs e re also edible. For tbe pro- ] friend took m.v baud. The deed was type to (terfecllon ductlon of tbe feathers these birds are 1 d o n e T he bag was mine." bred In France, b u t to a small extent. ; * All Happens In a Second. S to ry o f Em p rosa Eugenia. A second Is the sm allest division of as they are difficult to rear, because in O f one o f tbe visits the Em press Eu tim e In general use. and when we con a big area they wander off, and If In- »genie m ade to tbe Purls hospitals dur sider that in one year there are about closed within Darrow limits they be- j £ng tb e cholera plague that afflicted 31,558,000 of these periods It would cer come mischievous. F ra n c e in 1800 the following p retty In tainly seem as If It was enough for all eld e n t is told: At tbe Hospital Beaujon practical purposes. But. a fte r all. a R ig h t T h in g to Contam plata. tb e em press took tbe baud of a dying good deal can bapi>en In a second. Life Is so full of miseries, minor and victim , who. m istaking her Identity. A light w are, for instance, passes m ajor; they press so close npoD us at Idssed ber band and m urm ured. “ 1 through a distance of about 180.000 every step o f the way. th a t it la hardly th an k you. slater." T he nun wbo ac miles In this length of time. Tbe e a rth worth while to cat) one another's a t com panied tbe em press whispered: In Itself moves In its orbit a t a rate of tention to tb elr presence. People wbo “ Yon are m istaken, friend. It Is not about tw enty miles a second. do this are merely dwelling on tee ob J , bnt our good em press who speaks." A tuning fork of th* French standard vious. and tbe obvious la the one thing “ Nay. sister." retorted tbe em press not worth consideration. W hat we quickly; “be bas given ms the sw eet vibrates 870 tim es per second to pro w ant to oontem plate Is the beauty and duce tb e note A on the treble staff. e s t of all nam es." tbe sm oothness of th at well ordered plan which It la so difficult for ua to Saving Talk. M odern Berlin. discuss.—Agues Reppller. “ Do you believe to telepathy?” I t w as F rederick II., styled tb e iron, “ Yon mean.*' responded Miss* Cay w ho constructed tbe flret building on New Coin D esigns th e site of m odern Rerlin. This was a enne. “the a rt of communicating It Is provided to section 3517, chap c astle which was tbe llrst domicile of thought w ithout Hiidihle speech?“ ter !H4, revised statu tes of the United '‘Something like th a t.” «he B randenburg electors. It was much “I am not sure w hether It could be States, th at the director of tbe mint -dam aged In tbe T hirty Years' war, but a f te r th is the town started to loom made to work or n o t But I know a ahull have iiower, with tbe approval of o p around* I t However. Its present num ber of people who ought to try the secretary of the treasury, to cause changes to be made in the designs of s tre n g th d a te s from tbe form ation of I t ” —W nshlngtoir Star. cdlns not often than once lu twenty-five «he G erm an em pire aud il ranks third, y e a rs a f t e r London and Ports, to population E n co u rag es Fine Buildings. o f tb e cities o f Europe. Our city planners might well Im itate P retty Coal. tbe exam ple of Buenos Aires. Which W anted to P aten t a C ircu s H a lle r-8 n y . when are you going to P . T. Baruum once came to tbe office every year exempt* from taxation tbe pay me th at ten you,borrow ed? You r know if be could iw teut the three most beautiful building erected with In the preceding tw elvem onth and know I’m m arried now! K taller-O h. circus. In technical parlance bis arc you? T h a t's too had! I wanted to ring circus was an aggregation aw ards a medal to the a rc h ite c t-■ touch you for five m ore.-E xchange. Youth’s Companion. not a com bination to produce a result. T herefore it was not pat- T h a 3topp«r.- A Bom Leader. wbk-b inform ation highly lu “Th/it man w as l»om to lead." L o ttle -Ile wore my photograph over th* showman. “I t will be sdopt- "V.’liat makes you think so?" t ery circus Just -aa aoou a s I fils heurt, and It stopped the bullet. “Even hi* own daughters obey him." T ottle—Pm not surprised, darling: It 'flo w n .” he declared. And It woald «top « >4** k.—liondoii Sketch. —Detroit Free Press. • t ‘T î-ia , EARLY BRIDGE BUILDING. DR. P. h . Msv to determine. Use or i m m . TtlN* '-‘I vwasvr Famous Old Instrument In Paul>* Weide. aa Keoerel'y ^ ^ ^ _____ •d for *11 Mut» and w(ia C athedral, London. mineral * * u‘ “ JriurTpaï H# m*k» ymi w#ii T he orgeu of *»• a cotbedral to i fimi hut uiucb ibfHNfcjF tbm f * v J v radi urn m ineral csruotlte. J a s a bright Loudon Is the moat powerful In the Hubbard Bldf. world. T here la a weight of tore* c a ñ a r /yellow tons ou the beHowt. sud some of * powdery.—lad •• aapolls N *** giant pi 1 >ea disappear trout view lu tee Alse Celerad. recesses of the enormous dome, some -y ,* i was lined teO for petting e of the sm aller pipes ore «P by Uw altar, and te e real are either hidden »ring » • » ! « •“ ■r* ?,t<?LbJ ,) . T Treats all Domestic Animala -Well, didn't you dee*r»t UT aw ay behind the loug row of choir plie* the TubarruliaÎL atuiis or are seen towertug ou rllber I -P erhaps But what made Telephone 1*7 aide of the choir gates. But all are w s. tbs. the nmglatrste who Imgflfld controlled from a Uttle orguu loft m tito fine had dyed whiskers. M i« OFFICE A T ATAYTON i which la scarcely room for auyoue be Opinion ______ - side tbe orgaulst seated a t the key- W r«n| T im a bout d. ■ j : . -8o she refused y o u r There are five rows of keys and two -T ea but It w * my own fau l t - - lid - tiers of over 100 Ivory handle stops • The orgaulst showed how. by presalug the young stockbroker with bis thum b oue of a row of buttons uu a declining m ark et“ - Lmilavlllo Room* 7*8, Roy Bldg. as be played, whole winbtoaUuaa of raurtof-JouroAi stopa were pushed out or pushed lu STAYT0N , ORB. little Thlnga He dem onstrated, too. how with the "It's the little thing» that _ slightest pressure' he could transform the souud of tb s orguu from the softest the owe! annoyance, ashl tb s pa su d sw eetest of tones t« a volume pblhmqther * — ___ * U m -Tbat'a right.* agree.1 Mere Man which roiled and seemed to shake tbe T h e people- " ho live next door to mr entire building. The organ Is u very aucleut one. Il bare seven childreb. the oldest being was built between tee years tek’4 and ten "-T ow n Toph-a 1700 by one Berm tol tkbmlUt. a cele brated u e r u a n urgiWSnokar. and coal Friends and Feea Pear to me la the friend, yet rs a over £2.000. BchmlSl^wai merely re sponsible for the Inside work, the esse make evert my vefy foe do « ^ T being aappUed by s joiner for Just over friend's part My friend shows £830, while tha carvlug on tbe case wbut I ran do. my f°* lea rues me cost uoarly £110. Tbu urgun has slues whet I should d**. ficblllsf. undergone entire reconstruction, but aH Schm idt's pipes have been retained The bate whh’b wc all bear with IM and are now doing as good service as m<wt patleiire la the hate ef thoaa who when they were m a d e . — London MalL ■nvy ns •«*<»»■«« ___ _ 6 . F. KOMMüt, V. S.. X VETERINA 1 _ DR. G. C WA1 DENTIST D R . C B . 01 OPTOMETRIST OPTICIAN Rooms 5-4 B ub B ull Salem, DR. 0 . A. 01 G rüne-8« DENTIST amKJv » 214 tiaeonie Temple. the Golden State S. II. HELTZEL ATTORNBY’AT-UÜr NOTARY A friend just back from Southern Cal ifornia says: “The weather was fine, in fact too warm for heavy clothes. Many were bathing at the beaches. Oranges were ripe in the valleys, while the mountains nearby wire covered with snow.”. V. A . GOODE LAWYER u i noun Office Room No. I, Rojr BMfl Dr. 0 . L S c o tti, Take a vacation trip now where life is different; where climate surroundings and amusements are out of the ordinary. Spend a different February. Chiropractic Sptaoio|ht Try Chiropractie Bpi nal and get well U. R NatT Bank Bid«. Room* 406-7-8 SALBU FUNERAL Dl Three Trains Daily Scenic Shasta Route , J. M. R1N00 STAYTON will take ynu there in corçifort. Ask the ai£enL G. A. SMI JOHN M. SCO’tT . U iw n l lu M n g tr Agent Portland. Or*. ‘ DflALM to C ity a n a L o v n tij REAL ESTA S O U T H E R N P A C IF IC LIN E S If you have property to with me. If you want t*l R I Y F H me I V ■ a calL I B M . give Office in Lancefleld Build* MONTHLY1^MAGAZINES * STAYTO N. A NATIONAL (Sen-NntUj) (Stn-MntUr) FARI JOU uRNAL A n d O u r P a p e r A ll O n e Y e a r /^ O O D READING is one of the necessities to a V J real home. W ith the happy com bination shown below and now offered in connection yijtli your subscription to this paper, the whole fam ily can g ath er around the evening lam p and get the m o st valuable, entertaining and instructive reading obtainable for a year. i 0P“ Stayton Meat S E S T A K <a T H < PROPRIETORS Fresh, Salt and I M E A T S: Creamery Butter snd Highest Market Paid for Ffit Stock H E R E T H EY A R E Change of Scl To take effect Oct I I STAYTON-Sl STAYTON - HN< AUTO STA< Sum ) In (i ran t of KW««*aJ •“osrfcr! poalta Every Day, Sunday, i Lv Stayton fo r Kingston, noct m o to r...............J' " K ingston fo r Stayton. Ar S ta y to n ........... Lv S tayton fo r Salem iib lim ity .. v................ •••‘j Sublimity " A um avilio............. .........'*1 “ Turner....... ... o f f e r i.g *8 o o d . ^ T h U ^ o i U r ^ e o o d ' f ** k T 'u $ | 25 I = A VKU >*NEwtrs & E R S h NEW *"d 0 rí* r ‘ «tl your friend, « n d neighbors before it is too late. Ar Salem , m ea^t Oregon bl* tr ie ...............••• v j .*' Lv Oregon E lectric depot S alem ............ Ar T u rn e r........... . “ A u m sv ille,. . . . . . . " S u b lim ity ........................* “ S ta y to n ,., Lv Stayton for Kingston. m otor. " King»toni ti w* flSHL % ■- t M t è îÆ £ A ] r , Îfi& Jk ¡Jr,; vM ¿ HP