I PEER SANTIAM EVENTS
Who is "(’hattar Ito»?"
" ho la
“Nil>ba?“
Hope to make their ac
quaintance.
John Zink of Shelburn haa I won visit
ing his daughter Mra Carter, who live*
on Mail Creak.
•
A Mr Reamea from Medford haa
bought the B T George place near Po
tato lliil, formerly owned by E I.
Wheeler of Shelburn. He brought the
finest team of Missouri blue-black
mules that 1 have seen in Oregon. I
atw just such matched mulca used by
tl»e rich as carriage teams in the corn
belt Imfore the civil war.
He also
brought the biggest touring automo
bile that I have ever seen.
He ia u
rustier and to have him among us has
encouraged all of ua.
T II Hanies is so as to be around
again
A firm of R R contractors from th-
Yakima country have taken over the
building of the Hammond railroads.
They brought up a large force of men
and teams ami are camped on th--
iJrewery place, well known as a camp
it g ground in the old days by berry
pickers from the Forks.
Nearly fifty
Bulgarians rams up thia Week to Worn
for them.
A Japanese boy about 12 years of
age la enrolled In the M C school.
He
is bright and cute
He was schooled
in the common branches in Japan be
fore coming here The boys are learn
ing jlu jitsu and other capers from
him. Hia father works on the section
ami wants hia boy to become A i.<■■
camt.l, No doubt in a few years we
will hear of him filling som< prominent
position In hia native lend.
A prominent luml>erman told me that
the owners of timber up Thomas creek
must cut their timber or sell it to tho«<
who will cut it soon. Taxes and ths de
cay of the old timber makes it a lasing
proposition to hold it.
Four Hindus came up. looked us over
and departed inside of 24 hour» The)
are undoubedly prominent men in their
own country. I hey were drew«-d as we
are except the head gear Nomethink
they are a committee spying out condi
tiona in thia country with the intent to
bring changes political and otherwise
at home—a revolution perhaps.
I visited a logging camp and was
Surprised at the way of loading cars
Formerly tney ran a small cable under
the center of the log and through a
pulley across the track and rolled it on
by the tiower of the donkey engine.
Now they cut off the Lips of two tre. i
1U0 to 12U feat high
They fix two
large steel pulleys to the tops of the
trees through which runs a heavy cal -■
from the engine. On the cable is a
trolley from which ia two small cables
about dn feet long. On the lower end
of each la a large sharp hook The en
gineer "pays out“ the large cable and
it sags dnwn in the middle bringing the
hooks down to the log. Two men each
grasp a hook and fasten into the end»
of the log. The engineer moves an
other lever and causes the big cable to
raise the log 1U or 15 feet off the
ground
He pulls another lever and
move» the trolley and log over the car
and drops it on the car- I »aid. "Ilow-
do they cut the top off so high up?" A
young man standing by said, "I do that
alone." He took much pains to ex
plain. He to >k me along the track to a
new loading place where he had just
"topped" two trees, one on the n<>rt*i
side of the track amt one on the south
aid . one luu feet hign
the "th.
180 feet high, lpe long trunk was on
much lower ground. It is necessary
that the cable bo level across which a,
counts for the difference in length of
the stubs. He uses a spring board
It
may tie of interest to those who never
saw a spring board to say that it .«
hewed out of tough wood. It is about
f> fast long, t> inches wide and If inch
thick. They dare not trust thems.-lv-
on a sawed plank Un each at one ei d
ia bolted what looks like a large horse
•h. •• without heel corks.
There ia a
large sharp toe cork, lie cuts a hole
in the tree about 4 feet from the
ground, inserts the shoe end of the
plan* with the cork up. He jumps on
the apr.ng board and cuts another hole
h gher up and a little to one aide, in
serts the second board and jumps up
again. He continues doing so until he
gets up 10U or 120 feel. It makes two
rows of holes perhaps 30 inches apart.
He then cuts a notch around the tree
atxiut 3 inches deep, puts Dupont pow
der in the notch. Axes a fuse, lights it.
fastens one end of a long rope aryund
the tree, elides down sailor fashion and
runs The powder cuts the tree sen a
as slick as it can be dune with an ix
unless the tree ia doty
Sometim«» t
shatters the top 2 or 3 feet down. H w
■Ri they-get those heavy steel pulleys
Met Here Last Week
WHY TIRES BLOW OUT.
FORD
Undorinflatien Bands the Fsbria and
Generates Hast.
Ask a tircmaker why tire* break
(Albany IL-rald)
down, and he will pro.nptlv answer
Prospects for bringing the “under inflation” or “overloading,”
county fair to Albany on or Swuich is the same thing. A highly
about September 10, are so inflated tire is almot as hard a*
• did rubber. Let out some of tl.e
rosy that already there is ten air and its springiness increases
tative talk of a probable pro Since moat of us rule for the joy of
it. wr are inclined to pumjwnir into
gramme.
our tires too rpanngly. The car
One circumstance is firmly liowla along easily; the tin* absorbs
fixed in the minds of the Alb all the »hm ks. But all the time the
any committee men who will umleririflated tire fabric is bending
go to Scio to conduct negotia and bonding at the side», thousands
tions. and that is. if the Fair and thousands of times, until at last
the heated interior walls weaken
should come to Albany it will and a loud explosion breaks up ■ i
be the greatest Fair ever held the air.
That iact-»*nnt bending and
in the county.
The commit
straightening of side wall* to which
tee from Albany will meet a a tire is subjected generates beat.
committee from Scio in Dr. Bend a piece of wire bark and forth
Prill's office, and there will in your hand manv times, and it
will bee out so hot that your fingers
be a pow-wow on Monday.
< unnot hold it. Heat, similarly gen
There will not be and dis erated, breaks the chemi al union
cord or any dissension, I lar- between the inu«.*r fabric and the
meny will prevail, but the i outer rubber and reduces a tire to
dominent not.’ in that har- separate layers. No longer are the
I -trains equally distributed. One lav. j
mony says ‘ Albany.’’
er is pulled this way, another that
The County Fair will pre way — moreover, with un«*qual
cede the State Fair by about force*. Blisters, corrugation», bump*
a week. It will be an old i largo anJ small, appear on the sur
fashioned count)- fair with all face.
Tires are popularly supposed to
the old time features, but will : blow out because they have been
also be a new fashioned ! heati-d by the sun. No tire manu
C( untv fair with features that facturer makes allowances for hot
It is true that h<*at ex
the old timers never dreamed weather.
pands, but the amount of <-v.>.in»i<n
of.
due to the sun alone is negligible. A
However, rabid, rank sen ¡certain degree of heat is generated
sationalism will be avoided. in running over tlw road. But even
that docs not increase the nir pr<
In some eastern fairs, auto I «ure
ns much as motorear owner*
mobile wrecks and head on 1 believe.
If the temperature of tin* air i-
collisions between locomo
tives have been featured as i 39 degrees F. (cold enough to freere
water), if the tiro is blown up to a
attractions. Such appeals to I pressure
of seventy-two pounds a
the morbid are not looked up square in h, and if the rise in the
on with favorable eye in Alb tires temperature at the end of a
run is 35 d< grees, the total pressure
any.
within the tube will be seventy-
But all kinds of legitimate eight pounds, an increase of only
features arc looked on with six pounds. But if the thermometer
a favorable eve, and efforts I records 00 degree*, c* it often do«
will be made to have so manv I <>n a summers day, the rise in tem
at the < nd of an < ¡Biva
features cf that kind that the perature
lent run will be only 3.1 degrees,
Fair will pass in to history and the total*air pre-»ure
as one memorable from a na- . pounds, an increase of only 5’,
tiona! as well as a local Doin? pound*.
I’arado^cal as it may seem, the
of view.
increase in pre»-ure due to the sun's
It will he held on the heat is not nearly so grt at ns motor-
Round-l p grounds.
There < ar'users suppose. For a gin n dis-
w’ill*bc horse racing, pony j tan o it is uctuallv less oti a hot day
than on n cold dav. — Waldcmar
racing, auto racing, foot rac Kaempffert in McClure's Magazine.
ing and if anybody can sug
gest any variety of legitimate
■sport that may make a new
and attractive feature, let him
do so.
In order to preserve the
old time fair idea, the ranch
ers will be encouraged to pro
vide a show of dairy cattle
and horses. 1 he back coun
try tributary to Albany is one
of the greatest agricultural
domains in the world. Even'
body knows that in a gener
al wav, but it ought to be ad
vertised all over the United
States and Canada, and the
pronosed Albany County Fair
will provide an opportunity
for such advertising.
The
United Press associations arc
io he asked to send out des
patches concerning the Fair
to every paper in the United
States.
Defying the Dictionary.
up there?
that
Wi ll, I forgut to ask about
i h‘>«n king* an<l emperors are railing
on their gods to help them in their
dev tltry. They must be heathen gods.
Surely they do not expect a just and
righteous God*to sanction their wick« d-
ness.
J. R GKDDKS
Mill City. Oregon.
|
FRED T. BILYEU
SCIO, OREGON
Semi-Tropical
Southern California
CALIFORNIA with it» oranges, its Winter flowers,
it
I - « he*, its mountain resorts, its time »taine.1
m.-ai 'ns, its .l.-lightful sunshine and out-of-door life —
-ursly th« call ia irresistible in January.
d ul a
«o days journey away on daily trains of the
delightful
SHASTA ROUTE
Shasta Limited
California Express
San Francisco Express
You can secure tickets or complete
Portland, Oregon
Southern Pacific Lines
Presidential Conventions.
asked Willoughby.
•’Yes; about five millions,” sai l
Hickenlooper.
“What's be doing now?” asked
Wdloughbv.
“Oh, he’s resting on hia ore,” sail!
Hickenlooper.
It was upon presentation of th-
aliovc under oath that the court ac
quitted Willoughby of assault and
battery on the ground of extreme
provocation.
On display and for sale by
JOHN M. SCOTT. General Passenger Agent,
The fir*t presidential nominating
convention, as is tho custom of to
day, wa* in the campaign of 1-12,
when the Democratic convention
met in Washington in Muy and
nominated .’ayv•* Madison for fres
ident, and the Federalist* met in
New Y ork in September and nomi
nated DeW.tt Cl luton. From this
<>n every fourth year conventions of
the respective parties have^been
held ana candidates have been nom
inated and »tales have chosen elec
tors to vote for them.
______
The above prices are
guaranteed against any
drop before Aug. 1, 1917
but not against an ad
vance in price.
Place vour orders now
tor Spring delivery.
information from any agent or write
Green btref hides arc worth
Pleasing Occupation.
per pound at the Sanitary
‘‘Slothcr* made a pile of money
in that gold mine of his, didn't he ?"
Market
____
*
Thr. «• «trong reasons urge you to buy a Font car First, because
of it- n r<,r : of -at -factory service to more than fifteen hundred
thousand owners; Second, because of the reliability of the Com
pany which makes it; Third, because of its large radiator ami
re
d fa->. -treamline ho«id, crown ’ fc-stera front and rear,
hia» * finish, iick. i; tr.mminjc*. it is moat attractive in appear-
a- . ... To tjv e r ust tw a>i>icd ita?w..nderful economy in opeva-
Uonjaid ii ii'.' ai •*. likewise.the fact that by reason of its
simplicity m cc vtruction anyone can operate and care for it.
Nir«- th. usand hord agents make Font service as universal as the
ear
J i-irig Car t • , Runahout 4346. Coupelet f5<)6. Town
Car f '.-5. S«-ten M46; f. o. b. Itetroil.
•
George Eliot and Horace Wal
pole introduced the strange word
“greenth” in place of “greenery”
into their writings, Shakespeare
wrote “ki*t" and “drest” nnd is said
to have signed hia name in »ixtecn
different ways, and Carlyle wn* fond
of such terms as **aenBiblest” ar.il
“pitiablest.” Even Queen \ ietoria
often spelled separate “seperate,”
Dickens mt rm!need the most •• en
trie punctuation whin writing
’•PickwiA." Jane Austen mu very
partial to the use of the word “ex
cessively" when »lie obviously meant
■*exccedi®gly,” and the critics have
ncctu 1 * a Marie Corelli of tiam -
•‘perspicuity" instead of “perspi-
MCltf.**
Tvpowriter ribbofls G5c at the
News office.
THE UNIVERSAL CAR
I