Jacksonville miner. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1932-1935, January 05, 1934, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE JACKSONVILLE MINER
Pag* 2
-
The Jacksonville Miner
Weekly at
JACKSONVILLE, OREGON
OFFICIAL
Starting a Clean Page
VIEWS
of OTHER PEOPLE
NCWSFAHN OF JACKSONVILLE
WHAT DOES THIS MAKE
NEWBERGf
Butterfat Story Get*
Too Slippery; Needi
Few Grain« of Salt
(Continued from page one)
ter likewise la the same for the
two cities.
When butterfat brings 26 cents
a pound the code breaking
point for figuring churning over­
head the creameries' overrun
portion Is worth (6 20 per 100
pounds of churned butter. When
the price was down to 12 cents
a |H>und. thia same overrun w««
worth less than half 12.40. Ex­
penses of churning the butter,
operating trucks or salaries were
no less, and the difference quite
naturally (and the NRA code
provides for this emergency)
was made up by putting a spread
between price of butterfat and
wholesale price of butter. Thia
same process la followed In San
Francisco, and In all other cities
The Medford weekly fulled to
point out that when the price of
butterfat I h greater than 26
cents per pound, the creameries
sell butter at LESS than the
butterfat price. It works this
way: For every two cents drop
In the price of butterfat under
26 cents, the creameries are au­
thorized to arid one cent to the
price of butter: for every two
cents OVER 26 cents per pound,
the creameries must sell whole
butter for ONE CENT
'LESS
Twenty-cent butterfat,
. when churned under thia regu
i latlon, would sell iW buttar foi
1 23 cents Forty cent butterfat.
churned under the same regula
lion, would — and has many
times anil tot 33 cents a pound
as butter! The Medford writer
"explaining" the overrun and
-burning charges of creameries
either was In Ignorance of this
basic, universal fact, or purpose­
ly kept It from his story.
Were Medford creameries to
follow the inference of that story
It would be Impossible to ship
surpluses to the larger murk<-t-<
Because Medford is on the Nan
Francisco butterfat price ached
ule. it would be Impossible for
creameries to pay six cents a
l>ound MORE for butterfat as
mggested by Innuendo- und then
'jell that butter on the California
markets. The surpluses would
have to stay In southern Oregon
to further glut a burdened mar­
ket
centuries man will Iona two of his
toes. It’s a wonder he hasn't worn
'em off long ago putting his foot
In it so much.— Olin Miller.
Now we're sno-nurt worried!
We've Just stood a physical exami­
nation and our doctor tells us that
we're sound as a dollar.- Olin Mil
ler In Thomaston (Ga.) Tiinee.
"Intellectuality la moving wnst-
ward«” says a Colorado college
president We feel greatly relieved
al this statement, for we'd been
thinking something slightly differ­
ent that It was going west.—Olin
Miller lu Thomaston (Ga.) Times.
Give the unemployed a hand In­
stead of a handout. Olin Miller.
Today's slmlll: As rude sa a
prude to a nude.—Olin Miller.
Recent announcement from the
national capital la to the effect that
the bill for all this national recov­
ery activity, which Includes the va­
RHONE JACKSONVILLE 141
rious appropriations for emergency
employment now keeping millions
at work, will bo paid by taxing
liquor (2 a gallon.
Of course, liquor taxes cannot be
collected without liquor being sold
and presumably consumed. All of
which creates an odd situation for
such Irreconclllhly dry communi­
ties as Newberg which last full
voted by a small majority against
In the County Court of the County
allowing public consumption of
of Jsckson In and for the
(Continued from page one)
even the ¡nocuous 3.2. This city,
State of Oregon
Miner. Perhaps 1933 DID teach
with a statewide reputation for try­
some people a few things, after all!
the
Matter
of the Estate of
In
ing to legislate Its citizens Into
Guo Nichols, Decsassd.
temperance
und
with
an
almost
Art says he has a "sworn circu­
equally wide reputation for number
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLE­
lation of 686.” We can see no rea­
of Jobless workmen. Is eagerly
MENT
son why any country editor should
grasping Its share of CWA funds
NOTICE Is hereby given that
swear when be has that many
It would probably bo the same story
Alice O. Nichols, executrix of the
readers.
If taxes from legalized gambling or
will and estate of the above named
other locally prohibited thing wore
decedent, has filed In the above t»u
At least we can say this much
used to pay the bill.
titled court and estate her final
for the year Just past: Much credit
But this la not the first Instance
account and retsirt of her sdmlnla
was due 1933, that won't be paid
In
which
the
cherished
Ideal
of
"a
(ration of said estate and said court
by 1935.
thousand years of prohibition" pe­
by an order duly given and entered
'a.'*’
culiar
to
the
organized
vote
swing-
therein has fixed the 20th day of
Too bad egotism can’t come un­
era of thia community has had to
January, 1934, at the hour of (0:00
der this inflation control activity.
take a backward step on coming
o’clock a. nt., at the court rcom of
into conflict with more practical
the ultovo entitled court ,n the
About the only thing left, any
matters. For Instance, hop growers
Jackson County court house at
more, that soaks poor and rich alike
declare they have encountered num­
Medford. Oregon, as the time and
is wet weather.
erous cases of Newberg prohibi­
place for the hearing of any and
laboring
right
willingly
tionists
all objections to said account and
As a result of the passing of the
among the vines of the festive hop.
report and for the settlement
old-fashioned home cook, young
The
only
moral
we
can
point
husbands now HAVE to bring home
i thereof.
ICogyrtgU w. N v ZZ
from
the
above
discourse
fa
that
the bakin'.
AIJCK O. NICIKHA
the Joy of forbidding the other fol­
Executrix
low
to
do
the
thing
we.
ourselves,
And the newest version of a
(Dec 2’2 29 Jan 5-12)
i
.
..
,
<lo
not
care
to
do
probably
has
an
second-story man is the weekly
The timber tribes comprise the Mppeal to „ certM|„ lyiH, of
——■»-------------
editor with a pair of scissors in bis
Caddo, Attacpan. Krankawan and |,ut th,, accompanying duty of being
NOTICE
OF SHERIFF’« SALE
hand.
confederacies The prairie tribes con,lit.nt in any conscientious ob-
i consisted of Apaches and Coman-1 ' jection
<_ ___ Is ____
____
_______
■
_
. By virtue of an execution in Tore
more easily overlooked
Some people seem to believe that
ches. The two cultures were in con­ than observed Newberg (Oregon)
closure duly issued out of and un
the shortest distance between two
stant conflict. The Spanish lent aid ; Scribe.
der the seal of the Circuit Court of
points is the line of least resis­
to the wild tribes of the prairie by
the Htste of Oregon, In and for the
tance.
releasing some of their mustang
County of Jackson, to me directed
horses In Mexico. By crossing them lariat and perhaps a bowle knife
and dated on the 14th day of De
Speaking of war debts, some na­
over on Texas soil they multiplied They were the first to demonstrate
cember. 1933, in a certain action
tions won't even pay the United
very fast on the plains, swarming In actual war. the value of the re­
therein, wherein Jackson County
tsssii•••a*••••!•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••i••••••••••••••••••••as®•••assttsssssssssssaisssssss
States their respects any more.
up from the south and covering volving six-shooter. After Its Inven­
Building and Loan Association, an
Presenting a Series of Pros and Cons Concerning Oregon's Newest
the plains with immense ‘lerds wax­ tion In the 40's it became, and has
Oregon building and loan corpora
What puzzles us is people who
Dr. Jekyll-Mr. Hyde Taxation Scheme
remained
to
this
day,
their
chief
ing fat on the mesquite grass, and
tlon as Plaintiff, recovered judx
worship a “wisdom that passeth all
furnishing mounts for the Coman­ weapon.
ment against G. I,. Britt and Lu
understanding” for a lifetime but
When the war between the north
ches and Apaches. The Spaniards
die Britt the defendants, for the
never absorb five minutes of it.
in the meantime were also coming and the south had ended and Texas
sunt of two thousand and no.ioo
found herself In the union, the Ran­
north.
((2,000.00) dollars, leas the sum ot
Real benefits to Oregonians seem
gers disbanded with the feeling that
Austin's Band
(635 00 paid on stock, less the sutn
y
to be in Bonneville dam's power.
By W. T. SELLERS
The story is told when Texas the regular army would afford
of 2106 47 accrued earnings on said
(Grants Pass Bulletin)
of Mexico the Texas and her citizens whatever than 50 years as a Ranger and stock, being the sum of (1258 53,
was a providence
.
Possibly the reason pretzels seem
protection
was
needed
against
the
Comanches and Apaches frequently
peace officer, In some capacity, and plus Interest on (2000 00 from the
The state of Mississippi in 1931
Not having passed an adequate
to understand the tastes of drinkers
came into San Antonio, the center Indiana. The federal government
22nd day of January, 1933, to the
so well is because they’ve been on passed a general sales tax. It has income tax law, let the people in of Mexican population, and com­ did establish posts und maintain has felt the sting of bullets three 118th day of October. 1933, at 10%
times and la vet raring to go.
been taken as a model by the sales each crippled district, or several
a bender themselves.
forts at Fort Concho along the
----------- a
per annum, being the sum of
tax advocates. Even our governor school districts in distress in a pelled the Mexicans to hold their frontier, which she garrisoned with
-SMC
horses while they paraded the
(147.77, plus Interest on (1258.53
and
the
1933
special
and
regular
county,
make
a
concerted
canvass
One old-timer tells us there was
streets and celebrated the occasion. negro troops mounted on large, A CHANGE OF PROGRAM ON from October 18th, 1933, to date
sessions
attempted
to
duplicate
that
of
delinquent
taxes,
and
tho*
»
able
a lot of mismanagement around the
NEW YEARS DAY
A sad state of affairs, but one des­ clumsy horses. These negro sol-
hereof at 10% per annum, being
now extinct town stables in spite tax for Oregon. But what happened? to pay such taxes be prevailed tined soon to end.
dlera did not understand Comanche
the sum of (1361, plus (17.60 for
In
the
special
called
session
the
upon
to
pay
to
save
their
schools
of their abundance of horse scents.
By J. C. REYNOLDS
The first settlers from the United ’ warfare and the Indians were not
Insurance premium paid by Plaint
house endorsed it; the senate as a patriotic duty.
long in finding this out. They soon
States
were
introduced
by
Stephen
Iff, plua (5.00 for continuation of
The hardest steak to chew is a barely defeated it; the regular ses-
Of fhe 26,000,000 warrants out- F. Austin In 1821. Once the door I Mirt-ad terror throughout the border Tie well to remember—
abstract of title, plus Interest on
a°wha^k8a?ittanddbturTed^tPso d^n standinK
j*« Bta,e “och <>t “ was'open the Americans’ pusheTin land, whose Inhabitants called long The month of December
mistake.
judgment at 10% per annum with
a whack at It and buried It so deep could and should be paid from de- wlth .v... miuhtv surge which car- and loud for Rangers. Again many Is steadily gliding away.
coala and dlsbursementa taxed at
Although he could use a new one that
^HU«1(blehatVheat<1aea^!Unf|uent taXe8, lnt° th® cholce of rl«d the Anglo-American civilize lives wer'e lost, many persons Quite soon we'll be meeting
twenty-four and 80/100 ((24 80) dol
to advantage, a fathead seldom gets that it was possible that a sane funds to which a part can be ap- t|on from the Atlantic to the Pa- wounded unto death or made crlp- And joyously greeting
lars. and the further aum of one
l>l«-s for life, ami many were'par The dawn of the New Year's first hundred twenty five aud no IQu
A
-- «
---------------
- -------------------------
day
During
the first
part of the last rled to a horrible captivity S^uch
((136.60) dollars, as attnrKfP*
Sometimes poetics are very one­ did unearth it -dead as a mackerel. pled digtricts. In a concerted drive century Mexico, becoming alarmed, property was deertoyed and Thous­
fees, which judgment was enrr*-"*!
It is not resurrected. It is still fO induce delinquents to pay at undertook to close the door, but it ands of horses and mules and cat- It han long been my habit—
sided, especially if you happen to
und docketed In the Clerk’s n.flrr
be on the inside.
a corpse. The income tax-dodgers least their school taxes. Schools was too late, the Texans not only tie were driven off by the Indiana il might as well blab It)—
of said Court In said County on the
will^try to resussitate it. It means :ire crippled by reason of the tax stood off the Indians and the Mexi­ and outlaws.
To make new resolves at thia time. 14th day of Decern be«, 1933
| de|jnquencjr and jor no ottjer rea.
E. Hemmila, whose business is much to them.
And also my custom
Carpetbag Reign
cans but turned and wrested from
Notice 1s hereby given that, pur
reeling, is thinking of trading his
«
Look at the wealthy delinquent I ! son.
At the close of the war came that Soon after, to bust 'em
them Texas independence in 1836,
suant to the terms of the said exe-
little pup in on a new one that's taxpayers (rather tax-dodgers) in
There is more than one way of just 15 years after they had en­ miserable period of reconstruction And slip back contented to crime cution. I will on the 27th day <>f
not so Foxy. And anyway, says Portland. They would like to pass killing a cat than by choking it tered the state. This done, however, during which the Texans, those who
January, 1934, at 10:00 o’clock
Eino, the darned animal insists on the burden onto the poor masses. I with hot butter.
as it had held back the Indians and In pondering over
a. m.. at the front door of the Court
using his wife’s best furniture as a They appeal in this proposed law ; This is what one Mississippian they found themselves caught
were between the Jaws of a great Mexicans and fought for their con­ Those facts, 1 dic-over.
house In the City of Medford, in
pacifier.
to the school loving people of Ore-' 'said alrout their sales tax: “We vise. On the frontier, the Indians ception of right In the war agalnat Such acts are foolish und vain
Jackson County. Oregon, offer for
gon to save its carcass and to res­ reach them now from the cradle extended along the edge of the the north, were disfranchised and Hard, stern resolutions
sale and will sell at public auction
Man is the only thing that gets urrect it.
I to the grave. The physician who great prairie from the Rio Grande made helpless in favor of the infa- For frail constitutions
fresher as i it gets older.
A revised income tax along the | ushers the hopeful little life into , to the Red river, a distance of 500 mous carpet-bag regime, i and also Like mine prove too much of a | for cash to the highest bidder, to
satisfy said Judgment, together with
lines proposed by the Grange, or j the world, and the undertaker who I miles.
u„,r„ The actual southern boun- the Indians with their scalping
strain.
the costa of thia sale, subject to
To the Gulf Publishing chapel under the decision of the supreme bears the last mortal remains to
lln." of“the‘repuhUt-' was”7h | knives. The carpetbaggers came for
redemption as provided by law, all
pals down in Houston: It has been court of January 24, 1933. whereby its resting place are both taxed Nueces river. War was the rule, the their spoils, while bold i
and des­ And so I've decided
of the right, title and Interest that
a Lang time since we were to­ a delinquent taxpayer may pay his therefor. The swaddling clothes cornrnonplaee of daily life, and perate characters sprung
up on No more to be guided
the suld defendants, G. L. Britt and
gether Dailey, so we thought we delinquent school tax if he chooses, ■ t.
®JJwraP
infant and the death was the price of defeat, for every hand. Lawlessness and dls- By custom's unpleasant decrees.
I.u> lie Britt had on the Nth day of
Otto Penn a bit of Witt to the old would solve the school dilemma., stone that marks the tomb are now I the enemies of Texas knew no order were truly rampant
in those In fine self-compassion
December, 1927, or now have in and
Franz down south. We have been But no! Our overlords say we must alike within the domain of the tax ■ i mercy.
I'll alter this fashion
post-war days.
to the following described property,
Sojourner-lng here in Jacksonville have a sales tax.
| collector.”
Before
it
becomes
a
disease.
In 1874 the government was re­
The early Ranger« were un-unl-
situated In the County of Jackson.
almost since we Bennett Houston,
' formed and undrilled. They were, turned to the real Texans, but con-
I State of Oregon, to-wit:
there being Nossel else to do for a
and the legalization of a mode of ■, in a sense. indigenous to Texas, dltions were very serious, The In- New, grand resolutions,
living unless we were an out-and-
Ix>t five (5). block twenty-five
warfare already established, and having sprung from the soil made dians remained bitter, and there With like Institutions.
out Peisker. Greetings to all of you,
(25) of the original town (now
implies that the need for it con­ fertile by the blood of their kins­ were enemies within the settle­ This year shall be laid on the shelf.
and here's hoping 1934 will Oil
men and they soon became the ments. A great crime wave was on. Ne'er again, I state plainly
tinues.
city) of Medford. Oregon, accord­
Weekly your troubled waters while
frontier fighting force par excel­ Murder was a dally occurrence, ow­ Will I act so insanely
ing to the official plat thereof.
Indians
Marauding
we continue to Hoot-wlnk the folks
And
make
such
a
fool
of
myself.
ing to deadly feuds which had
It would be well at this point to lence of the world.
up here. Be Bob-ing down to see
I
--------- «----------
Learned Their Lessons
grown up spreading sinister Influ­
Dated this 14th day of December.
examine the circumstances out of
you when the air lines give press
(Continued from page one)
The true character of the Ran­ ence over the entire organized coun­
“Sleeping sickness is attacking 1933.
which such need arose. In order to
passes.
has enshrined the state’s institu­ make the situation clear it will be gers becomes clear only in the light ties. In many localities sheriffs horses. Unfortunately, Jackasses
WALTER J. OLMSCHEID
feared to arrest criminals
We have been reliably warned tions with a peculiar interest for necessary to ask the reader to use of that knowledge which comes judges found it dangerous to and continue Immune."—Olin Miller. Sheriff of Jackson County. Oregon
I
from
an
acquaintanceship
with
the
ren-
those
within
and
without
her
bor
­
When
you
analyze
this
It
sounds
fully his power of imagination. Pic-j
that our friend. Moore Hamilton,
Ry OLGA E. ANDERSON
I nature and disposition of their foes, der decisions.
Illogical. Olin Isn’t a horse.—Wes­
of the Medford Muse, er. News, ders. Her flag, her presidents, her ture two great rivers 500 miles
Deputy
Drove
Out
Bandits
ton
I
reader.
the
Mexicans
on
one
band
and
the
states but one other objector to the foreign ambassadors, her army and apart, flowing parallel to each
(29-5-12-19)
Once more the Rangers were re­
navy,
her
statesmen,
all
have
come
i
Indians
on
the
other.
From
long
ex-
Organized
propaganda
against
other,
from
the
far
northwest
to
Medford postoffice appointment is
in for a share of the song and story; the southeast, across a title plain Periences with the Mexicans Tex- organized. Six companies of 75 men the Roosevelt monetary policy
in existence — Henrietta Martin.
each, but an important change was gents a conspiracy to scuttle a
dl"‘ru«t
Trouble is, Moore ought to widen the history and tradition of the 700 or more miles in extent and! an" _ had. cJom®
j *
°f the race They made in their status and duties. boat—Weston Leader.
his circle of speaking acquaint­ Lone Star republic, all her institu­ emptying their waters finally into I
tions. However. Texas has none the great Mississippi and the Gulf dou*’ted ^*11* honor, feared their They were to protect the frontier
The man who looks before
ances.
which have attracted more atten­ of Mexico.
mercy, and despised their valor, and fight Indians as before, but in leaps Isn't likely to be the
Between these two great rivers, i Iesg°n8 dearly learned at the Ala- addition they were given the power who drinks before he driven.—
Some of these people who think tion at home and abroad than that
organization
of
fighting
men
known
the
Red on the north and Rio
Oo,,ad and S,a? Jac,"[°- Th« of peace officers. On the northern Weston Leader.
they're the intellectual center of
as
the
Texas
Rangers.
Their satisfaction over getting
Grande
on
the
south,
to
the
south
i
l
ndlan
?’ whose position on the west border they fought Lone Wolfe, Sit­
culture are partly right—they're in
The
man
on
the
street
car
of
a
_ civil
......... work-
......
and
east
the
country
was
well
wat-
ha8
.
al
ready been Indicated, also ting Bull and fallow Wolf. And on on a payroll results In
the dead center of something.
northern city may have curious ered and heavily timbered, but to
hard lessons. The Comanche the southwest they guarded on the ers for civil works.—Weston lead­
Texas side of the Rio Grande, Cor­ er.
All may be fair in love and war, ideas about Texas and her inhabi­ the northwest as the elevation be-,warr,or was a terrible foe, coura- tina and his gang of cattle thieves,
a"d cruel in all the
"It’s a wonderful world If you
but it is beginning to look as though tants. He may think that Dallas Is comes higher the climate becomes I Keoua’
on the Red river, or on the Rio drier and the timber regions give
’n„.°„rd!LL° and in the interior pursued and think so,” remarks the Hubbard
everything's unfair in politics.
Grande. He may believe that San way gradually to the grassy treeless meet this, the Ranger had adopted killed Sam Bass, broke up the Tay­ Enterprise. And It's still wonder­
lor and Sutton feud of Dewitt coun­ ful If you do not.—Weston Leader.
Antonions are in danger from stray plains, with average altitude of , his tactics.
We feel the glow of satisfaction bullets let loose by Mexican revo­ about one mile above sea level.
For example, the Comanches al­ ty, also broke up the Harrell and
Medical science has perfected a
that comes from returning good for lutionists. And he may think that
WHAT A WHALE OF A
In the early days the prairie re­ ways came suddenly, mounted on Higgins feud of Lampasas county, drug which will cause a person to
evil, having sent a Basic English Texans in general wear horns and gions extended further east than I the fleet prairie mustang, which and drove the road agents under tell all he knows. If Clark Wood
DIFFERENCE
A LITTLE
primer as a gift to Olin Miller. It six-shooters. But along with bls in­ at present, due to the fact that the j they managed with great skill and cover. When not more actively en­ doesn’t quit talking so much about
contains about a hundred simple formation he believe" the Texas Indians frequently burned the ' which bore them away with the gaged they guarded prisoners, pro­ us, we’re going to give him a shot
SHRINKAGE CAN MAKE!
words, our regret being that they Ranger is a fighter, and In this bit prairies and destroyed all under­ ■ speed of the wind. Again the Co- tected courts and dispersed lynch­ of this drug and silence him.—Olin
—That’s Why the Pantorlum
couldn’t be as simple as Olin.— of knowledge he is correct.
growth. With the coming of the Imanches never permitted them- ing parties. The Rangers were busy Miller In Thomaston (Ga.) Times.
Takes Pride In Its Work)
Weston Leader.
Just what is the Texas Ranger? white man the prairie fires ceased 1 selves to be made captives, and to men In those days in their double
There’s double assurance that
The New York market plunger The question can be answered best and much of the land that was for­ become their prisoners meant tor­ capacity of soldiers and peace offi­ the poor wo havo always with us
•
who says his mind was a complete by finding out what he has discov­ merly barren of trees Is now over­ ture and death. Here were the cers.
will be with us always, when
Cleaning and Pressing Prices
blank during a recent disappear­ ered in his origin, tracing his de­ grown with dense thickets of ready-made rules by which the
Be that as It may, during the they’re clothed and fed by a ben­
MEN’S SUITS............. 11.00
ance, may have been pinch-squib- velopments, and examining his scrubby oaks.
Rangers had to fight. The Rangers 10 years following this reorganiza­ evolent
government. — Weston
blng for Olin Miller.—Weston duties.
were good marksmen, showing tion the Rangers pushed the Indians Leader.
DRESSES, up from........ 80c
Two Indian Cultures
Leader.
Date of Origin Lost
great preference for the revolving and outlaws to the very limits of
Noting that "the bumblebee can
Such is the mighty stage upon six-shooter, were versed in war­ Texas and made Texas a safe place pull 300 times his own weight.” a
Don’t we wish now that Uncle
The exact date of the origin of
Sam had the money with which to the Rangers is lost in the obscurity I which the drama of Texas history craft and possessed a sense of di­ for white people to live In.
Leader fan writes: “My boyhood
relieve his own people that he vir­ of early Texas history. Stephen F. has been enacted; a drama unsur­ rection.
recollection Is that he can push
The Texas Rangers of Today
tually gave to Europe?—Weston Austin mentioned them in his let­ passed In density and tragic hero­
The Texas Ranger could ride like
With the passing of the Indian more than that."—Weston Leader.
DYE WORKS
Leader.
ters of 1821. When Texas revolted ism.
a Mexican, trail like an Indian, raids the Rangers were relieved of
Clark Wood, poor wretch, has to
6th and Holly
Phone 244
Who have been the actors in this shoot like an outlaw and fight like further military duties, and from keen one eye closed to keep from
Olin Miller says we “got up on in 1835 a general council met and
the wrong side of the floor.” Mebbe a part of its work authorized the drama, and what role have the hell. He was a quick thinker. One 1880 to the present they have de­ seeing more than he can under­
so; but we did not. as in Olin’s ranger force. This organization Texas Rangers played upon the far thing In warfare he had forgotten voted themselves to the mainte­ stand.—Olin Miller In Thomaston
case, have to be picked up.—Wes­ consisted of three companies of 25 extended stage’ The curtain rises In his long struggle with a dual nance of law and order within the (Ga.) Timos.
ton Leader.
We shan't do any heavy worry­
men each, one to range east of the to reveal the Indians growing their foe and that was to surrender. He state. They have been kept busy
With reference to the much-de- Trinity river, and one between the corn, chasing the buffalo and kill­ gave quarters sometimes, but never trying to catch the bank robbers, ing about "cut-throat competition”
bated question of position in drlnk- Trinity and the Brazos, and the ing the deer. While they were all asked and never expected any.
hijackers, kidnapers and bootleg­ until the barbers begin to practice
ing. it’s our opinion that the wets third between the Brazos and the savage from the white man’s point
gers. Today they may be found pre­ It.—Olin Miller In Thomaston (Ga.)
FUNERAL PARLORS
Rangers Once Disbanded
will fall for it and that the drys Colorado. The men were to serve of view, they differed widely in de­
Though the Texas Rangers have serving peace in the oil towns of Times.
Medford. Oregon
will have to stand for it.—Olin solely as protection against Indians. grees of savagery, and differed never had a prescribed uniform, West Texas, or they may be seen
‘‘Business Is now resting on bed­
Miller in Thomaston (Ga.) Times. The remuneration being (1.25 per largely according to the land which their dress has always been dis­ on the docks of Texas’ great sea rock," declares a speaker who may
The Prince of Wales is learning day. Thus was the Texas Ranger they occupied. The eastern tribes tinctive. They have worn buckskin, ports, helping to solve a difficult be taking thia for granite.—Olin
to play a bagpipe. The chief result force created in the midst of thej were more or less sedentary, being corduroy or khaki, according to problem.
Miller.
REASONABLE RATES FOR
of his exertion is likely to be a revolution, and from that day to I fishermen, farmers and hunters. time and circumstances. Fine leath­
The Texas Rangers were always
A socialist is one who is willing I
royal flush.—Weston Leader.
this it has existed almost constant-; The western tribes, those of the er boots, spurs and large felt hats in the storm centers of danger, to share anything he hasn't got.—
An editor observes that unre­ ly in some form, though under vary-1 rolling plains, were roving nomadie i have been a part of their costume. calm and devoid of fear. They have Olin Miller.
warriors migrating with the move­ From the day of the republic until been called, and perhaps were, the
mitting toil is essential to suc­ ing titles.
Any idea a college professor has
cess. We find it neutralized, how­
and DRESSMAKING
The creation by the council of ments of the buffalo herds.
the present, their arms have con­ most picturesque set of fighting about money la bound to be theor­
ever, by the unremitting subscrib­ the Ranger force was a formal rec-| Here In Texas existed two dis­ sisted of the best rifles that could men the world has ever known.
etical.—Olin Miller.
MRS.
J. L. TAYLOR
er.—Weston Leader.
ognitlon of the present social need ( tinct cultures among the Indians. be had from two to four pistols, a
The writer served Texas more
A biologist says that in a few
The Editor Speaking
POINTS AND DISAPPOINTS OF THE
GLEANED from the OREGON PRESS
The Sales Tax Corpse
LEGAL NOTICES
State Police of Oregon
Are Copy of Original
Famous Texas Rangers
PANTORIUM
CONGER
PRESSING
DRY CLEANING