Image provided by: Central Point School District #6; Central Point, OR
About Central Point star. (Gold Hill, Or.) 192?-19?? | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1930)
CENTRAL POINT STAR VOLUME TWO FRIDAY, JU N E 20, " ■■ Highway Crews Making Several Needed Repairs CLUBBERS LIKE COLLEGIATE LIFE 700 Boy» and G irla Enjoylng An imai He«aion un Campii« uf Stata Collega NUMBER 4M " America Leads in Power on Farms POW ERS STORIES OF OREGON ARE SUCCESS Storie« Have F >m dation in Oregon H is to ry and Scenic Spot« L iv in g in the men’s and w om en’s C a rry in g d e lig litfu land e n te rta in d orm ito rie s, going to rlasses to real More Mechanical Energy In 500,(88) ce ntral station e le c tric in g glim pses o f Oregon in to all college, professors, sw im m in g in plants. These figures do not in p a ils o f the U nited States, “ Ma Use Per Worker Than the big tanks and ru m b lin g over clude n e a rly 5,000,0000 passenger rooned in C ra te r Lake,” a volume llie campus, the I II club hoys anil In Factories autom obiles w h ich are owned by o f short stories w ritte n by A lfre d g irls are as usual th o ro u g h ly e n jo y farm ers as they are not p rim a rily Powers, dean o l the extension d i The | hi si weak or more Ilia h ig li- ing the collegiate atmosphere of pro du ction machines. vision o f the I n iv e rs ity o f Oregon Wliy crew s have beau busy be-t th e ir tw o weeks summ er camp at By Caleb Johnson T he re w ill alw ays he p le n ty of is already p ro v in g a m arked suc lu t e in G c iitru l I'n iu l anil Gold H ill Oregon Slate College. Let its tliin k fo r a m in ute of w ork fo r hum an beings to do in cess, accordin g to reports o f the on the P a cific litg l way iiiiik iiiR More than 709 club members and fa rm in g in term s o f pow er. fa rm ing . F e w machines run them- publisher«, Ihe .Metropolitan Press. sou«* very much neei <1 ri-puirs. At leaders are attending th is year's A nim al pow er us w e ll us me »elves; fe w o f Ihe k in d th a t run Orders fo r the hook, w h ic h con the Anderson corner u «trail) shovel ses, w h ich began Monday, June 9, chanical power. themselves can do the varied things tains six h ig h ly in te re stin g tales o f is busy rem oving llie side b ill so and w ill continue u n til June 21. F arm in g w ith o u t p ow er is almost w hich must he done on the farm , th is state, are now com ing in from Hint the curve ut this place w ill not The delegates represent 31 counties inconceivable to the Am erican So in machine tending alone there a ll arts o f the U nited Stales, es be so dangerous due to the fact that ami some till o r 70 tow ns and com m ind. Yet in Ita ly today ttiere is w ill alw ays be the need o f human p ecially from lib ra rie s , some < f v is ib ility is b elte r from a greater m unities o f Oregon, according to If. o n ly one horse to every fa rm w o rk labor, though not so much in p ro w hich are o rd e rin g several copies. distance. The earth and gravel re C. Seymour state club leader. ers. At the beginning o f the W o rld p o rtio n to the w o rk done as is S ta rtin g w ith a clever sto ry, “ Ma- moved fro m this ru t is being used Many o f these boys anil g irls W ar, when the use o f anim als on needed to take care o f the horses roone din C ra te r LaJ^e,” in w hich to b u ild up the shoulders ulong the have attended th is session in past Am erican soil was its peak, we had and mules w h ich m echanical p o w a hoy le ft by accident at an in h ig h w a y fo r u m ile to the south. years, w h ile others are on the cam more than tw o horses fo r every er is displacing. T here w ill a l accessible on the lake shore, fin T h is too fo rm s a b ig ndnntage fo r pus fo r the firs t tim e, hut to a ll man employed in fa rm lu b o r; Great ways he farm s on w hich horses a lly signals llie lodge by means o f the hig hw u y in this lo c a lity has o f them it represents a red le tte r B ritia n had less than one horse |>er o r mules w ill do most o f the w o rk , a kite constructed w ith the aid o f e ith e r had a very n u rro w shoulder period o f the year— the c ro w n in g man, Germ any one horse fo r each farm w here p ow er fro m o the r postage stamps, the stories take the o r none at u ll. re w a rd o f a year's conscientious tw o farm hands, Erance one hors? sources cannot he used econom ical reader through m any adventures At III* W illo w Springs camp the w o rk on one o r more rlu b p ro to three laborers. ly. and to m any absorbing places. h ig h w a y is being straightened so jects. The Iw o weeks are fu ll ones Pow er on the fa rm , then, is n o th It docs not fo llo w , h ow ever that Pioneer lore is d ra w n on fo r th ill 'lie tr a ffic w ill go behind the fo r the clubbers, w ith regular ing new in Am erica. It is the se even sm all farm s cannot be large many o f the tales, one o f the most s tiili m instead o f in fro n t us be classes each m o rn in g in the various cret o f our greater fa rm p ro spe rity. ly operated more e ffic ie n tly by the unusual o f w h ic h is the “ H ic k o ry fore. T his im provem ent is being phases of a g ric u ltu re and home ec in tro d u c in g m echanical aid o f m echanical pow er. There Bank.” T h is tells o f a unique and made Io elim in a te three short onomics covered by clu b projects, And in pow er on the fa rm we are s till is a great deal o f ta lk about the s u rris in g m ethod o f keeping coin, curves from the highw uy. W ith ng w e ll us la b o ra to ry periods devot these im provem ents and the resu r ed to actual w o rk w ith the college leading Europe and the rest o f the farm o f the fu tu re as a great deal w hich alm ost resulted in a w id o w operated lik e a fa c to ry , w ith em and her fa m ily being le ft pen ni facing o f the highw u ween Med livestock, on the experim ent station i w o rld . In the fo rm o f tra cto rs and o th e r ployees w o rk in g by the operating less th ro ug h the death o f a husband fo rd and Ashland the P a cific h ig h farm s, and in the home economies pow erd riven m ach in e ry w c had system o f an e ig h t-h o u r day sched w ho fa ile d to reveal the w he re w ay w ill be more pleasant to d rive laboratories. more than tw o horsepow er per ule, liv in g in to w n and m o to rin g about o f the “ hank” . in another over than ever. There Is s tilt other Each afternoon th i re is a g e n e ra l! “ The D in n e r C a ll,” a pioneer w o- w o rk planned fo r th is part o f the assembly w ith prom inent men and w o rk e r on the farm s in 1900, th ir ty out to th e ir jobs every m ornin g. Beyond doubt there w ill be a tnan fo ils an In dia n by a clever In m a n u fa ctu rin g in slide liu l to date w o rk hus not been women speakers, ami in Ihc even vc "s ago. d u stry less p ow er was in use p e r good deal more o f that k in d o f ruse, w h ile the w h ite mans clever- started. ings the county delegations broad w o rk e r than on the farm fa rm in g in the fu tu re than there is ness is again dem onstrated in “ The cast over KOAC. the college ra d io The same p ro p o rtio n obtained now, and there Is quite a b it now . Vanquished R id e r” in w h ich tw o NORTHW EST FLORA station. In u dd itio n, tim e is p ro dow'n lo 1925. it is o n ly in the But it w ill be confined to a few vided fo r both hoys and g irls to past five years th a t'w o rk e r» in in specially favored areas and a fe w hoys escape fro m the re d s k in s by FAST DISAPPEARING sw im , play te n n is , o r engage in the sim ple process o f reversing the And it w ill come shoes on a horse. d u s try have had m ore m echanical staple crops. o th e r form s o f recreation that may n ow er per man at th e ir disposal very fa r fro m s a tisfyin g the vast Alm ost tra g ic in a w h is m ic a l w ay Tourists, Camper« Threatening N a appeal to them . than w o rk e rs on the farm . Now’ m a jo rity o f those w h o now liv e on is “ The Blue Bucket M ine” a sto ry tive Shrubs and Flower» Says ■ -o---------- •he average w o rk e r in in d u s try th e ir farm s, to w hom fa rm in g is o f the Oregon c o u n try around old O. H. C. Specialist use« about fiv e horsepow er, w h ile som ething m ore than a means o f i + + ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Baker C ity A fa th e r and son fin d the average farm w o rk e r has at liv e lih o o d but rath er, as President YOU EVER STOP TO a nugget in the c ra w o f a chicken his command o nly s lig h tly less in H oover phrased it, a mode o f liv - t THINK? and Ihe gold h un t is on. Its te r W hile Ute average citizen is de m echanical p ow er an<l more than ing, w h ic h appeals lo them m ore m in a tio n , minus the fo rtu n e , is both m anding beauty o f line and co lo r the equivalent o f Iw o m echanical s tro n g ly than any o the r mode of By Edson It. W aite hum orous and sad. in almost e ve ryth in g from curs lo liv in g . horsepow er in the fo rm o f anim al Shawnee, Oklahoma A sto ry that is certain to arouse kitch en kettles, lie I» s till ruth less + + + ■► + e ♦ + pow er. Perhaps Ihe greatest value o f a ll, a real co ntrove rsy in w h ich m athe ly and thoughlessly destroyin g the And the greatest increase in the in the increasing use o f p o w e r on m atics exerts may take part is “ The w ild flo w e rs and «hruhs that give use o f pow er, i f the present ten the fa rm is in the dom estic a p p li F o u rth o f the F a r F ifte en ,” the heuuty to his surroundings. THAT progressive w ide - awake dency is a fa ir in d ic a tio n , w ill be cations w h ic h make th is mode o f action o f w h ic h hinges on w h e th e r If the cam per unit to urist con m nnfaeturers are ] 1 rsistent ad on the fa rm . The horses and mules liv in g so much easier and more o r not a flam e on M ount Shasta tin ue lo dig up. c u rry aw ay or vertisers. That kind o f adver are being replaced by egines much com fortable, fo r the farm ers fam could be seen on Mount Hood, 259 destroy the n atu ra l flo ra ut the tis in g mul.es fo r pernuinent suc more p o w e rfu l than the anim als ily as w e ll as fo r the fa rm e r h im m ile away. Hood is 11.225 feet rule they have been doing, it w ill self, than life on the fa rm used to are. cess. h ig h, w h ile Shasta is 14,449 and be Im l a fe w years, according lo A ttra c tiv e ly advertised lines are a l A ll o f that means th a t the farm be. there is some question as to w h e th D r. Helen t.ilk c y , botanist of O re -------- o-------- em ployed in ways good fo r steady sales. They output per person er the cu rva ture o f the earth w ou ld gon State College, u n til m any of are alw ays better fo r service, farm w o rk is steadily g ro w in g la rg p erm it vision fo r this distance be Oregon Poultrymen To the most b e a u tifu l native flo w e rs er. Few er men are need to p ro therefore easier to sell. tween these tw o lo fty points. In and shrubs o f Oregon and the Advertised brands are the biggest duce and tra n sp o rt to m arket the M eet At Corvallis terest Is added by a s c ie n tific ex n orthw e st w ill he e xtinct. Ib is , Dr. value that ran he obtained. T his same amount o f foodstuffs o r o the r Some 400 o f Ihe leading p o u try - planation by J. W . Booth, w ho (iilk e y says, has already happened fact is know n to everyone. a g ric u ltu ra l com m odities. inen fro m a ll parts o f Oregon w ill w ro te fo llo w in g the appearance of in most o f the eastern slides. Persistent advert!? ing means p ro T h is increase in fa rm p ro d u c tiv the sto ry in the New Im provem ent “ The need o f imm ediate action to gress— and progress means suc ity has been going on fo r a h u n lie guests o f Oregon State college Era in 1925. preserve fo r fu tu re generations cess. dred years. In 1830 it took the ; fo r the annual p o u ltry m e n ’s con Dean Powers is w e ll kn o w n as such necessities as fuel, b u ild in g People are co nsta ntly lo o kin g th ru labor of three-quarters o f the peo-1 vention, J u ly 23 and 24, a cording an a uth o r o f sh ort stories, espec m aterials, food and pow er is start llie a dve rtisin g colun is fo r new pie o f the U nited States to g ro w to A. G. I.u n n, head o f the p o u ltry ia lly tales fo r young people. These lin g ly evident p ro ba bly lo the ma and better things. Products not the ro in m o d itie s necessary to feed husbandry departm ent, w ho w ill be in the volume are fa vorites from in charge o f the meetings. The an jo r it y o f citizens,” says D r. G ille y , représentas there have a slim and clothe themselves and the rest | various p ublications, chosen not on “ but to the maintenance o f those chance o f being know n. o f the p opulation. By 1900, though nual m eeting o f the Oregon state ly fo r th e ir interest, but because o f th ing s w h ich have no s tric tly ec Advertised products register an ap the) a d d itio n to the fa rm e q u ip P o u ltry m e n ’s association w il be th e ir location in Oregon. onom ic value, most o f us have s till peal that makes the thoughts of ment o f more horses nnd o f mech- held on the campus at the same A special feature o f the volume given little thought. buying any o th e r k in d fade i : iir al pc v e r-d riv e n im plem ent, we time. is tlia r t a num ber have been hound "T h e autom obile and the general E conom ical p ro du ction w i ll be away quickly. had reached a stage o f e fficie n cy, exodus o f the co u n try on Sundays Persistent, tru th fu l a d ve rtisin g is w h ic h req uired the w o rk o f not one o f the c h ie f topics fo r discus in Oreyon m y rtle wood, and made ill) in to b ea u tifu l g ift sets. These and o the r holidays has proved n a b u ild e r o f steady and certain more than fo u r-te n th o f the w hole sion d u rin g the convention. O ther are expected to prove p ou la r not I subjects such as breeding, disease te m p o ra ry menace o f great p ro p o r business. It Is the greatest know n p op ulatio n to feed and clothe us c o n tro l and m arketin g w ill also r e - i o n ly to book lovers and co llectors tio ns to o u r native flo ra . Places rem edy fo r poor business. a ll. i hut to Bie people o f Oregon w ho fo rm e rly inaccessible have been Business concerns w ho ilo not ad T h is y e a r’s census is not com ceive a tte n tio n . One o f the p rin - ! k n o w and love th is b ea utifu l wood. eipal speners w ill be P ro f. B. B. opened up, and thoughtless flo w e r vertise are p la y in g a dangerous plete, hut it seems certa in that it The book is one o f a scries o f lovers s trip the woods and roa d game. w ill show that not more than a Thom pson, the fir s t graduate o f the hooks on the Oregon T ra il lo he sides o f blossoms anil shrubbery, q u a rte r o f the e n tire population o f college p o u ltry departm ent in 1913, published by th is company. 'riie ra re r and more sensitive plants the U nited States is a c tu a lly en w ho is now head o f the p o u ltry de- i ----------o---------- have retreated before c iv iliz a tio n — SAMBO’S PHILOSOPHY gaged in farm w o rk ; and the con partm ent at Oklahom a A. à M. eol-1 T illy , you w ere e n te rta in in g a lege and a recognized a u th o rity on ! soealled— and in many eases are tin u in g increase in p ow er equip man in the kitch en last n ig h t, were m aking th e ir Iasi stand. The next ment lim y, and p ro b a b ly w ill, re p o u ltry problem s. you not? The v is itin g p ou ltrym e n w ill be fe w years may determ ine th e ir duce th is p ro p o rtio n to 15 per cent That is fo r h im to say, ma’am. I fuies.” in the course o f another ten years. entertained Ihe firs t evening b y 1 d id m y best. the C o rv a llis cham ber o f commerce Some o f the outstanding exam That is w hat the sta tistical experts ----------o---------- ples o f flo w e rs and shrubs once fig u re — that e v e n tu a lly we shall abundant hut now not perm anently reach such a stage o f a g ric u ltu ra l gone o r fast disnppeuring from e ffic ie n c y that o n ly 15 per cent o f C le rkin g in Theiss’ Oregon fie ld s and foresls, accord the people w ill be re q u ire d to g ro w Mrs. Bose Hodson is c le rk in g in in g lo l)r . (iilk e y , are the small a ll o f the crops and livesto ck w h ic h the I'hriss G rocery store d u rin g Ihe p in k o rch id called fa iry o r asgel Ihe e ntire 700 percent o f the peo absence o f Mrs. Pearl Bonney w ho slipp er, Ih c Cascade lily , now ex ple consume. is in C a lifo rn ia on a ten day vn- V « . ■ tin c t, and the T rilliu m s o r wood The present volum e o f p ow er In ealion. lilie s w h ic h ar destroyed, not by use on Ihc farm s o f Am erica is rem oving the roots, hut by ta king estimated at 50,000,000 horsepow er. V is ito rs at Mce Home the leaves w ith the flo w e r so that T h is is d ivid e d among n ea rly 25,- Mrs. M o lly Dahl John and daugh no food is m anufactured and stored 000,000 separate u nits, o f w hich te r M ary Jane o f Berkeley, C alif, fo r the next year. The rhododen horses and mules s till com prise the drons are another notable example la rg e r p ro p o rtio n . But in add itio n o rn ia w ere v is ito rs at the M ary Mee home Wednesday. o f wholesale and thoughtless de lo some 18,000,000 w o rk anim als s tru ctio n , and there are many there arc in use 853,000 farm tra c _ -wi> others. tors, 097,0(8) tru c k s — the farm job Taken to H ospital •TOUKS that TRT t o . s e t M M ’ - ------ —rfl---------- “Kf dey was mo' tialid pullin an is in very large part a tra n s p o rta J. N. Hurle, who has been sick twing fop . notvon ’ G rtie P M -tV Read the Ads and p ro fit. A good less see »awin' an ' brayin', (ley tl lie tio n job— 2,5(81,000 s ta tio n e ry gas FIND T H A T W H A T 1 H E V O C 1 I * for some time, was taken to the mo’ big loads pulled to de TOP o’ de advertiser is usually a good mer wo <\ th a u y r w h M t h s v p a id engines, 1.000,000 windmills, 300,- Community hospital in Medford bill 'slid o' atlpkln' nenh de bottom." chant. FOlA I T ’’ -w- -** 000 individual electric plants and v. S? Wednesday morning. iÄ a t FR AN K PAR BANKS A. P. Giannini told a Congressional committee the other day that branch banking would eventually supersede the present system of independent local banks i > the United States, as it has done in Canada and largely in England. Small villages, he said, can not support a bank with sufficient re sources to meet the growing indus trial needs of small towns. Mr. Giannini is probably right. There are good-sized cities in the United States whose progress has been held back by lack of adequate local banking capital and by the narrow outlook of local bankers. The pre judice against "chain” ownership of any kind of business extends to banks as well as to stores, but as in the case of chain stores, the remedy is in the hands of the community Independent banks, like retailers, can compete with “chain” institutions if they will adopt the modern methods of the chains and provide themselves with sufficient re source- o make competition effective. CRIPPLES r One of the things which we are be ginning to learn is that the worst thing we can do for a person who ha- been disabled by disease or accident is to coddle him or her, and the best thing that can be done is to train the re maining faculties to useful work. The Veterans Bureau has finished its rehabilitation work with men who were injured in the World War, and reports that every tnan who is capable of any sort of productive effort is now at work somewhere. But the Federal Government is cooperating with the states to provide the same sort of rehabilitation training for vic tims of industrial accidents and of crippling diseases like infantile paral ysis. Only a tew states are giving cooperation, but in those surprising results have been achieved. Leaving out the benefit to society by not having to support the cripple in idleness, there is a definite value to the injured person in the discovery that he is still able to earn a living. STUPIDITY * Customs officials in Seattle recently seized 120 copies of a German medical book, imported by a Seattle dealer for sale to the medical men of the Northwest. The ground for the seiz ure was that the contents of the book were "indelicate.” The book is a learned treatise on biology, which word is merely a technical term meaning “life.” Life, apparently, is indelicate, in the eyes of the United States Cus toms. But human life only. Nobody tries to suppress books which deal with the breeding of livestocks, dogs or poultry Only when a book sug gests that the life processes of human beings are similar to those of other animals do well-meaning but stupid officials interfere. LOWDOWN Victor V. Green runs what he calls “The Most Low-Down Paper on Earth." Its title is the Caochella Valley Submarine and it is published at Coachella, Riverside County, Cali fornia, 76 feet below sea level. Editor Green has a sense of humor, as is evidenced by the sub-title of Ins paper. He also has a sense oi re sponsibility to his thriving agricultu ral community, as ihe local news in the "Submarine” clearly shows. There are otk^r valleys in Califor nia the bottoms of which are even farther below the level of the Pacific Ocean than this one. They are beds of ancient lakes which were once bays of the ocean before some prehistoric earthquake raised the land between them and the sea. Old ocean beds make good farms everywhere. Holland's farms are almost entirely on reclaimed sea-bet- tom, and another 300,000 acres of ocean has just been diked off and is being pumped out to add to the agri cultural area. Much of Florida’s best land has only lately been reclaimed and now a project is on foot to irri gate the Sahara desert and make it the world's garden spot WASHINGTON The National Capital is rapidly be coming the most beautiful city in America, one of the most beautiful cities of the world. I first went to Washington as a boy, nearly fifty years ago, and have seen it grow from, a mtidhole ornamented in spots with beautiful structures and monuments, into something which now begins to resemble the harmonious, stately de sign of the great Frenchman, Major L ’Enfant, whom George W ashing ton employed to lay out the city named after himself. Just now there is being spent in Washington on public buildings and grounds, parkwavs and the like, a total of $314,250,000k 'w Washington was planned to face East and South from the Capitol and the White House, respectively. Real estate speculators of the 1790’s bought up the desirable lots and held them at such high prices that the city grew North and West instead and new front» had to be put on the White 1 the Capitol, the back door» « M b MB, ?