Central Point herald. (Central Point, Or.) 1906-1917, October 05, 1916, Image 1

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    C entral P oint H erald
O U R MERCHANTS
•*
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0 A 6 ¿ fV 6
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W ill «rive > au a “ square d e a l"
every time They appreciate your
patron age and w ill treat you rig h t
E s t a b l is h e d
A
26,
p r il
C e n t r a l P o in t , J a c k s o n
1906
Club Work
Club work is the
performance of
l definite enterprise
based upon the
m ist economic practices of
the farm
! a id home.
1
I It is founded on sound priciples and .
h is come to stay. It is supported by
f deral and state aid as a definite form |
j o f agricultural extension work. Boys |
and girls on the farm are in this work
and every possible advantage isextended
to fit them for a better living “ to
improve country life ,” thus bettering1
our government.
Its purpose is to enlist the boys a id
girls of the state In profitable and in-
j teresting activities, which will develop
t lem into economic producers, thus
h Iping these boys and girls to find j
: themselves in ureful training in place '
0 ' allowing them *.o drift into useless
; or harmful occupat’ on.
Hughes and Fairbanks
N ATIO N AL
For President—
Charles Evans Hughes
For Vice-President—
Charles W. Fairbanks
C o u n t y , O regon . T h u r sd ay , O c to ber
W. C. Hawley
STATE
For Secretary o f S ta te -
Ben W. Olcot
For Justices o f Supreme Court—
Geo. H. Burnett
Frank A. Moore
For Dairy and Food Commissioner—
J. D. Mickle
For Public Service Commissioner—
Fred C. Burchtel
For Judge o f First D is tric t-
For Representatives Eight District—
Benj. C. Sheldon
C. M. Thomas
tore, aud State Department of Educa­
tion, all working in cooperation. There j
were last year 127,822 members enroll- j
ed in the Club work in the United State
aid 11,642 in Oregon in the following \
p rojects: Corn growing, potatoe growing !
vegetable gardening, poultry raising, j
pirk production, dairy herd record keep­
ing, fruit raising, seed grain, selection,
rural home beautification, farm and
home handicraft, baking, canning, and
sowing.
For Representative Ninth District—
William H. Gore
COUNTY
For District Attorney—
G. M. Roberts
For County Clerk—
G. A. Gardner
For County Recorder—
Chauncey Florey
For Sheriff —
E. W. Wilson
Good
For County Treasurer—
Myrtle Blakeley
For County Surveyor—
A. T. Brown
George W. Owen
Cigarettes are not sold at the new
i co-operative store o f the University of
j Oregon students, although the store is
not on University
property.
The
s udent directors have decided tem-
p irarily against cigarettes, and
the
injunction is likely
to stand. The
students also have an unwritten
law
against smoki ig o f any kind on
the
campus.
Many Accidents
Girls Work
University o f Oregon, Eugene,Portable
Wjodsaw Accidents is a safety pam­
phlet just issued by the new
Oregon
Federation for Industrial Safety. The
pamphlet shows the maimed arms of
four sufferers from
the a; common
accidents, many o f wh'ch, the pamphlet
says, “ could be prevented if mechanical
safeguards w ir ;
applied."
Labor
Commissioner O. P. Hoff, of Salem, or
stands ready to assist any iperatur who
desires to apply the proper
guards.
The various types of accidents caused
by the portable woodsaws are explained
in the pamphlet.
University of Oregon, Eugene, The
growing independence o f the
college
g rls is shown by statistics gathered
a’ the State University this fall. One
f mrtli o f the women registered
are
e ther partially or wholly self support-
i ig. Stenography and book keeping,
caring for faculty children,
general
h jusework, and services in sorority
hnuses, are the principal ways by which
m iney is earned. Some are
putting
themselves through on the proceeds of
p-evious teaching. Five o f this year
freshmen girls are entirely self-support-
ing.
For Coroner—
John A. Perl
For County Assessor—
James B. Coleman
For County School Superintendent—
G. W. A g tr
For County Commissioner—
E leven
N
umber
23
Radish Pests
THESE PIPING TIMES OF PEACE
■ In Oregon Club work is carried on by
t ie Otegou Agricultural College, the 1
United States Department of Agricul- ;
Frank M. Calkins
V o l u m e
CARRANZA AND WILSON—THE EXPERTS
HERALD
W ill co-operate w ith you on ao>
proposition fe r the betterment
o f Central Point and its vicinity
5, 1916
It developes leadership and creates |
cooperation, it inspires the right at­
titude towards honest toil, and a spirit j
o ' sympathy for some calling, however
humble.
It t( aches the child to learn a few
basic facts relating to agriculture, ant- i
nial husbandry, home economics and i
relative topics, v^uch he or she will
use many times to advantage in future
1 fe.
| It helps make the whole eomuniny (
m ire efficient and creates a deeper re­
spect for the school as an educational
center.
For Representative, First District—
THE
The small white maggot in radishes
prepared for the
table spoi's
the
pleasure o f eating this vegatahie. The
most satisfactory way to eontr. I these
pests, espically in radish beds, is to
screen the beds to prevent the entrance
o f the flies that deposit eggs.
The expense o f screening is very
slight anl the satisfaction o f know
ing that the radishes are
free
from
maggots warrant the extra
trouble.
A frame of ten or twelve-inch
boards
should be built around the borders
of
the bed. a few strands of wire streched
across the top to hold up the covering
and then ordinary
cheese cloth or
misquito netting streched across the
top to keep out flies .
Cabbage beds
may be similarly protected.
Soon after being set into the field
voung cabbage plants are often injured
in the same way.
The injured plant
becomes a sickly blue in color and then
die. In fact
all
members of
the
cruciferae family are
likely
to be
attacked, and the injury
particularly
in a backward season such as the
present, is sometime quite severe.
For plants already in the
field
in
which insects are present and doing
injury, about the only practical method
of control at the present time is the
use o f crude curbolic emulsion. This
material is prepared as follows:
Water, 1 gallon; whale oil
soap, 1
pound; crude carbolic acid 1 pint.
Shave the soap finely in the
water
and allow it to boil until the soap is
thoroughly dissolved.
Remove
from
the lire and iinmediatly
add crude
carbolic acid a little at a time with
vigorous stirring, continue to stir
the
material for about five minutes until
it has assumed u thick
creamy
consistency. This is known as stock
soloution. One part o f
this sto ck
Soloution should he used with 50 parts
o f water.
This
material is
then
poured or
sprayed about the base of the cabbage
cauliflower and similar
plants
a nd
simply poured along the rows o f radishe
turnips, etc. This treatment should be
repeated every five to eight days in
order to prove most effective.
Winter Garden,8 most gor­
geous, dazzling, girliest Revue,
Oct. 5th, Page, Medford.
M A R K E T REPORT
(Prices paid the p'oducer.)
W h e a t....................
Ryo
$1 10
O u ts ................
Barley
Corn...............
A lfa lfa haled
Grain huy baled . . . .
B u tter....................
E g g s ....................... ....................... : m >3
BUR3TING A OUBBLE.
The Dcmocrats w ho sougbt a erlt-
i Iclsni frinii Dr. Charles \V. J llot of
Air. Hughes' nceeptamo o f thè presi-
I dentini lioiiilliiltlon got mie, hllt noi
| Ilio kiud tlicy yvanted Dr. lOliot was
i heartless. Instead of helplng thè Deiu-
ocrats keep thè supreme court bllbble
III thè atr he prlckcd q wlth a piu
; wben In hls letter he sald of Air.
Cows
Hughes’ action:
"Alost Americana wllì thluk flint, H c fc o
liavlng tritai thè llfc of a governor and Sheep.. . .
thè Ufi* o f a Jiistlce o f (In* supreme Hens......................
Lame Ducks.
court, he liad n rlglit to givo ellect to Broilers................... . . 2 lb or less 17c
"What Is a 'lame duck,' anyhow''"
hla preference for pollili al servlce."
Old cocks.
Most gorgeous and bewildering ""¡‘T ’ ,lle liin"
1,11 k
"
A lame din k. responded Congress
costumes ever shown on any man Hammfatt. "is a statesman who
Ducks (o ld )............. ........
.......... 1 0 «
*• \ \ \ r __i . „ f Dl
,,
has tieen urged by bis constituents to
Southern Oregon’s
great« st Ducks (yourg)
Sta re, A World o f Pleasure , : take hlB f(K.t ou, of llie m>llKl|. _
event. “ The World o f Pleasure” Geese
10.;
Page, Medford, Oct. 5th.
' Rlchmaml Times Dispatch.
Oct. 5th, Page, Medford.
I’otu tocs.................
Those Canadian sentries w ho search­
Chinese Music.
ed the car of Air. Hughes for explo­
The notes of •'biueve mush rend like
sives missed the bombs he has ready the written chtir:i<*Wi'* from right t"
to drop into the Democratic camp.— left, and the Intervals of the scale are
I'hlliidelpliiii Public Ledger.
different from those of (ho scale »d ipt
! «1 l»y the nations of the West. The
The New York Sim says that Dan­ I music Is not very harmonious and
iels la the Issue, but our opluloti Is tliat I sounds meaningless and Jingling in
the Democrats will, in company with western ears, but It has a pretty intisl
several other so colled Issues, duck cal cadence that inalus It attractive
this one. Daniels Is too difficult a i and interesting in spite o f us frequent
discords.
proposition to defend.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
GRUENj
The
- | W n s t ia t w t c * s
A
u
EN
N ew
“ Octathin” Wristlet
Here is a wristlet watch o f real distinction
''D ifferen t” enough for she who likes s touch of the unconven­
tional, yet withal the embodiment of dignified design and good taste
♦
♦
♦
The reputation for precision timeke [ ng won tv the Gruen
Watch is your guarantee of timekeeping qt aaties i i this finely je w ­
eled adjusted model
In 25 year gold filled case $ 2 5 .
Let us show them to you.
You Should
j
i ♦
♦
In 14k solid gold case 550
Martin J. Reddy
The Jeweler
House of Quality
Lay in Your W inter Supply of Flour
NOW
Full
Line
All
Mt. PITT
> I
Wool
♦
Flour s wholesome and pure
And m akes the finest of Bread
Its the Popular Family Flour
jj M A C K I N A W S
; :
f
♦
Bring in your grain and exchange
Just Received
212 E. Main St,
Medford, Ore.
:
Visitors Always W e lc o m e
f t
Car e t « Tim* Cell 10
C R A N F IL L & R O B N E TT
with
The Central Poitit Mills
i ¡