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About The Scio tribune. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1919-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 10, 1924)
Tbe Scio Tribune AMERICAN CHARITY ALONE CAN SAVE General News ujjtf 1*4 Page 3 hh Hi.libi German Children Facing Star* A Neu) Pay Day vation; Oregon Is Raising Si 00.000 to Help Them. Th* very Istsst official srorS fro« headquarter* <rf the Amertaaa C b « milt** tor R*lief of Genaaa CMMroa. for Thrifty People of which Majorsinsral SBea, eeaa- maoSwr of the *~7*rl«oi treopa ea U m Khla* during onnyitlr—I Says. ts aa- tlonat director. to tkM eeaglUoM ta Germ nay beggar deecrfpttoa. to Ulloa* of ch I Id me, under aowtehe4 beeaaee of food *cereity aad frtghlfnlly pHl able condition* reanltlng from (ha war. abaolotaly far* atarvatleo; Anar Iran charity aloe* will save than. It I* di" lared officially la dlapatchaa from General Allan and Harbert Hoover, on President Coolidge's au thorlty. Kronomlc breakdown. valualva* U-oli»-y and Other thing* combine to mak" of thia situation one of th* moot appalling In th* world'* hiatory Rabe* aa lnn-H-»nl ot wrongdoing aa any ev<-r bora ar<- going to di* tor lark ot t»-.<l unla»* America saves them Other way* have l>n*n triad, without re» ulta 'Ofgon will do Its share, which ha* loan !>!.«■• <1 at 1100.000." *ald Robert H Strong, of th* firm of Strong A Mai Naughton, Portland, who was stat» dlr» tor for the Hoover food r* lief campaign for Europe here In 1911. nr.d who I* stats chairman for thia ■ ampalgn. "Word I* rearhlng our headquarters, 715 Corbett building, that thn whol* state la aroused; that oui i>eople everywhere are deeply at f«-. t*d by the *ad condition* with which German children are faced, and that they are randy to respond with their money to alleviate this terrible suffering All possible speed should b* made in tbla work and we are or ganlring In every sectloa of Oregon to that end I appeal on behalf of lb* InniKent ones for hearty co-operation, for prompt and liberal response in money to the cry tor aid that ha* gone up." Tips For Taxpayers No. 1. January I. 1924, marks the be- Irinin? of the period for filing in come-tax returns fur the year 1923. The period ends at midnight of March 15, 1924. Heavy penalties are provided by the revenue act fur failure or willful refusal to make a return and pay the tax on i i i xiwi NEW PAYROLL for many many lciuline» families ikzm lias uccii been vicmcvi created during the past few years. i vl . w A It is a pay roll which brings substantial amounts to those enrolled—as regularly and as dependably as the arrival of the seasons of the year. You can get your name on this pay roll and stay there as long as you please. All you have to do is to become a 7 ‘ Gold Note holder of Mountain States Power Company, and put your money to work extending the properties to meet the steadily increasing demand for service. You do not need a considerable sum of cash to do this. You can invest on the Monthly Payment for Plan you at the rate the of first $10 from a month, and your money starts to earn payment. If you are on the payroll now, why not get your name on another? You will find our Investment Department prepared to give you complete information to help you with your prob lems and as glad to see the man or woman, boy or girl, with $10 to invest as to welcome those with considerable sums. Mountain States Power Company time. Form 1040A. heretofore used fur reporting net income of 15.000 and leas, from whatever source derived, ALBANY, OREGON has been revised in the interests of the largest class of taxyavere— wage • 9 earners and salaried persons. Re duced from six pages to a single sheet. Form 1040A is to be used for reporting net income of 15.000 and less derived chiefly from salar ies ami wag» *. Persona any part of whose income is derived from a business or profession, farming, legume hay crop or silage crop or O.A.C. Fa*m Reminder! sale of property or rent, though Improper Feeding Shown green ford crop for the coast re the amount is 15.000 or leas, will be gion is j>eas and oats. White Can required to use the larger form. 1040 If vetch is ’<> I* planted fur hay The use of Form 1040 is required thia year, a* »ling should take place adian field peas at about 90 pounds The seriousness and extent of im also tn all cases where the net in in auuthen Jrvgun and in the Will an acre with 50 to 50 pounds of proper feeding was shown by the come was in except of $5.000, re arnette v alley principally before oats make a large yield uf feed recent survey uf a leading dairy gardlem <>f whether from salary, March I. In out»« of th* higher which reaches the hay state about distr ct by a w»<l| known Wisconsin business, profession, or other taxable altitude« and in (he coa*t district a the middle of the summer. It is dairy expert. Out of the first four sources little later a«eding ia permissible good fur silage or for hay and rnav teen herds visited he found but two It being impossible to determine but beet result« are always secured) be cut for green feed a long time receiving all the feed they were at this time which form is desired, with early planting. For March Itefore it reaches the hay stage. capable of handling at a profit. It is important that It be planted copies of both f.rms will be sent planting, peas and oats are usually Innumerable other herds showed early, as in late March or In the clearly that they were being under taxpayers who filed individual re better than vetch and oats for hay j month of April. Later planting* turn* for the year 1922, and may or green feed purpose* fed. If half of those cows were do not get good yields. be obtained also at the offices of sold to the butcher and the other collector* of internal revenue and half given the feed now lieing uwd Folks who want summer pasture Oregon Had To Buy Eggs Ion the first half, milk production branch offices u|x>n written request fur hogs can plant Dwarf Essex rape Now She Must Sell Them would be equal to the present vol- at abuut 5 pound« an acre in April. I ume and expense of handling the Divided Into Zones May or early June and have a good A few years ago Oregon imported fewer cows would be greatly reduced hog pasture in six to eight weeks from other states poultry and eggs) The survey holds that if prices of W. L. Starr, superintendent of after the seed is planted The later by the carload. It is estimated butterfat and milk were doubled, the Bromnsville schools, was in Al plantings, if th« soil has been pre that in 1922, however, 100 cars of many of these herds would not yield bany Saturday arranging the prelim pared early, usually make a good eggs alone were shipped to outside their owners a profit. inary work of organizing the county deal of excellant summer hog pasture Farmers who complained that markets. Ways and means of main division of the Oregon State Teach there was no money in dairying taining our middle western and era' aaa-ciation into zonae for the were those who kept down their The lw*t spring planted annual eastern markets in the fact of com more convenient disposal of the feed bill. They would make a scrub petition from poultry raisers in association’s activities The school* Mrs. Crandall (Iowa) Telle How S» m eow out of a blooded animal in short those state« will be considered by Slop**! Chxlon I. om *» of the county will be divided into order. Hundreds of prosperous the poultry group at the state five zones, centers of which will be dairy farmers were found. Every agricultural economic conference Albany. Brownsville. Shedd. Scio one of them knew the vital import that is to be held January 23 to 26 and Letianon. ance of a well balanced ration. The Brownsville ocgantaatioa will j inclusive at the Oregon Agricultural “You Should Be An I nvestor. ceikge. in clean, ventilated quarters. They were well bedded and flanks and udders were well clipped at regular intervals, a health and sanitary measure that is the ear-mark of the real dairyman. Since those in the feed trade have taken a keen er interest In the problems of th« dairy farmer, sales have shown a substantial increase.—From Grain Reporter, December 19, 1923. Contageous Diseases Contagious diseases reported for th* weekending December29. 1921, by the State Board of Health: Tuberculosis 9, Typhoid 7, Diph theria 76, Scarlet fever 26, Small pox 9, Whooping cough 5. Measles 567, Chickenpox 7, Mumps 5. Ery sipelas 2, Pneumonia 2. Apple Twig Blooms Twice C. C. Hall, Santiam forest super visor, has produced a twig from a Gravenstein apple tree bearing a second crop of the fruit. It is ex- Dected the ripening will not be at tained, but some of the apples are fairly well developed. The tree bloomed tn the fall after having Moreover thesr herds were stabled borne an earlier crop