The Scio tribune. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1919-19??, February 23, 1922, Image 10

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    APPARATUS FOR
RECLAIMING OIL
Dav ice Conserves 60 to 80 Per
Cent
by
Ex-
Eliminating
traneous Matter in It.
REDUCES BILLS OF MOTORIST
Thr«w(h Ot*till*»l«n «< »om« Lighter
Lubricant* Quality la Said ta Ba
Improved—Abraaiva Matter
la Removed.
fer«d with th« Idea that when a tn*-
I ori st wishes to renew ths oil th hla
crank chamber he will go to a ga
rag* equlpiwd with the Oe-essary out
III have the old oil drained out and
receive an allowance of new oil In
return A garage without the equip
ment will make an allowance for the
used oil and send It to be salvaged
by concerna organised for that sole
purpose.
creaaing th* economic efficiency of the
average cltiicn “
ii Tested Field Seeds
But ask th« high school boy or girl,
what he think* of the life he i* com-
polled to lead I* he appreciative ? He 11
I* not. I am afraid, in too many inst­
ances. He belong*, it ha* been said,
I!
to one of three claaarw; those who like
school .those who are »ent. am! those
who are sentenced Them are. it ia
’
certain, many of the sent and many of
!!
the sentenced who do not madiae ths
Qardan Nota.
The snsleat way Io remove weada vaiue of a high school education. They . o
ar* merely hurrying through because
«oberi la to mnrry a widow.— Roe
it. for some reason, terms to be the
ton Transcript
thing to do. They ar* hurrying on
AS A BULB, WK Lt
into the kmg yearn; the thirty, forty,
hi mart our school fifty years of trouble and of trial.
We hav»- the moat complete «lock <>f farm and field M*dl
i- il..........
oata. (anty
clover and graig a>"ifo and a complete stock of tested garden
aevdn. M ail ua a list of your wants or send for our new
price lint
m
The laru- it and beat selected «»lock in the at« te to aeiect
Aa a rule, a man’a a fool. When
It’« hot he wants it cool. When It’«
T» eonaen e prrarnl day rwmurc** cool he wants it hot; always wanting
what la not; never liking what he's
for th« hmrOi of |H»ti>rlty 1« not a
particularly attractive pnqKWitlon to got. So we maintain; aa a rule, a
the man at t‘»«lay. who la rather likely man's a fowl-**
The above quotation may not be
tn **k why hr should <!<• anything
for pnolorlty when *•• far aa hr can poetry and it may not be true, but It
ere, posterity haa done nothing for illustrate« an attitude that in all top
him
prevalent in common life not only,
Hut when conaervatlim put« money but alao in relation to our acbooling
tn hie own pocket, that la another story Ask representatives of the seven agon
altogether
their opinion* of the value of educa­
That 1« rtmdly what can now be
tion and what will each tell you T
dom- For the motorist by a re.<-nt In
The very youngest, who ia «till be­
«entlon of an *p|>ar<ttu* for re< lalmlng
or cleatiaitig crunk man oil
Pram flO low the compulsory age will beg con­
The
to wt |a*r < > m <>f till* oil enn now t>e tinuously, "Tant I do to cool.’
very oldest. the man of dream* in the
aalvagetl nnd need over again
old armchair, will dose hia «yea and
Est.nd* Life of Motor.
one >>f the considerable Item* Io a think in deep appreciation of the
mot oriel'* budget la lubricating oil. school day* pa»t, the day« made
moot of which gio«« into the crunk famous In Whittier’s linca;
case of hl* rar l'p«>B the lubrication
"Still aiU the schooihouaa by the
of that part of the mrrlufiitm largely
mad.
dettrnd* the efficiency and life of hla
A ragged beggar sunning;
car.
Around It «till the sumach« grow,
I.iibrl'«ling oil <loe* not actually
And blackberry vine* are running
deteriorate through use
It merely
Within the master’s desk ia seen.
cvlbo-ta a uiua* of abraairc matter
Deep scarmd by raps official;
from the wear on moving part*. car-
The warping floor, the battered
lam and nnhtimtal gasoline leak fnuii
seat*.
the cylinder Into the crank case un
The jack knife'* carved initial.’*
dementh. and moisture and grit And
Nor are middle aged men of thot
their way In from the outer air. Al
Glenn
though the oil Itself th-es not lose indiffeient to school value*
It* lubricating quality, all thia adnl
Frank, in the September Century,
ter ’ion «»entuaily forms a mlkinre while criticising the college, aay* in
which canmil give proper lubrication part: "In the elementary and arcond-
Eliminates E*tr«n*ou* Matter.
ary school* we am beginning to subs­
What the new appuratua does la to titute natural for artificial method*
eliminate nil that extraneous mutter of teaching- w« are paying mor* at­
nnd thus restore the original useful
tention to the gwakening of interest
tie«» of the lubricant frequently. In
than to the enforcement of discipline;
deed, through the distillation of the
we are substituting play for drudgery
lighter oils
Improving Its original
—we are correlating learning with
quality.
life. We have made provision for in-
Thia new reclaiming machine la of
Poultry Supplies
The United States IMpartmrnt of
Education, making an analyvla of the ! from, including I mu Laton». Brooders, Poultry feed of al|
namea in 'Who’s
Who", discovered ! kinds, gnt. bone, shells and fountain« and feeders.
that only one
uneducated child in I
You will always fi d our prices are low as the best goods
IM.000 was ever able to accomplish
! can be sold for. the kind you find it pays to buy.
anything worth calling great. wMle I
high school graduate* were eighty-
»erm times a* likely to make a mark
in the world. Similar statirtics have
often been givrn proving that from a
financial standpoint, even, high school
education pays and pays big. So much
for future possibilities
I* the prse- (
mt entirely joyless, oh you sent and i
sentenced scholar* • When you have
reached that future wherein you have ♦
increased your chanrrs eighty-seven
tim««, you will look back ami realise,
louse.” t,n1c»s, before moving he had
as you do not now, that school day* and other mor* or 1«--« harmful sourc­
lcam«*l in whool the common princi­
es
of
anKafftnenL
To-day
we
have
al
­
were the happiest, moat worthwhile»
ready advanced sufficiently *o that our ple* that are good anywhere. The
day* of all.
True, some of the blame for the at- i pleasure do»-» not come principally school uf today, 1 »ay, does add to our
from our la*lea*n<M*. but from our or­ ability to support ourselves. I aay
titude stated at the beginning belong*
ganised ami intelligent school activi­ that it is becoming practical, but I
to our school sy»tem*. They have, ad­
wonder if it i* only those of u* who
ties.
mittedly, been lacking, in at least two
have been deprived of these ail vant­
respect«; they have lacked in interest
Then too, good as our educational
age« who appreciate them?
and they have failed tn meet the prac-' system* of the past have l>e*n, they
Scio high reboot aifn* to be in the
tical need* of the pupil*. It ia now hav» pivpared us for nothing, »r nay,
float rank of th<> *e that try to make
my intention, however, to point out, except perhaps for a greater enjoy­
m luxii life mere enjoyable, mor* valu­
as Glenn Erank did in the article ment of life. We did not then, a* to­
able, and moi* practical. We have
which I quoted above, the improve­ day, learn to drive nails, sew warn*,
th> -e -quirts, activities, the enjoyment
ments that are tiring introduced run typewriters or plant crop*. The
and the up to-thr-minute subjects and
Think, for instance, of the multitude writer of this article, who «as put
improvement*. We have the best
of means that we now have of abiding through school tivfore these change*
school and we're going to tell you so,
enjoyment to school life.
Footliall, war* introduced, is, at the moment of
and in believing in ourselves and in
basketball, debate*, literary societies, writing, labomu.ly punishing an Oliv­
advertising ourselve* we will change
school paper*. various contest*. more er with his index Anger, trying to use
the rhyme that was quoted way back
interesting method* of instruction, the "Hunt Method.“ It take* him half
at the tieginning of this articla.
school annuals, class parti*». claa* riv­ a day to hang a »erven door, and,
"A* a rule, well boost our school.
alries, track meets, newer and moVo though he was raised on a farm, he
interesting studie*. class plays, etc., did not l»-arn those principles of agri­
When it's hot. we’ll make lb cool;
When it’s cool well make it hot;
etc, ar* being cmphasfkod more and culture that hold true in all parts of
And we’ll tell folks what we've
more a* the need for thmi becomes the world. The knowledge pick**! up
got;
increasingly apparent No longer is it on father'* farm is too localised to be
aeeea**r> for boy* and girls to depend sufficient and a farm-hand taught in
For we maintain: Aa a rule we
have some school "
on "the jack-kmfo's carved initial" New England might fail in "The l‘a-
; D. A. White & Son
:
Seed men and Feedmen
: 251-261 State St.
Salem, Oregon
I
9
..........
« » < j
•O-r*
r.
GARAGE
1
Sampson
Quality Goes ClearThrough
$1065 f. o. b. Scio
Traitors
Trucks-—I ton $635.50,
$735 Scio
«<
ton $1134.50
Zenith Carburetor; Magneto, no battery'; 32x4 Goodyear
Tires; weighs 2 I 30 pounds; l I 8 inch wheelbase.
Sound Tires
Made on the Pacific Coa^t
•mn Plunger pump feeding oil troughs,
onnecting rod dippers splosh oil from
onstant level troughs to all parta of
ogine.
„ ignea to
t< stand coast conditions. BETTER,
Built and Designed
and co^ts no more than other tires.
<r "• rter improved side outlet, easy
ti rtii * and ununuolly economical.
L’nci
I • U
Corr-tici.t battery system. Switch,
ombined with that controlling lights,
ia carried on instrunent board.
Tire« Goodyear 3lxl.
and rear.
The Battery We Assemble is the best battery on
the market today and is sold at a price you can afford to
pay. Guaranteed for 2 years by us.
Non-skids both front
W. L. Cobb di* Son
WUelb«M -108 inches.
it :
pr=a ,rx-r- ■ .«
(T— *—r-
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