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About Aurora observer. (Aurora, Marion County, Or.) 19??-1940 | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1925)
Knight’s Rogue River Catsup on the tables. “ ‘Here’s the joke,’ he said. _ *1 Entered as second class matter March 28, 1911, at the postoffice at Aurora, like it and think it’s a fine catsup Oregon, under the Act of March 3,1879. but I had to get another brand, a California catsup, for so many Geo. E. Knapp. Editor and Publisher California people refuse to eat any other but California products.’ He said they don’t hesitate to tell EDITORIAL you, either. He said he* started Opinions o f the out by putting Rouge River pears Observer and Umpqua valley prunes on the menu and the California p eople Supporters of the bus and truck raised such a holler that he had to bill, known as House Bill 413, are quit it. “ He^s from Southel-n taltfornia, making a strenuous fight to keep the law bn the statute book and but. Mr. Weaver nad bougnPraose prevent a referendum, thereby Oregon products and thought it hoping to put the highway carriers only. fittin g ^ ) put them on the out of business. The advertising mend the same«,s 1m does irfcRose- is done almost exclusively in papers burg. I was talking to MrTWeav- of the metropolis and the larger er about it and Ke tells me that cities, evidencing a belef on their they brought a bunch of soap down part that the fight will center al from their Roseburg hotel (made in most entirely among the urban Oregon soap) and said you would population. It is probable, how be surprised how many people here ever, that the country and country called him on it, saying: ‘ Why do towns will have something to say we have to use»Qregon soap in about the question of depriving Califorma?’ And? one man even them of their transportation facili went s ) far as to say he would ties. The coming of the stage and never stay there again until Mr. freight truck has revolutionized Weaver showed him a copy of an business in the country, and while or^er where he had ordered soap it has i ot been an unmixed bless from some California hou e. And ing, yet the people are not pre the only reason they had the Ore pared to go back, to old conditions, gon soap was Decause they over conditions under which they might looked ordering until too late to have to wait a week for freight, get it in time for the opening of which under present conditions the hotel and rushed some up from they can secure within twenty-four their Roseburg hotel. ‘ I told this steward, ‘ Why, you hour . can find California catsup in many Prophets of good told us that Oregon restaurants and hotels,’ 1925 would be ushered in by in and he acted rather surprised. He creased business and better times. said, “ Why, that’j|i&nny! Why We fail to see 'the justification for don’t they use OnJgqa catsup? that prophecy: Business has been He said he had never been in Ore steadily closing down and we see, gon and added, “ Binryou can’ t do yet, no prospect of betterment. that in California. California This condition does not warrant us people won’ t stand for it.’ in taking a Micawberish stand, “ Can you beat it? We in Ore hoping for something to turn up. gon preach it, but in California Nor are we advised that the Wil they live it. If only the Oregon son policy of “ watchful waiting” is merchants and Oregon people took the proper course. Nor should we that stand we sure' would have place all our eggs in one basket and some catsup business; sit down in the fond belief that \ ‘ ‘T F. MOSCH.” “ FL A X ” will help us out. The flax .mill, IF IT IS ERECTED may eventually bring us some RAISING SHEEP ON good, but it is a long way in the DIVERSIFIED FARM future. In the meantime we sit There are three systems of sheep quiescent while other good things management In the United States. more certainly within our grasp 1. Running sheep in large bands and of immediate benefit slip by on the range. 2. Keeping small flocks on the farms. our doors to be grabbed up by 3. Fattening of range sheep. other communities. The second and third are farm en Aurora Observer Powerful, Yet Helpless A. S. Goss, master of the Wash ington State Grange, says the farmer pays three times his share of taxes; that the middle man gets twice as much for selling the farmer’s stuff as the farmer gets for raising it; that the farmer is at the foot of the list in income tax returns and is the poorest paid in dividual in America. And in com menting on this condition Mr Goss says: “ The wonderful thing is that the farmer, with more capital invested than any other three industries in America, and with more economic power than all the other industries combined, is so unwilling to help himself that he won’t take this plain business proposition into his daily life and spend a portion of his time and money in building up an organization which will do for agriculture what other organiza tions have done for other in dustries.” Can Yon Beat It? Following is a copy of part of a letter written March 25, 1925, on the stationery of the Yreka Inn, Yreka, California, to the Knight Packing Company, Portland, by their representative, Mr. T. F. Mosch: “ This is a'new hotel and run by the Weaver boys who also have the Umpqua Hotel at Roseburg. On my last trip here .(while the hotel was still under construction) I talked Knight’s Rogue River Cat sup to M r. Weaver and he bought 5 cases through Mason, Ehrman Company. So, tonight, after fin ishing my dinner, I introduced my self to the steward and told him I was very much pleased to see M AN NEAR PERFECT “ STATE OF H EALTH ” Notice of Final Account Turbans and Nests The turban is a fashionable head dress in Burma, and each girl eagerly In the County Court of the State of Oregon for the County of looks forward to the time when it will Marion. Mortality Rate Steadily Be be her privilege to swathe her head in yards and yards of dark cloth. But Jn the Matter of the Estate of ing Lowered. Laura Ann Beeler, deceased. until she has found a young man who is willing to build her a bamboo house Notice is hereby given that the It Is probable that civilized man In and to raise rice for her, she cannot undersigned, as administratrix of FEEDING COLTS ON the Twentieth century is not only wear this coveted headdress. Because the estate of Laura Ann Beeler, GRAIN IS FAVORED healthier than any other human be among the Kachins unmarried girls deceased, has filed her final account ing that ever lived, with the possible are not permitted to wear a turban That young colts to do their best exception of a few happy-go-lucky sav nor do they let their hair grow long. in the County Court of the State must be fed grain, has frequently age tribes living in lands of plenty, They wear bobbed hair and have done of Oregon for Marion County, and been advised In these columns. Re but that he is the first civilized man so for centuries. But the day a Kachln that, Monday, the 11th day of May, cently it was our pleasure to visit one who ever attained anything like a girl la married she lets her hair grow 19z5, at the hour of 9:30 a. m. in of the large stock farms located In state of health, is the comment made and binds it up with the turban, whicn the forenoon of said day and the the central portion of the state, writes by Robert L. Duffus, in the Century she wears with pride. For the turban court room of said court has been marks her as a married woman.—Fam appointed by said court as the an expert in the Farmer and Breeder. Magazine. The proof is in death and mortal ily Herald. On It we saw a splendid herd of time and place for the hearing of Shorthorn cattle and also large York- ity rales. At the beginning of the objections thereto and the settle century, in the United States regis- shire swine, but what pleased us most ment thereof. Alm ost Unanimous was the twenty-three grade and pu rei tration area, the death rate was 17.8 Date of first publication, April “ Why are you always bragging about thousand, in 1921 it was 11.6 and bred Shire colts which we saw in the 9th, 1925. box stalls at their dams’ sides in the though it rose to 12.6 during 1923, its yourself?” "You don’t ever brag about Date of last publication, May yourself, do you?” “ I certainly never horse bams. They were an excellent general tendency is still downward. In New York city the rate dropped do.” “ Well, I've never heard anybody 7th, 1925. lot of colts—as good as we have seen M IN N IE B. RUPARD, from 20.26 in 1898 to 11.72 in 1923. In else bragging about you, either.”—Cin on any farm for a long time. * Administratrix. We visited at the farm for several fant mortality in New York city was cinnati Enquirer. hours with the herds and In the fields, reduced during the same period from Oliver M . Hickey, Atty., Early Advertisement observing the results of breeding 205 a thousand to 63. Death rates 826 Northwestern Bank Bldg., which had been practiced In the for are, of course, an average between ex In 1649 there appeared in a sheet Portland, Oregon. mer and the methods of management tremes; In the cities of Mississippi in called Modérate the first-known Eng which were being practiced about the 1923 the rate was 20.3 a thousand; lish newspaper advertisement. It was Aurora: 50 minutes from Salem; farm. We chanced to go Into the in the rural districts of Iowa 6.5 a an Inquiry for a stolen horse and the horse barns just as the caretaker was thousand; among large groups of in offer of a reward for its return. 60 minutes from Portland; 30 min feeding the mares at four o’clock p. m. surance policy holders, 8.9 a thousand. utes from Oregon City. before turning them, together with As hygienic knowledge spreads, the their col is, out to pasture for the average will naturally tend to ap Notice of Hearing of Final Account night. Immediately we looked Into proach the minimum. But even now the stalls to see what the colts would medical science In the United States CH ARLES GLAZE, be doing while the mares were munch may be credited with saving at least Notice is hereby given that the DEALER IN ing their grain. These colts ranged one-half million lives yearly that twen final account of John Edward Mills, in age from three to eight weeks. ty-five years ago would have been as executor of the estate of William Were they lying down and asleep, lost. Stauffer, deceased, has been filed in standing back In the stall, or nursing The baby born in 1900 had a life Cleaning and Re-setting Mon the mothers? Not a single one of expectation of about forty-nine years; the county court of Marion county them. As we passed from stall to now It may count on living, with rea state of Oregon, and that the 9th uments, and Inscriptions Cut stall, we found every colt standing up sonable luck, seven years longer. Cer day o f June, 1925, at the hour of on Monuments at the Grave. to the feed boxes and enjoying its bite tain diseases, as everyone knows, ten o’clock a. m., has been duly 20 per cent Discount on of grain with its mother. No won have been almost wiped out. The death appointed by such court for the .Marble and Granite Purchases der they were such fine fellows, big rate from typhoid has been reduced hearing of objections to such final for their age, and the pictures of nearly 80 per cent, that from tuber account and the settlement thereof, Work Guaranteed thrift— drafters all in the making. We culosis nearly 50 per cent. Yellow at which time any person interested Prices Reasonable then followed the feeder from stall to fever, typhus, malaria, diabetes, the in such estate may appear and file AURORA* -* OREGON stall as he fed the remaining mares hookworm disease, diphtheria and * jK e * jH * je j* j* j * » * + * j* * J * j* + * J * * » + * objections thereto in writing and with colts, and sure enough, those scarlet fever are wiped out or under contest the same. colts knew what was coming when the control. JOHN ED W A RD M ILLS, door opened and he stepped into the Surgery of all descriptions has made Executor of the Estate of stall with pall in hand. They didn’t emarkable advances. New drugs have William Stauffer, deceased. hesitate to be shown the way, but been found which alleviate suffering made a bee-line for the feed box. They and promote recovery; in fact, it may Blaine McCord, stayed, too, until all the feed was almost be said that a new medical Attorney for Estate. gone. chemistry has developed. Date of first publication May Medical authorities agree that 66 per We repeat. If young colts are to do More and more the treatment of dis 7th, 1925. cent of ail men past middle age (many their best, as well as they should, ease is an exact science, with predict Date of last publication, June much younger) are afflicted with a disor they must have grain. The colts on able results. der o f theprostate gland. Aches.in feet, 14th, 1925. this stock farm were getting It to The modern physician is almost as leas and back, frequent nightly nsings, gether with their mothers; a mixture far ahead of the practitioner of the sciatic pains, are some of the signs— of bran and oats with a little corn. eighties as the latter was ahead of an Notice of Hearing of Final Account and now a member of the American The feed boxes were attached to the Indian medicine man. Good roads, the Association for the Advancement of Science has written a remarkably inter walls In one corner of the stalls at a motor car and modern methods of san point low enough so that the colts itary organization have made the new Notice is hereby given that the esting Free Book that tells of other could easily reach them and eat out knowledge accessible even in remote final account of John Edward Mills, symtoms and just what they mean. No longer should a man approaching or -of them. It is a good way and a very regions. as executor of the estate of Samuel past the prime of life be. content to. Simple one. Colts are naturally cu Stauffer, deceased, has been fiWtl in regard theBe pains and' conditions as rious to know what their mothers are Bananas Grow in Favor the county court of Marion county, inevitable signs of approaching age. doing and to do likewise, and so soon The import record o i 1924, says the state of Oregon, and that the 9th Already more than 10,000 men have used the amazing method described in learn to eat In this way. Trade Record of the National City While at this farm we had an op bank of New York, shows a larger day of June, 1925, at the hour of this book to restore their youthful ten o ’clock a. m „ has been duly health and vigor, and to restore the portunity to further study the benefit ¿ «¡m in te d b y such court’ fo r the prostate gland to its prope rfanctioning. of feeding the colts on grain and con number of bananas entering the I hearing o f ob jection s to such final Send immediately for this book. I f you tinuing to do so during their early de ed States than to any will mail your request to the Electro and the sum paid therefor also the £ velopment. Out In the pastures we largest on record. The total value 0f a ccou n t and th e settlem ent th ereof Thermal Company, 657 Knapp Bidg., saw a number o f yearlings, two-year- the bananas imported was $22,674,000 a t w hich tim e any person interested Steubenville, Ohio, the concern that is olds, and three-year-olds, all of which against $16,398,000 ten years ago to in such estate may appear and file distributing this book for the author, it will be sent to you absolutely free had been fed similarly to this year’s the fiscal year 1914, and $7,710,000 objections thereto in writing and without obligation. Simply send name colts. They were all big, growthy twenty years ago to the fiscal year contest the same. and address. But don’ t delay, for the terprises. The third is often more or drafters, far advanced In their de edition of this book is limited. JOHN ED W A RD MILLS, less a speculative business, but the velopment for their respective ages, 1904. Originally a native of the Malay Executor of the Estate of second—keeping a flock on the farm— compared with the general run of an archipelago, the banana was Intro may well be considered a permanent young horses seen about the state. duced to tropical America, especially Samuel Stauffer, deceased. R A IL R O A D T IM E C A R D the Caribbean countries, to the early part of diversified farm business. Blaine McCord, Producing high class draft horses isn’t days o f the development of that area. SOUTHERN PACIFIC Sheep fit well into a system of farm a matter of breeding alone, but one Attorney for Estate. NORTH BOUND Its Importance as a food supply at ing because of the small Investment of good feeding, too. Date of first publication, May No. 32 (on Flag)____ .c___ !.-.5:44 a. m. tracted attention to the United States, required, the quick returns, their hah No. 16 (on F lag)___________ ,7:38 a. m. and a very large sum of American cap 7th, 1925. its of feeding, their benefit to the land Date o f last publication, June No. 62 (Stop)____ ; _________ ..10:19 a. m. Feeding of Tankage on ital has been invested to its develop and their “ two-way” cash crop. No. 18 (S top)........................ .1:23 p. m. Any Pasture Is Favored ment, and that of the railways by 4th, 1925. It is usually considered that sheep No. 34 (on F lag)_______________6:47 p. m. which It Is transported to the water’s Working with growing shotes the can be purchased cheaply in compar SOUTH BOUND edge, the steamships which bring It ison with other live stock. At present past summer and fall, Professor Loef- No. 17 (Stop)__________________ 9:43 a. m. to our ports, and the especially con prices, however, an animal unit of fel of Nebraska found that where structed railway cars and warehouses No. 61 (on F la g ) __. . . _________ 1:31 p. m. “ No Collection, No Charge” sheep (seven ewes), Is not so much shotes had access to alfalfa and re by which It Is distributed the country No. 33 (Stop)___________ 4:62 p. m. ceived only corn, that the cost of pro Delinquent accounts collected on a No. 31 (on Flag).....................9.14 p. m. lower in price than in other classes over. The number of bananas con contingent basis. We do the work, of live stock. The Investment for ducing 100 pounds of pork was $8.94, sumed to the United States now ap shoulder the expense and make no shelter need not be large, as expensive whereas when tankage was fed with proximates .6,000,000,000, since the 47,- charge unless collection is made. F O R O V E R 40 Y E A R S bams are not necessary. The fleece the corn and alfalfa, the cost was 000,000 bunches imported last year are $100,000.00 Bad Accounts Turned In HALL’ S CATARRH MEDICINE has been of the sheep will prevent It from suf $7.62 per 100 pounds of gain. Further estimated to average about 125 ba to Cash Since W e Started. Jot down used successfully in the treatment of more the corn-tankage pigs weighed fering from cold if It is kept dry and a trial list of bad ones and let us Catarrh. nanas to a bunch. turn them into actual money. given a windbreak. Proper fencing 210 at the dose of the test, while the HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE con sists o f an Ointment which Quickly will be the greatest investment neces corn-alfalfa pigs weighed 142 pounds. Business Men’s Adjustment Co. Relieves by local application, and the Lotto’s Esprit Similar results were obtained where sary. Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts "TiOtta left a lot o’ money.” 315-16 Masdftic Bldg., Phone 911 through the Blood on the Mucous Sur It should never be but a few months Sudan grass was used as the forage. Where com alone was fed, the cost An actor was talking about the fa faces,- thus reducing' the inflammation. after sheep are purchased until a cash SALEM, OREGON Sold by all druggists. per 100 pounds gain was $8.41, where mous Lotta Crabtree, who bequeathed crop may be sold, either wool or F . J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo. Ohio. as with the corn-tankage-sudan-grass her $4,000,000 estate to charity. He lambs, either one of which will return pigs, the cost was $7.14 per 100 chuckled and went on: a considerable part of the purchase pounds gain. In this test $75 profit "Lotta was funny to the end. I price. was made on each ton of tankage fed asked her one day to buy some oil A very large part of the feed for when full fed In self-feeders. Teats shares—I was interested to oil at the sheep should be roughage. This carried on at the Iowa station also time—and she said if she did that makes it possible to utilize large bear out the statement that full feed she’d be as ignorant as the old lady. quantities of grain that would other ing of tankage on any kind of pasture “ ‘An old lady,’ she said, ‘was visited wise have very little value. They can Is advisable for growing shotes. In by a young art student just back from also graze profitably on waste lands, the Nebraska tests, com was figured Paris. fields, meadows, lanes and roadways. " ‘ “Here’ s a French franc, ma’am,” at 98 cents and tankage at $65 per ton. Sheep benefit the land upon which With corn at $1.25 to $1.50, tankage said the art student, “ that I’ve brought they run, In two ways, by keeping would show even a greater saving. you from Paris as a souvenir.” down weeds and by Increasing the fer Of course tankage might go to such “ ’The old lady looked at the coin tility. Their value to soil fertility figure where it would be advisable to and frowned. has been so generally recognized that limit the amount but at prevailing “ ‘ “Oh, shucks,” she said. ‘T d We have funds to supply your needs for they have been called the Golden prices such is not the case. rather ye’d brought me one o’ them Hoof. They have an advantage over ' Other feeds like ground oats, ground there Latin quarters.” ’ ” new buildings, land clearing, or new and ad other common classes of farm live barley, shorts and hominy feed will no stock because their lighter weight does doubt be used very extensively this Rats in Fatal Tangle ditional equipment. Or perhaps you have a not pack the soil and also because summer, and the com can be made to A group of fair-sized rats was the their droppings are distributed to go much further by adding to mortgage maturing in the near future. first thing that Rev. Olney I. Darling much better advantage. ground oats, barley or shorts. If hom of Warren saw when he opened his iny feed is fed it should be fed along hencoop, and Instead of a mad scram with barley or oats. ble at his intrusion, the rats were un We loan on first mortgage security ex sesfe¡erorererore'-#ero ow<e'.f**o > *:* * * Marble and Granite A Test Ev&y Man Past 40 Should Make WILLAMETTE VALLEY Mortgage Loan Co. Nature’s Kindness Asked by her school teacher to de Transferring Pigs scribe the backbone, a schoolgirl said: If another sow, with a small litter "The backbone is something that holds farrowed about the same time as the up the head and ribs and keeps one large litter, Is available, some o f the from having legs clear up to the neck." pigs from the large litter can often —Boston Transcript. be transferred to the sow with the small litter. .Seldom will any sow Preserving Blankets raise more than one pig to each teat Blankets, when they have been successfully if all are allowed to re washed and thoroughly dried, should main with her. Attempting to raise be well beaten. This has the effect little pigs en cow’s milk right from of making the wool light and soft, the start is of doubtful economy, and giving the blankets a new and It requires more work than the pig worth. fresh appearance. able to get away. Upon investigation, Mr. Darling found their tails so tan gled together that they could not free themselves. The rats had entered the coop through a hole, but the last one had not been able to negotiate the opening. Some one ventured the sug gestion that the rats had tangled their tails together so they could gain more power to pull the unfortunate one through the hole. Before killing the pests, the minister called his house keeper so that he might have a wit ness to corroborate his story.—Boston Gldbe. clusively and will be glad to consider your application. We loan for three or five years at cur rent rates. Office at Aurora State Bank