The Scio tribune. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1919-19??, February 14, 1924, Page 3, Image 3

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    Tba Scio Tribune
Cou ntry Correspondence
X
Your Safe and
Comfortable Way
Your Aral consideration
when traveling should I m - for
your safety and comfort.
Safety to something we ever (• r.
get and our roomy, well v< til«’
equipment insure« comfort
Irrespective of climatic c< m P i . •
you ean always depend on tl S<
ern Pacific being 'on th.- joi. !<> ike
you to your destination.
SAVE MONEY
Buy Round Trip Tit Ad
.’
Wtsr Scio to P osti am »
Week Endf 7 in
I
(Í ) 7C
Tickets.
IT
Low Round Trip Far«-» to Oth« r
Points.
The small daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Murray Gonser to recovering
Many from here attended the
funeral >f the poison victim« in Al­
bany Thursday. The DeVaney school
was closed, an i the teacher and
pupils attended, as Hans Yunker
was one of their number. and will
be greatly imwd by all.
About 25 gathered at the John
Shepherd home Sunday evening and
aang good old hymn*
Mrs S, B.
Holt presided at the organ, Cakes
ami loganlierrv punch were served
at the close of the singing in honor
The wheat growers of the nation of Mrs Eldora Slewart's birthday
are vitally interested in the bill be­ j which was Feb. 9.
Mr and Mrs. E P. Sage of Spo­
fore congress for an exuort corpora-
ti n to handle the surplus produc­ kane are visiting Mrs. Sage’s broth-
tion of the country. If the bill be- ¡er, F. A. Hough.
give wav in part to the raising of
materials needed in manufacturing
indu*trl««a. He stated that he be-
lieved that shortly oils and fuel al­
cohol» would become field and gar­
den products, snd that a field of po-
tatoee w >uld be of great commercial
value as a tiroduet to make fuel al*
cohol from; that weed« the farmer
lights to exterminate today will ba
I cultivated for their use in making
rubier, and that many products of
’.he soil may b grown to advantage
for other than food products.
<*•
r me a law it will be the greatest
dep for control of farm products.as
it is not confined to wheat entirely,
but to all farm products. If it
giv< th»« exp«- ted relief |to wheat
I producers, it can also be applied to
: livestock ami other lines of agricul­
Call on your local agent f >r any ru '
road information you may wi-!i he
will be glad to be of servi.-.-
JOHN M. SCOT!
Ass’t Passenger TraftV M.i-i.r,
Portland. Oregon.
Southern Pacific Lines
Successful Farming
1 hrough Coopera­
tive Selling Urged
with vision) realize that there is
much truth in th«--e statement* and
that cooperation mu-i g”tc
at i
tighter to the production p nt*,
that all the cows, the grains, th»
meat and products must be r ■ •
and worked out on the pr lucti
ground; that the hog should I*
cured into bacon where th»- h>'gs m-
raised, that the flout «h- tld i • mill
ed where the wh« it is grown; that
the butter and chee*e should be a
part of cooperative product >n I’n-
less these are done by the farmer,
and the great middle profits retained
by him. then they will t>e done by
others who are waiting for agricul­
ture to collapse and the land* conn’
into their possession.
Henry Ford said in a speech some
months ago that the American far­
mer was starting at the wrong end
of the cooperative movement, that
he had hitched the wagon ahead af
the horse; that the big objective of
organization was cooperative selling,
while it should start with production
instead. Mr. Ford illustrated that
there was a field of corn here, a
field of wheat there; a team of bora-
«•« and a half dozen cows; a few pigs
here and a few sheep there —end-,
leaaly repeated all over the nation.
In a recent talk nt < rne I Vniver
Mr. Ford says this is not farming,
that it to an unorganized condition sity, at Ithaca. N Y.. one of the
of needless waste and work, bad for professors stated that there w.n
over-production on every hand
the farmer and the country.
largely the result of under-«-
o.p
The leaders of cooperative move­ tian - and that farming tn the id
y must
ments in this country (the real men way of food production
factory
ture.
The cattle men of Oregon are fac­
ing the same conditions as confront
th.- wh -at growers, apple an«| fruit
raisers, and one of two results seem
certain, that there must tie a power­
ful c’operati*» organi lotion to force
profit conditions or cattle raising in
Oregon for meat must end, or be
greatly diminished. There is much
igitation for a strong cooperative
producers’ organization for the Pa­
cific northwest.
Page 3
%
plant aa the fly will seldom deposit
eggs on any but young plants.
By Franklin E. Gilkey. Scio
stud« nt at O. A. C.
Why Mr. N. Windsor (R. I.) Put Up
with Rata for Years
' Y««r> a*a I
« mm nL p * m . akkb aautr
tUM < xm Sas »»ak o.*
W« pat «
«••U • IHraS *44 *• »’—•» XM-Sas*
I
<1 -vh I mom two >«‘l Inal
do
¡»a. t *> Marti braaa. th.
Md sad svsnatMd br
K» II) 'a Drug Store, Scio. Oregon
Coming to Albany and
Salem
Dr. Mellenthin
SPECIALIST
in Internal Medicine for the
past twelve year«.
M im Audry Ferris of Ling View.
Wash., sister of Mrs. Orville Gilkey
and Misa Audrv Coker of Alma.
Oo«i Not Opera«*
Wash., who to a cousin, came to
visit her Monday. M m Ferris is
Will be at
still here. Misa voker left Sunday
evening.
Al.BA.NY. Wednesday, Feb. 20,
Franklin Gilkey off). A.C. and
Albany Hotel
Alvin of Albany visited home folk«
Sunday. Jack H irons. also of O. A.
and at
C.. visited Franklin here.
S ai km , Thursday. feb. 21.
Gertrude Yunker did not have
Marion Hotel
' the measles, but a bad cold. She
- was able to attend her brother’s
Oltlce Hours: 10 a. m. to 4 p m.
funeral but has been quit» ill since.
Mrs. Etta Stevenson. who visited
ONE DAV ONLY
her sister. Mrs J. II. Kelly, hns
gone to Prineville.
No Charge for Conewltattofi
Mr and Mr« S B. Holt and Mr«
J. H Kelly vtoi'ed in Corvallis Sun­
day.
Dr. Mellenthin to a regular graduate
Mr« Arthur Kelly visited her
in rn.-liruie and surgery and is Hcensed
people here Sunday.
by th«« state of Oregon. Hodova not
operate for chrouic appendicitis, gall
»ton. « ulcers of stomach, tonsils or
adenoids.
He h%» to his credit wonderful results
in dMv«»«-« of the stomach, liver.bowels,
bl«"«l. skin, nerves, heart, kulncy.blad
I. r. lied wetting, catarrh, wvak lung»,
rhvuinalistn, sciatica, leg ulcera and
rectal aliments.
I « low ar«- the name» of a few of his
many satisfied patients in Oregon;
I. A Ciinith, Ontario, Oro., ulcers of
the stomach.
I««»na Ford. Washougal, Oro., ade­
noids.
W If. Keltondonk. Estacada, Ore,,
high blood pressure,
Mr». I d Eberhardt, Scio, Or«^, gall
stones.
I
Nichols, Iwbanon, tire., appen­
dicitis.
K«-mcrnber aliovr date, that consulta­
tion on Ibis trn> will tie free an<l that
his treatment is different.
Married women must be accompanied
by their huabaixto.
ww
The outcome of th# economic con­
ference at the Oregon Agricultural
college last month will lie watched
with keen interest It is the first in­
■
stance in history where a state col­
Santlam Farm. February 12. 1924.
lege has taken up such a problem as
Ed Kalina had his hands badlv cut
the agricultural situation to work
while holding a tigut barln-d wire
out a relief program,
which snapped in two, jerking it
C. E. ne*aca. Market A g ant
through his hand aome two feet.
Mrs. Rebecca Morris of tue River­
side Inn of Scio came out Saturday
for a visit with her sister. Mr* S.
W. Gaines, a* she enjoyed the h tel
i
grub.
Mr Gambar of l^ebanon is teach­
Gilkey Station. Feb. 12. 1924. ing us a good school
M C Gaines of Crabtree was up
Mrs. James Reiley was operated
Address: 211 Bradbury Bldg., ls>*
on at St. Mary’s hospital in Albany on the farm looking after his she* p Angeles, Calif.
Feti 5 by Dr. B R Wallace for the as they are turning out a fine lot of
removal of a tumor. She to doing lambs, and are the best paying Stock.
0». P T T-w4
Dr H. 0 HaUrt
Our fail-sown crops never looked
as well as could he expected
better. Should the cold weather of
this month not injur«- it. we will be
Ix’lianon, Oregon
assured of fine crops.
Office at
The old man and hi« g >od wife
ha«e regained their usual go»*!
Rolx-rtson Drug Co.
health and feel as young a« they
used to ba.
Ed Kalina is putting up a nice lot
of wire fence, as h» is deligh'ed
with a gji”d fence. He sent thre«
fine reala to Portland Monday and
got a much better price by d Ing
his own shipping. He is also setting
out a lot of strawberry plan!«
David Horsburgh is widening out
a new channel for the creek by hlata-
ing. as the old channel to about dry.
George Griffin ha» a fi»e lol o’
hill land which he is plowing for
early spring sowing.
Community Sing
Brings People to
the M espelt Home
VETERINARIANS
PIE EATER.
Maggot Control
For the “Hard Knocks’* of busi-
ne.‘ . wear there isn’t a more prac­
tical frame made than the Shur-
on Twintex. a shell frame with
the inner rim.
The radish root maggot is control­
able by covering th«- young seed-
lings to prevent the root maggot fly
from laying her egg* on or near
them.
A good method to to make an in­
verted "V” sha(<ed trough, covered
HAROLD Al.BRO,
with cheese doth or tine wire screen
Manufacturing Optician
The trough to usually made IN inch­
es wide ot the base, IS inches high
»♦♦»♦♦ooooeoooeoeooooeeeei
and 10 feet in length. It can lie
Made from iight material and with : Why suffer with Headaches? •
good care will last several years.
Have Year Eyes Eiaatiaetl
The radish seed can be s>>wn in
rows or broadcasted under »he
S. T. FRENCH
screen
When radishes are one-falf
Qo.uala O*<*m««rlat
grown the screen can be removed
With
In
and another planting mad«’
this way fresh radishes can lie had
Jewelers and Opticians
all the times during the season,
ALBANY. . OREGON
Little damage will result from re­
Che screen from the mature
♦................................ ...
Optometrist.
*LUNY
F. M. French X Sons