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About Beaverton times. (Beaverton, Or.) 191?-19?? | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1922)
FRIDAY. APRIL tl, MM. THE BKAVKRTOtt TIMKS PA01 THBU coimoare Flak Prernkr Tread SO x $10.85 Noo-Skid Fabric . Extra-Pir Rcd-Toi 3U X 3fr Sii-Ply Non-skid Clincher Cord x3.i, 17. Six-Ply Non-Skid Cord Straight Side 3tn3 19. 35 Time to (Buy 'st KAfw Non-skid Cord THE lower prices on FUk Cord Tires are interest ing to you because they buy more tire value than higher priced tires can give you. Comparison with other tires will show you Fisk are bigger, stronger, and lower priced throughout the range of sizes. There 's a Fisk Tire of extra value in every she, for car, truck or speed wagon It Costs You More to rot buildings than it does to let paint save them CHECK the costs. Compare the prices of lumber and paint They will show you how extravagant it is to allow build ings to depreciate for lack of paint And buildings do depreciate rapidly unless they are painted when they need to be. Paint saves the lumber. It protects your investment To enjoy the biggest sating In painting, as the best paint. It spreads more easily saves labor cost It covers more surface per galloo than "cheap" paint It serves five or more years longer than "cheap" paint The best paint is most economical because it is scientific in formula and preparation. We have been making best paints for 73 years. F! 'Uiiers srtariCATioN House Paints Phoonta Pure Paint Pur Prprtd Paint Maanfactared by W. P. Fuller Co Dept. 47, Sao Fraacisc Braachet la if Citfcs fn the West Mr hawse DpauoriiiC. gi ;g &fe Beaveton Overy The one place to town that Is always at your service, day or night, Monday or holiday, when jam want a, as yoa want as, where you want utt. zstvsmmmw IT tt Say Something &od. Have a good word tor everybody. The only man who hats a right to look awn on others, Is the man io in atr ahip. Even the tombstones apeak well f thoae beneath them. J. H. Turn en Ira til 81i-PlrN-8kM TJ IP Vj Conl31l4 -3:.l E3r IV Moi-SIdd Cord Ira 1 4 -f 32 - 0.M NoB-Skid Cord Re-tire? Flik) IS - 51.50 They contain the finest materials. Onr whh lead, for instance, u PIO NEER WHITE LEAD. It is super purified and ground so fine that it will pass through a silk screen with 10,000 mesbes to the square inch. So with the other materials pore Unseed oil, pure line and pure colors all of the finest quality, combined in Fuller's Paint in scienti.ieaUy euus proportions with long-time skill. Free Advice on Painting Aifc Hf agent for adrioa. Aik I be Fuller SpedBc ttoa Di-parnroi about ifce mo' demat ir cnlra acbenei, coloi turmuDT anil aar mWt l(ake of Rntibe Cam Floor faint, AN Ptrpol Varaiihri. Slllhil E ni at e 1 . Fif leenfor-Floo Vuaish. Waahal,le Till Fialah. AU Enn Ban. and T.oof P.Im. Pan awl Staa faiat, aid PiO.NEUi VU1TE IXAA " "irfrT- H t tsTMI. 'ni Unw Only Real Thing in Lit. No man -an at'tord to work for money alone. ' Simply accumulating wealth adds nothing permanent te ha man welfare. Wealth It only a means t an end. It to life with real puryo that counts most II a g TO GROW SUFFICIENT SILAGE Experts Assert It It Batter to Care fully Figure on ftiio to Fit Herd of Cows. (Prepared by ths United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) The planting season li the time when the dairy fanner should arrange to see that he has crops enough to till his silo. As a case In point. I Missis aippi fanner failed to take this mntter into consideration when he bought silo of fiO tons' capacity, for ho fount that he hnd corn and sorghum fo only 20 tons of sllatrp; and since, more over, he hod only 8 cows, he dectdet he had made a mistake, and tried tt sell his new silo instead of sating It Bp. A field niuu fro.n the dairy divi sion of the Cnitod States Depart iuenl of Agriculture however, persuaded hint to keep ll until the next year, and to put tip a small stave silo for imme diate use. He did so. and found It such a help In, feeding his cows cheap ly that he bought more land and ie solved to enlarge his herd to 50 cows, and thus make good use of his larger alio. Both the height and the diameter of the silo must be considered. The proper diameter of the silo depends npon the quantity of silage to be fed dally; and this quantity will Tary with the Blue of the herd. The silage should be fed out fast enough to re move it from the top of the silo at the rate of ltt to 3 Inches a day, depend ing upon climatic conditions. The warmer the weather the more silage must be removed from the surface dally In order to prevent spoiling. For the winter feed.ng season It H Bafer to figure upon removing 2 inches dally than any smaller amount. A common error Id building Is to make the diameter too large for the else of the herd. The weight of a cubic foot of silage varies according to I he pressure to which It Is sub jected, hut In a silo 30 feet high the weight per cubic foot averages about 40 pounds. So, by knowing the quan tity f silage to be fed dally, It Is pos sible to estimate what the diameter of the silo should be to permit the removal of a certnln neither of Inches each day. The table below shows the jin-i'er diameter of the silo, on a basis of 40 pounds of stlaee iier cubic foot, Laying tits Foundation of a New Silo. for herds of different sizes to be fed different quantities for winter feeding. when 2 Inches of silage are removed daily: Relation of 8! of Herd to tyameter of Silo For Winter Feeding. Numer of animals that may be fed, allowing 1 i It li i li !? It ' K K t l &1 al Pounds u.... 61 i.i7n li 1,30 1,613 io.:.. -im u io km itf A 900-pound cow ordinarily con uiueK :M) pounds of silage a day, and a 1, 310-pound one about 40 pounds. Veurlihgs eat about one-half as much as mature animals; fattening cattle, 25 to '6a pounds for each 1,000 pounds live weight. It happens, sometimes, that a alio Is not wholly tilled. bcau&e there la not enough com planted for silage and there are oot enough of other crops wake np the deficiency, The amount of silage that may be ob tained from an acre of corn 'varleVl from 4 to Zt) tons. A fair allowance on average land ts 8 tons per acre. Hence for a 60-ton stle it might be well to plant 8 or 10 acres of corn It Is by all means heat to lay out bind enough in silage crops to nri the silo to the very top; and If there I any doubt about bow much will be needed, to allow a margin of safety, remembering that the season may cut down the yield of this as well as ol other crops, On the other hand, 11 there is too much corn or sorghum ts go Into the aUo. the excess can be cot. as.. dry fodder, and other crop can be made Into 'hay. ' t Two bulletins issued by the Depart ment ef Agriculture are useful la thii eeanectloD ; eue la farmer Boiletia tot, Homemade Silos; and the other la Farmers' Bulletin BT8, The Itaklnl Ud Feeding of Silage. 1 MARK TWAIN AND WATTERSON Lifelong Friendship ttween Two et the Brainiest Men the United States Has Produced. The late Henry Watterson was a long-time friend of Mark Twain, as of early every other prominent Ameri can literary worker of hla day, and related many nnecdotea that resulted from this friendship. Murk Twain's mind turned ever to the droll. "Once in London I was Ihlng with my family at 103 Mount street. Be tween 103 and 102 there was the parochial workhouse, quite a long and Imposing edijice," . Mr. Wntterson re lates In hla autobiography. "One eve ning, upon coming in from an outing. I found a letter he had wrltteu on the sitting room table. He had left It with his card. He spoke of the shock he hnd received upon finding that next to 103 presumably UKl wtis tne. workhouse. He had lovod me, but had alwnvs ft-uml I would end by disgracing the family being han'd or something but the 'work'ua,' that wa beyond him; he hnd not thought it would come to that. And so w through pages of horseplay; his re lief on ascertaining the truth and learning his mistake, his regret at not finding me at home, closing with a dinner Invitation. ''It was at (leneva. Switzerland, that I received a long, overflowing letter, full if flamboyant oddities, written from London. Two or three hours later came a telegram. "Hum letter. Blot It from your memory, Susie Is dead." SCHEME WORKED OUT WELL How Hast Mads Pretty Sure That Unwelcome Queat Would Not Attend Engagement Party, The problem was how to Invite a certain young woman to the engage ment party and still be certain that he would decline to attend. She was known to be a killjoy, but If she were not Invited she would talk ef It , About ttvo weeks 'prior to the party the couple managed to bring together the young woman and masculine acquaintance of theirs. After the proper Introduction the In nocent young man and the young wo man were left alone. The following week the young man received two theater tickets from his acquaintance who was to be engaged, wbiPsttld be would not be able to use them himself. Three days later the young woman received an Invitation to the party. ; "He's a alee fellow," ran part of the letter In answer to the engage ment party Invitation, "and he has asked me to accompany him to the theater oo the ,very evening of your party. I would like to come to your party, but I gave him my promise before I received your Invitation, so you see how It Is: I do hope you will excuse me." New York 8un. 01 ants. Prom Nature we lenrn of a recent meeting of the Krltlsh association, wherein It wns brought out that the popular conception Is untrue regard ing power of glanis and the imig nliiceut types of masculinity which they are supposed lo be. Htutlstica were presented to show that giants were relatively feeble, usually short lived, and, in the majority of cases, devoid of thne features peculiar to masculinity. CilgniitU'lsm was said to he Identified with abnormal conditions of two small organs located at the base of the brain the thyroid gland and the pituitary body. The overac tivity of these, preceding or near the period of birth, la the primary cause Sometimes, however, their overactiv ity comes Into piny after the Individu al has attained his full growth, and, as a result, an overgrowth of the ex trend Men takes place, Women Have Changed Little, Women who dam-ed for and with the 1'haruohs put uu the war paint Just as enthusiastically aa the lady uf today, A collection of the vanity pots of an Hgypiluu lady of quality, rescued from the tomb which held her mum mined corpxe, has just been brought to London. In ft, wonderfully blown glass took tiie pluce of the silver toilet accessory of1 the pre writ time. Home of the gluss pots are beauti fully Iridescent due to the Inroads made on the pots by the acid lu the stibium with which they were filled, and with which the Egyptian beauty painted her eyelids, and eyebrows. The collection included l henna pot stilj containing traces of the dye with which feminine Egypt of the period hennaed hocAnger nolle as London's smart set is doing this season. Writs Served at Church Doer. Until the middle of tbe Seventeenth I'eiilury a familiar figure at a Virginia jturch door on a tiunday morning was he county sheriff. The law requiring Hernia nee at divine worship was of itutt usaf stance to him. ft rounded ip the planters and small farmer I'om remote corners and enabled hliu lib a minimum of effort to serve .riu. warrants, summonses, execu ii.iia and similar official pupers, .This practical method disturbed the . timers who did not faucy official In- iwlorj on such nn occasion,. So, In .M, Uiey passed , a Igw prohibiting ,ie service of official paper on Bun-t ay, at the parish church er elsewhers, tfid the aberlsT was asat esT on his eh of trail tbe other six day te do s well aa he might, . THE NEW FEED STORE HON FEED AND PRODUCE CO. BEST FEEDS AT LOWEST PRICES RELIABLE DEALERS WE SOLICIT YOUK TRADE. See us aboutLand Plaster f 14.00 ton. Alfalfa and Clover Hay Flour, Baby Chick Foed, etc. . Stock and Poultry Fend, Mill Run Albers Dairy Feed, Fisher's Molnss-O-Moal. More-Milk, Oil Meal. Seed, Fertilizers, etc, BEAVERTON FEED & HkOLUI v.O. Order First 4 ft. or IO Inch; also, flroplnre A. E. HANSON Locul phone. Blacksmith in Beaverton Alfred Hiuimoii, an experienced hliick smlth, la located In the Frtiliimuer bulldtiiK. just uuNt of KrlckMin'v 4Jnr mte. HOltHtiNHOKR, WAGON WO It KK 11 UHNKKAL HLACKHMITH Good Work, Klrat-t'liuM Material and Right Price Guaranteed. A Hlutre of your patroiiajpj solicit hL ALFRED HANSEN BEAVERTON INN Regular Home.(ooked Dinner from l:iiOIo l:JtO Mt, Horn) he t'rivini All Kind of Hoft Drinka Fresh Catidted iKHis Tobacco Fresh him of Cookies. GIVK 18 A TRIAL G. L. MjLLETT Proprietor . a 1 1 1 1 wami a a a a a iiitttttit in : intiniit Jttsi i s ssmtiti a it nmia A Literary Digest. "Lam night I got several imiirnzlrm nd a dlah of nuts and ale them," wild n Kmporla college girl; nnd the uH. tte dubs this sort or thing a literary llgent. Cupper's Weelrlv Nine-Cent Knife Brings Five Dollars in Chicago r- w,l . i ? rfl 14 IJ Both knives were made In , fn , v' Germany. Both are the same -f y Jh ' -." ize and equal in value. The - W ' f .. . .: knife to the left retailed for 96 jfoi'T&.- "f'-if"" " centa In Berlin. The one to the uf "W-'lUUi"' right sold for 15 in Chuago. .f i I J U. S. MANUFACTURERS LOSE CUSTOMERS AND U. S. WORKMEN LOSE THEIR JOBS BUT THE CONSUMER PAYS PROFITEERS CHAIHMAV PORDNRYd of the Ways and Meana Committee of the United Hlates llouae of hepreientntivea, rxhibfted the knives photo graphed above to Congreas, ptm cmt nine uuU lu Ucrmanyi the other Ave dollars In Chicago. ' A few days luter a Chicago Importing Arm stated that the knife No. t cost twenty-five times nine eeata and that It was bought In America. The Chicago firm bought the knife, which was manufactured by J. A. lleaekela In (Wmaiiy, from the American agent of that firm. The Chicago store paid n W for It according to their own truttmony giving the Chicago store a profit of more than 100 per cent, but the Germa.1 Importer In New York who bought It for nine six-tenth cents In Germany and sold It for 99.40 "cleaned up" f2J0 on the deal. The corn timer, according to Mr. Fordoer. paid the bill. ' Jfitlmony before the U, 8. flrnate and House of ItepresentatlTee hows that Paris hati, which eott ffl In American money In France, era selling here as high as ttt,A0 Anc steel-out buttons, coiling 94 cents per docm, are selling for 12.00 per dosen, Thii Is poiilbie because the present tariff law provides that Imported articles shall be subject to duty on their value In foreign money, ana foreign money has dropped far below par so that the government u losing millions el dollars per day In revenue and the public Is paying profiteering prices, Chairman Fonlney declares that the remedy Is In the tariff bill now before the V. S. fl'We. It provide tliat Imported articles toutt puy duty on their value In this country. This Is called "Amerlcuu valuation." Sup-portcrs-of this bill say. that Imjwrtert and mall order houses are spending mors than one million dntlaia to defeat It because It aBsans death lo their huge proflta. Tnese adherents ef Aawrieao alnatlon also point oat that awrer has ancb a fight been waged In Washington against a bill In Congress aa la being waged against the Pordney tariff bill. Class Fir Wood wood. Immediate delivery from Route 3, Itoiivcrton,, Oregon. ntiiit; a a an i mm irni nun tti a i n 1 1 1 1 n ntn i n 1 1 tit i : t i in a at. Ah, There's the Rub. An npimi aliiger stoa that no womia is worth loving until she Is thirty. Maybe not; but how li ou t MM when she Is thirty?