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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1921)
Half They Have to Abused „Pets Brother and Sister in Kansas City, Kan., Give Money and Time in Humane Work. DOGS, M T S AND PARROTS All Are Tenderly Cared For In the Little Bowered Cottage and Put Out of Their Misery If Too Sick to Recover. Kansas City, Mo.—Wouid you be willing to give more than half of your modest Income to make life less rig orous for suffering or neglected ani mals? Such Is the sacrifice being made by Miss Sarah and U. 11. Jacobs of Kan sas City, Kan., across the river from here. And It Is no mere passing hobby, they have been doing this for the last quarter century. The Jacobs ure nationally known for their un selfish work. Living In a little cottage, surround ed by rose bushes, bird houses, flower beds und fruit trees, these two have consecrated their lives to ameliorating the hardships visited upon man’s often neglected and ubused companions. U. II. Jucobs provides the income by working as a bookkeeper on the Missouri side, while Miss Sarah looks After the home and ,ts numerous pets. And there are many dogs In the Jacobs home—ten dogs, two score cats, and two parrots. The core of these pets, however, represents only a minor part of the activities of the two workers. Both are officers In the Wyandotte County Humane society and labor Incessantly to benefit ani mal life through thut source. With nil this the Jacobs nre not unmindful of the needs of unfortunnte children, and even adults of their city, as they ure active In the Associated Charities. Miss Sarah, who was found at home busy with her charges, said thnt her first Instruction In humane work was when she was a little girl and her father taught her thnt It was just ns eusy to step around nn anthill us to crush It with her heel. Chloroform to Diseased. While thoroughly orthodox In their theology, the Jacobs believe flrtnly thut most of the sin and suffering In the world has followed man’s hnhlt of killing and abusing animals. There Is nothing muwkish about tbelr views, however. Miss Sarah, as president of the llumnne society, hay^. personally cjfiorofornied hun- 'ffreds of disease^ ’neformed and home less animals. “It sometimes Is expedient,” she said, "to remove them to avert fur ther suffering. When It Is neces- sury to put an animal to sleep, I nl- ways utter a word of prayer, taking full responsibility for the act.” Most of the pets in the Jacobs home have been brought there by persons ■-•-'•»•-•-•■-I Says Farmers Go Crazy for Lack of Recreation Washington. — One of the reasons why you "can’t keep ’em down on the farm” was ex plained here nt the seventy- seventh annual convention of the American Institute of llotne- opntliy. More farmers go crazy every year In the United States than any other class of citizenship. Dr. J. M. Lee of Rochester, N. Y., told the convention. Work, worry and Inck of recreation ure the causes. Professional men—clergymen, physicians and lawyers—nre less likely to go crazy, Dr. Lee said. However, Dr. l.ee warned, don’t be too sure of yourself, for Insanity Is slowly but steadily increasing. who have found them suffering In the streets or were too poor to look after them. Many carry a story of human Interest, with sometimes a tragedy. There Is Cinderella, who has been brutally wounded. The Jacobs decided to chloroform the animal to relieve its Intense suffering. Finally It struggled over to the open fireplace and curled up In the warm ashes. Soon It showed signs of rallying and they concluded It should live. It did recover. The Inci dent reminded them of the fairy story of the little girl sitting in the ashes and who later was able to wear the glass slipper, and the spotted hound became Cinderella. Miss Jacobs told of a cat that saved their lives. A leaky gas Jet had filled the house with fumes while they slept. Tlie cat mewed In vain and finally leaped upon the bed and scratched Miss Jacobs to a waking position and a realization of their danger. Cat’s Interesting Career. Yarrow, a cut with an Interesting career, wus named after Mary Cralge Yarrow, a noted humane worker of Philadelphia. This cat once was a companion to a little boy. The boy died and on the night of his funeral the animal was carried away and locked In a freight car bound for Ar kansas. A fortnight later the cat re turned home nearly starved. The boy’s mother took It to the Jacobs home. Some of the animals of other days, especial favorites who had enrned some ninrk of distinction, are buried In the flower gurden. There are no markers, save a stone border around the grave of Hermano (Mexican for brother), long In the family. Hermano had saved Miss Jacobs’ life in Texus ; Dog Howled by His Dead Master’s Side 2 Months ! s * These Three Boys Won a Trip to England « t t • *, * J J t J , » j J , » s » t J t New York.—Almost nightly tor two months a dog has been howling and whining for his master, who lay dead In a small furnished room and no one went near to find out what was the trouble. The man who had died there and been forgotten was John J. Moore, pardoned criminal. When repair men. In going to fix a leaky pipe, found It necessary to get Into the room and break down the door they came upon Moore lying on the bed wrapped In blankets. The dog had gone. * night before and it may have « been that he had decided at last J no one would come to his mas- ter’s aid and there was nothing t » more to be done. t « J • J • , * « J « J • J J , * J » » » J » » when a big rattler was about to strike her. The dog pounced upon the snake and received the poisonous bite. He becnme blind, but lived many years. Asked about the cost of pursuing their humane work. Miss Jacobs said It amounted to $600 or $700 a year. She Insisted, however, that this did not constitute a sacrifice, that they de rived pleasure from It and preferred to spend their money In this wny, even If it forced them to give up many comforts. Girl Must Return His Ring. Asbury Park, N. J.—When a couple In New Jersey agree to break an en gagement the man Is entitled to the ring he gave. That delicate point was settled by Judge Lawrence of the Court of Com mon Pleas, In the case of a Trenton man who resorted to the law to get back the circlet he had given a girl who then married another man. In competition with boys representing 13 states, these three boys, G. W. Welting, Jack Turner and Alva Deb- nam, won the first prize In Judging live stock at the southeastern fair, Atlanta, Ga., the prize consisting of a trip to the English royal live stock show at Derby, England. They stopped off In Washington where they were guests of the government for two days. The picture shows them examining the secretary of agriculture’s driving team, while Secretary Wallace is an Interested spectator. that the price of a dollar In coppers runs from 130 to 140, Instead of the seemingly logical 100. “This state of things gives rise to the ’Oh, by the way’ habit Foreign stores will accept up to 50 cents in ’small money,* but more than that amount must be paid In ’big money.’ A woman under such conditions de get their pay and allowances at the velops a poor memory and yields to Writer Tells Some of His Expe day’s rate. In Peking, during the war, sudden Impulse. She buys something riences With Exchange in 18 a consular clerk earning $2,000 a year, for 50 cents and thus completes the But before she leaves on which he was guaranteed a rate of transaction. Foreign Countries. the counter, she says ‘OL, by the way’ $2.60, was receiving more money than a lieutenant colonel, who was getting and purchases another 50 cents worth, thus keeping a dime and two or three $1.15 for his money. coppers for herself. The store gets A Bureau of Standards In Money. Its money back by returning seven "In the office of the American mili tary attache In Peking, there Is an dimes as change for a 30-cent pur One U ttle Transaction in Exchange American flve-dollar gold piece, which chase and thus makes Its lucome look, not like 30 cents, but like 44 to 50. Nets Traveler 700 Per Cent at Har has been priced more often than a bin—Gold Coin at Peking, If hold-over pair of 1912 shoes. The of Trip Cost $200 Less Than Nothing. “In Tiflis, In the spring of 1918, the ficers were being' paid the day's rate, Sold, Would Upset the Fi which was then about $1.10 Chinese rouble was selling at 15 to the dollar. nancial System. money for an American dollar. But I bought 6,000, for there was no tell actual gold was worth 50 per cent ing how long It would take to get out Washington, D. C.—Variations In When I currency exchange rates have not only more. The officer rightly Insisted that of Russia at that time. a broad economic significance but also his men were being paid in a debased reached Vladivostok, some weeks later, an extremely personal pertinence to currency and insisted on receiving a the Japanese were preparing to send an army Into Siberia and were buying the traveler. Maynard Owen Williams, balance to bring the salaries up to up roubles. The rate there was 6.33 who has Just returned from a trip the rate for actual gold. Hence this through 18 countries to compile In solitary gold piece was taken around roubles for a dollar. I traveled from formation and collect picture material to the exchange shops every month the Caucasus to the Pacific and took for the National Geographic society, and Its value ascertained, but If It nearly two months to do It, and when I changed my money at the end of relates some of his experiences with had been sold It would have upset the financial system, for the Chinese, the trip. It had cost me about $200 less exchange as follows: than nothing. The professor with "It Is only In times of extreme stress ready enough to offer a price for a whom I had traveled for several that the average American considers specific coin, refuse to quote prices months In Russia and Turkestan had the ‘cart wheel’ nnd the ’greenback’ on theoretical ones. “It Is no wonder that there Is con converted all his gold Into roubles be as commodities much like flour or ma fore leaving America, and had been dras shirting, but for most of the fusion In Chinese exchange with for spending roubles that cost him 30 world foreign exchange Is a vital mat eign currency, for there Is a varying cents each which bought no more than ter every day In the year. When It exchange rate among the 18 provinces those I had bought In Tiflis for 8. takes 20 silver dollars to buy an ‘X’ themselves, and the Yuan Shlh Kai "On my recent trip to India I ex and a ’V’ In Budapest, It sounds like silver dollar Is the only currency on pected to cross Persia on my way from a fairy tale to the man who stops to which there Is no exchange when Eastern Europe, and since American think It Is Uncle Sara’s own currency crossing n provincial boundary. But gold had been worth four times as that doesn't mean that It has a fixed which Is treated In this manner. But the Chinese keeper of an exchange value even then, for the value of a much as American paper In the Pers dollar In small currency Is constantly ian bazaars In 1918, X carried a small shop makes It as plain as day. bag of gold with me. The trip across changing. A Chinaman Makes It All Clear. Persia proved Impossible, and It was “A sliver dollar when exchanged "You walk up to his open counter not till the eve of sailing for home facing the sidewalk and ask him how at a foreign store, contains 100 cents. that I sold some of the gold which I much American dollars are selling for Thus If one makes a 20-cent purchase at a Shanghai department store, he had carried for thousands of miles, this morning. and which had caused me endless ar “ ‘This morning, price very bad. My gets 80 cents change, which seems guments at nearly every boundary. no want ’em. No man want to buy. fair enough until one discovers that at Most of It I paid to the United States No steamer leave today. Saturday an exchange shop one can get 11 dimes customs on my arrival, after having big steamer leave for ’Merlea, can give and 3 cents for each dollar. When he carried It for ten months, and a hun changes one of the dimes, he will you more better price.’ dred thousand miles. There were get, not ten coppers, but 11 or 12. So “During the attempt to reseat the only two times on the trip when I boy emperor on the Chinese throne In could have sold I t for as much as I the summer of 1017, a money changer ABIGAIL ADAMS SHAFT could get for a letter of credit. In Hankow sold me some Peking notes Prefer Letters of Credit for 20 per cent of their face value, “I have never heard of anybody asserting that I could get full value making money on exchange by accept In Peking, If I ever got there. I was ing expert advice, and I would never on my way to Petrograd and had to want to offer It to anyone. But when get my passport amended In Peking, I leave American soil again, all my so I took a chance on $25 worth of money Is going to be Invested In a Peking notes Issued by the Bnnk of letter of credit and enough travelers’ Communications which cost $5 In Han checks to help me out when I want kow, the railway service between the only a small sum. Boundaries reduce Yangtze port and the capital being currency In a way that alarms the Interrupted nt the time. traveler and an American letter of Transaction Net« 700 Per Cent. credit Is fixed at any point where there “Most of the money I spent at face is a bank. In the varying prices that value In Peking for government tele one can get when merchandising his grams, but as I was leaving I Invested American currency, the gold coin a few dollars in Chinese postage sometimes wins, the sliver coin sel stamps. At Harbin, where the Chi- j dom, and the greenback most often. nese and Russian post offices com- j But In the 18 countries I hove Just peted, 1 trusted my letters to the Chi visited, my letter of credit beat every nese post beenuse of a censorship on other one of the many ways I carried Russian mall, and Instead of buying my money. Chinese stamps In Russian currency “Once In a while fortune smiles on at a high exchange rate, I affixed the traveler. Last December, In Bom stamps which I had bought In Peking bay, I tried to cash a Colombo draft. with Chinese currency that was d e-! The bank could not quote a rate and based In Hankow. My profit on the sent It to Its Colombo office, advancing transaction ran over 700 j>er cent. me such money as I needed In the “Certain firms and mission boards! meantime. A week later. In Karachi, In China are In the habit of guarsn-1 I received the balance of the amount. teeing their workers a rate of at least I There had been bookkeeping and tele- two Chinese dollars for every gold dol- j I graph charges. But the rupee had de tar In their salary. Otherwise a gold creased In value during the time It salary would be subject to a decide,! took to complete the deal, and the re variation since Chinese dollars In 1915 were worth only 4G American cents, The Abigail Adams memorial at sult was that I received nearly two and In 1918 they were worth nearly Quincy, Mass., which was erected by hundred more rupees than I would a dollar. Under this arrangement em the Daughters of the Revolution In have had If the draft had been marked ployees of one American corporation memory of Mrs. Abigail Smith Adams, Bombay Instead of Colombo." were sending home more money each wife of John Adams, second President W ear Big Colored Handkerchiefa month than they received as salary. of the United States and mother of Paris.— A voluminous handkerchief, Two hundred dollars a month, con- ( the sixth. John Quincy Adams. Abi verted at two to one would bring fonr I gail Adams was one of the moat In a yard square and of the same color hundred Chinese dollars. For 220 of fluential women of her day and a writ and design as the blouse and veil, to these the American could buy Ameri er of note. The memorial shaft la the latest Parts fad. The women tuck can exchange for 8200, and he would erected on the spot from which Abi or pin the center of the handkerchief gail Adams and John Quincy Adams, In a aide pocket, not a breast pocket, have 190 Chinese dollars to live on. "Consular officers get a guaranteed j then a boy. witnessed the battle of leaving the long ends of the handker ___________ chief hanging out six or eight Inches- rata of exchange. Military officers Buuker H1IL Adventures With American Dollar «----------- Stupid Yankees CHINAMAN MAKES IT CLEAR Lose in Baltic Unbelievable Ignorance Is Costing Them the Trade of the New States Over There. TAIL TO GET BIG ORDERS British, German and Dutch Firms Are Getting M illions of D ollars Because ! T h e a tr e Better Informed Thant the American Business Men. Riga, Lntvla.—Millions of dollurs In rcudy cash are going to English, Ger man and Dutch firms from the Baltic states because of the almost unbe lievable unfumillurlty of even the largest American firms with foreign trading conditions, und even geog raphy, say Americans here. Dozens of big orders for which cnsh was actually in the bunks In New York have been lost to America be cause of what American representa tives In Baltic states term absolute stupidity. "It Is said," said one of these Amer icans In Riga, who has had to place many orders In Germany and in Eng land, when America could have had them, "that tlie heads of Amerlcun firms realize what the subordinates In clinrge of their foreign trading de partments are doing to them. ’’Most of them, brought up on so- called American efficiency systems that may work well at home but are absolutely hopeless abroad, try to do business In Europe according to ‘form 22’ or ‘form 24’ or whatever form they would apply to similar deuls In Am erica. "To Illustrate, not long ago I hud nn urgent cash order for 40,000 suits of underclothing for a Baltic state. I telegraphed to a big American firm. •What your price 40,000 suits heavy underwear cash against documents New York?’ “Two or three days later, when some From San Francisco to Venezuela bright young credit man had tried to digest this telegram, I received a cable saying: ‘Wire your credit rating and references.’ "Now, I suppose Ills ’form 22’ re quired him to do that, but I wired back, ‘My credit references are cash In New York bank. What are your prices?’ “Some days later I received a tele gram saying: ‘Price dollar twenty,’ or something like that “More valuable time was lost In an exchange of cablegrams asking what they meant, per garment or per suit. The result was that I wired an English firm. My answer from It was complete, Just what I wanted. The telegram gave the price per suit, weight of shipment, probable date of delivery nnd every thing that I wanted to know. The English firm got the order nnd took the cash In the New York bank. "When I write American firms for catalogs, I get catalogs without prices. I suppose they think It Is undignified to print them. Then I write for price lists nnd get price lists without cata logs. Print Complete Catalogs. “German or British firms print com plete catalogs, giving Just what one wnnts to know. They save valuable weeks of mall correspondence and get the orders.” Another American In trade In Rlgn showed the correspondent a cablegram from one of the biggest oil companies In America, In reply to his telegrnm which sa id : “Quote me price refined coal oil delivered Riga.” The answer rend: “Crude oil has gone up 20 cents a barrel.” “Now," said this American denier, "I didn’t want to know about crude oil and I haven’t time to figure out what effect n rise In Its price would have on coal oil thnt was badly wanted by my buyer. "In many of such ridiculous cases I have telegrnphed directly to the heads o f firms In America explaining the situation. But I haven’t the time to write all of them. So the Germans nnd English get the orders.” Incidentally, perhaps half of the let ters sent by American firms to the Baltic states bear only 2-cent postage stnmps, causing Indignant prospective buyers to dig down In their pockets to pay postage due In rubles or marks or whatever the unit happens to be. Some of them hear fantastic ad dresses, such as "Riga, Russia, via the Pacific." Gne letter In reply to nquest to ship for cnsh a big consignment of goods from New York to Rlgn said the firm waa sorry, "but had no shipping facilities on the Pacific." e e e e • e e e e e e Bone From Leg Grafted Into Backbone of Boy From continent to continent by airplane on a business trip was the pur pose with which James Gtls and two others snored from the Marina flying field. Han Francisco, anil headed out for Veneauela. Five thousand miles lie between the three Intrepid men and their destination. Gtls Is making a trip to his plan tation near Caracas, the Venezuelan capital. William Morris Is the pilot and C. F. West the mechanician. Anaconda. Mont. — With a piece of bone six Inches long tnk- en from his left leg nnd grafted Into a bone of his back, Eugene McHugh. aged 5 years, returned from St. James’ hospital. Butte, to his home In Anaconda. The hoy suffered Injuries which de veloped complications and de manded the operation, which was performed by Dr, E. F. Maglnn with apparent success.