Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, February 23, 1923, Image 3

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Knowledge Begins Where
Believing Stop«
Next to Cagle Office
SESSION AT SAL
ENTERS FINAL W 23J
Best Place to Eat
Governor Send« Special Mot­
Hormboe Countar
Many pains and aches ar* due to a
wrenched Spine or Skeleton.
Don’t tell the doctor where you are
Buffering. Aa a 3pinologiat he la trail­
ed to locate your weaknea«. Let him
tell you.
tage Asking Legislatur« to
Saturday Might«
A straight Chiropractor la one who
adjnata the apine with his hands.
Dr. Breitling Is troth a straight Chi­
ropractor and Mpinologiat, having had
16 years of active practise it^ Portland,
Ore.,
and thousands
patients to
his credit. He is an able man.
Fried Oysters
Mealt* at All Hours,
Get a Meal Ticket.
Abo Spselalh«« on lobio«’ «nd
G. C. SALE, Prop.
Chlldron’o DHoosoo
Graduate of Palmer Sch. ol of Chiro­
practic, Davenport, la,, Clans of '07
6th Floor Broadway Building, Bet.
Broadway and Morrison Sta.
Portland, Oregon
Phones: Main H60K. East 2464.
ACTIWITES IN OREGON
Vernonia Batten Senice
Recharging and Repairing
—of—
Storage Batteries
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Agency for the
Famous Westinghouse
Storage Battery
Why go out of town?
»ict® located with the
Ver: onia Brazing and Mac 'line
Works, on Rose Ave.;
Vernonia, Oregon
”Ibt Batteri Willi th iMgtr Lita”
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Vernonia Home Saisiy
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Fresh Home Made
Buns, Snails, Pies
and Cakes
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Mr«. C. Newman, Prop
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Th« larg«at Individual lumbar Iran»-
action avar coneummated in Oregon
waa closed when the Buehner Lumber
company mill and timber located on
Coos bay ware tranaferred to eaatarn
and southern operaton for an actual
caah consideration of approximately
>4.000,000.
Road patrolmen or auperviaora of
Lane county thia year will receive pay
ac the rate of >4 a day In cases whore
they have charge of one district each
and where they have charge of two
or more, their stipend will be >5 a day,
according to an order made by the
county court.
Draatic slashes In the city payroll
were made by the Pendleton elty coun­
cil on recommendation of Mayor Fee,
and two employee were cut from the
payroll entirely. The cuta range from
125 a month to «10, all salaries but
one being cut. The total saving In a
year will bo >6290.
Excavating for the new >135,000 hos­
pital to be erected by the Eugene Bible
university at the corner of Twelfth
avenue east and HUyard atreet, Eu­
gene, baa been started and work on
the superstructure will start aa soon
aa the basement la completed, it was
announced at the administration of­
fices of the school.
Governor Pierce, in an address given
before the members of the Willamette
Rax and Hemp Growers' association
of Salem, said he had boon converted
to the flax indnstry in Oregon since
hta election and had authorised John-
son Smith, warden of the penitentiary,
to enter Into a contract with the grow­
ers for the entire 1923 crop.
George Toplet returned to bis
mother's home in Corvallia after an
absence of 17 yearn. He ran away from
home whoa he waa IS and enlisted in
the navy. During the late war the
; mother received word that George had
I been killed in a naval engagement.
Hatching Eggs
From
HOGANIZED
White l.eghorns
(Tiuikard Strain)
$1.50 per Sotting
G. W. HIGDON
Ì
Oregon
•
Vernonia,
Plymouth Rocks
S. C. Anconas
EGGS
$1.50 P«r Setting
C. R. WAT1S
’r„
on Mill Spur
Vernonia, Oregon
I Toplet found a ll-year-oid elater at
I bis home whom he had never seen.
Reports that Henry J. (Hy) Eilers,
former head of the defunct Oregon
Ellers Music house of Portland, and
now sought by the police, la In Ham­
burg, Germany, were received by the
Portland police, who had been asked
by San Franclace authorities to arreat
him on a charge of conspiracy In con­
nection with lasting and paselng
worthlees checks.
Oregon loads all other states In the
volume of production per man in the
lumbar Industry, and also laada all
other lumber producing sections In
the amount of wages paid to common
labor m the lumber mills and logging
camps, according to a report just is­
sued by Ethelbert Stewart, United
States commissioner of labor, cover­
ing lumbering operations in the six
principal producing states.
Prospects of a short fruit crop in
the oast uad middle west this year,
and the fact there has been little
canned fruit carried over by the whole-
sal era la those sections, will combine
to make IMS a prosperous year tor
Pacific coaat cannere, ia the predic­
tion of J. O. Halt, manager ot the Eu­
gene Fruit Growers* association and
bead ot the fruit department of the
National Cannon' association, who has
just returned from Atlantic City. N. J.
when he attended Ute annual
▼•nUoa of tfeo aosoolatlaM
DOLLE MAGAZINE
Subscrintion Bureau
atalog Free.
Address
WILFRKD DOUR
10« lath St.
Portland, Ore.
Fine Orano et Klin Üried FMeh Lumber
A l.v»-- Mt«»ek of
’a M ,u’ !l
Win-tows, boon,
’ Roo’tn.l •v’d Ru.IdHÿ T’ancra.
When 1» CUTMANK rail and
to koir ntock uvei.
WEST ORKCON LUMBER CO.
Expedite Moat uree.
After the Dancr
Quality Counts
In workmanship, aa well aa in
material.
We one the beat of
Paints, and fully guarantee all
our work.
Dale & Enos
Salem. —-Following precedent, the
legislature started on the final wook
of the 40-day session with the usual
jam of unfinished business. It seems
to bo a habit of legislatures to put
off final action on important measures
until the closing days.
Governor Pierce look occasion tn a
special message delivered to both
housee to call attention to the foot
that after being in session for M days
practically none of the legislation
recommended In hta inaugural address
bad been pasted.
Ths particular legislation that the
executive urged the legislature to ex­
pedite Included the income tax bill,
the consolidation measure, the series
ot taxation bills, several bills increas­
ing the tax on foreign corporations,
irrigation measures and a bill creating
a state market agent.
When the house and senate recon-
: vened Monday morning all the major
: measures remained to bo considered.
The Income tax, general tax revision,
consolidation of state departments, ap­
propriation bills, fish bills and Irriga­
tion and road leglalatloa were un­
settled.
The measures which have paarvd
beth houses are mostly unimportant
and of no great interact te the state
at large. During the first five weeks
205 bills were introduced in the senate
and 249 in the house, a total ot CM
measures. Slxty-flvo bills received the
approval of both houses; >6 senate
measures and >0 from the house.
Compromise Inooms Tan «III Appears.
A compromise income tax MU has
been introduced ia the Monee. The
measure provldee for a graduated rate
on personal leoomea and a flat rate
on business and corporation incomes
The exemptions are similar te those
provided ia the federal income tax
law and the tax on personal Incomes
will range from one to ten par cent,
while the corporate and bustaoM tax
will bo four per cent.
A feature ot thia bHl la the exemp­
tion granted to owners of real prop­
erty.
Both the individual and the bnsi-
noM schedule carries a right ot deduc­
tion covering all taxes paid other than
Inheritance taxes, income taxes of the
state and taxes assessed for local ben­
efits of a hind tending to Increase the
value ot the property aaaoaeod.
It is also provided, however, that
further deduction of “the fair rental
value of all real estate owned** by the
taxpayer may bo made from the gross
earnings, provided that such deduc­
tion does not exceed < per cent of
the assessed value of the property.
The same deduction runs to the busi­
ness schedule as well aa te the Indi­
vidual.
New Consolidation «III.
A new consolidation blU waa In­
troduced in the senate Saturday, bear­
ing the names of 17 senators aa joint
authora, or enough senators to pass
it. Thia bill is said to have Men
tentatively approved by the governor,
and if ho really wants it the house
will undoubtedly peas the measure.
The new senate bill provldee tor a
atate welfare commissioner, state
commissioner of agriculture, state cor­
poration and laauranoe commissioner,
each to receive >4000 a year.
Offices ef state industrial aecidont
commission. Inspectors of child labor,
board of conciliation, commissioner ef
labor and etatiatlcs and board of
health are abolished and their dutiea
turned over to the atate welfare com­
missioner.
Offices of food and dairy commis­
sioner. sealer of weights and mean-
urea, pure seed board, limo board,
sanitary livestock board, board of
horticulture and the like are abolished
and their dutiea handled by the eom-
mioeionor of agriculture.
Offleoa ot state water beard and
water superintendent are abolished
and the duties attended by the atate
•BMtDWWF •
Offices of corporation and tn s a rance
commissioners are consolidated.
Oregon bureau of mtaee ia abolished
and Us dutiea transferred te the Ore­
gon Agricultural s e l lege.
•tate vocational edeeatiea board ia
abolished and the dutiea transferred
te eupertatondeat of public laatruetion.
Committee Approves Asteria Relief.
Legislation ter the roMof ef AMerta
waa approved by the ways and moans
provides that the state purchase As­
toria beads at par in the sum of •NO.-
MO, bearing Internet at 4 per eeat, bet
no internet to be oeUeeted for a ported
ot six yean. The asm of IM0.0M io
to bo appropriated for the purpose.
The Kuehn house bill prcfclMttag the
changing of registration at «art« sa­
nitations within N ddys prsas4tag pri­
mary elections paoeed tbe senate.
The Cary ice eroam MU. which pro­
yoked such a atom of protort Orean the
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foe cream manufacturers upon tta to-
troduction la the house, was passed
by the senate by a unanlmuoa vote.
The bill increases tbe butterfat sad
solids content of ice cream.
The senate paaoed bouse blU No. 77,
desigaed te aid in the enforcement ef
the prohibition laws of the atate.
The Mil requires the reglatratioc if
all distilling appurtenances with tbe
proper atate and federal officials sad
makes the presence of a still, worm,
.mash or any of the other oquipaaer.'.
or ingredients Incident to the distilla­
tion or browing of liquors prima teste
evidence that the owner or occupant
of tbe premise« la the owner ef the
tabooed paraphernalia.
Representative Keeney's bill, which
waa intended to place a tax on literary,
benevolent, charitable and scientific
institutions when operated for com­
pensation, was killed by the senate
through indefinite postponement.
Senator Dennis' bill which provides
that taxes levied la 1923 and 1924 ahall
be 10 per cent lower than the tax col­
lected In 1922 passed the senate with
only President Upton voting against
it. It applies to all tax levying bodies
and excepts only money raised to pay
principal or interest on bonded in­
debtedness heretofore contracted or to
pay salaries fixed by law.
Rduoatlon for Crippled Children.
The house, by unanimous vets,
passed a senate MU providing for the
educating of crippled children. Pro­
vision la made la this measure for the
setting aside in every district in which
one or more crippled children are en­
rolled of a “crippled children’s educa­
tional tend,** in proportion to the nam-
ber of such children In the district
ont of the general funds of the district
This fund is to be employed to provide
tor visiting teachers to be paid for eu
the basis of hourly teaching.
By the bare margin of one vota Rep-
reeentative Woodward's eight hour
day law tor the lumber indnstry was
passed by the bouse.
The bill, aa
amended, prcMdea that the penalties
tor violation ahall not be effective un­
til similar laws are enacted by Wash­
ington and Idaho.
The honse of representatives decided
against free text books for elementary
school children In Oregon when it
voted to accept the majority report of
the committee on education and in­
definitely postponed Repneentattvo
Woodward's free text booh bllL
Initiative Safeguarded.
Tbe house voted te safeguard the
initiative from frauds when K passed
the Kuehn Mil with M ayes against
20 neea anb Gordon and Kay absent.
¿The bill as passsd requires petitions
to bo filed with oounty clerks and
local registrars and provldee that eoua-
ty clerks shall publish notices advising
the people of the counties just where
petitions are available for signature.
Mrs. Simmons’ MU to make jury
duty compulsory upon women and re­
move from the law the right now ex­
isting of claiming exemption, passed
the house, the vote being >4 ayee and
N none
The bill not only removes the ex­
emption. but requires that one-half of
the jury panel in Multnomah county
must bo women, and one-fourth of
such panel in the balance of the eoun-
tiee.
Against the advice ef the state high­
way commiaaion. the house pernod
Graham’s bill authorising the refund­
ing of road bonds and use of the money
on primary market roads. Graham’s
plan Is to issus each year for market
reads an amount of bonds equal to
those retired for tbe state highways.
This plan will keep Oregon at the con­
stitutional limit for road bonds.
The Lewis bill te tax church prop­
erty failed In the house when 35 votes
were counted against the measure,
with >4 for it. and Burdick, the sole
member absent, thus defeating the
measure by a majority of 11 votes.
Legielatlve «rev It lee.
By a decisive vota the house voted
down Representative Lovejoy’s MU to
create a state board of coemetic thera­
py examiners.
Reduction of the salaries of all state
officials and employees. not fixed by
statute, approximately 19 per coat, is
proposed in a resolution adopted by
the senate.
'
Representative Blower's MU, régula-
tiag the sale ef firearms and reetriet-
Ing the carrying of the same by per­
sons other than sheriffs and penes of­
ficers, was defeated in the senate.
The house passed Senator Eddy's MU
te provide ter a state prohibition com­
missioner and assistants to be paid
from funds diverted by the counties
te the state as collected from liquor
law violators.
The senate refused to go on record
as favoring the release from federal
prisons of persons convicted of viola­
tions of the espionage act because el
expressions of opinion construed to
have been disloyal to the United «teten
In reap ease te the request of Qover-
ange to the legislatura resolutions won
tbe aovorner te coil a conference of
governors at Washington, Idaho, Mon
tena and California te oom M ot tbe
Hngr «H f— of texes en natural re
nüaeten ef five to Investigate irrtgatiee
WITH A
Big Future
Property is Bound to Advance
\V e offer exceptional buys in our new additions,
Sunrise and Park Addition«
Big Lotn, Fine Soil Good View,
$50 to $75 Each
f
1-4 Cash; balance*$LO per mouth.
A
Do not hesitate, but buy now wnile
you can get choice locations
G. B. RICHMOND
General Sales Agent.
Place to Trade, for Home or
Camp. We Supply your Needs
Groceries, Feed
Powder, Work Clothes
Oil and Gas
sergerson Bros.
Vernonia’s Old, Reliable Comer
Across from tl.c Bank.
HTfww’W’rwwi ww jiiiii pun owir
Every Day in Every Way
Business Gets Better Than Ever.
THERE’S A REASON
Coffee Unexcelled
Cream Station
For the benefit and convenience of the dairymen of
the Nehalem Valley and to help «well our
already large output of Maid O’Clover
B itter
have installed a
Cream Buying Station
Coyle & Coyle Meat Market
an«l ready to receive cream and pay Spot Cash for
««me at Portland Delivered Price leaa • amall
hand 11 ,g ind tranaporiai on Charge. Deliver your
cream to th - station and end your worrits about ioat
cj ns, spilled cream, and delayed remittances.
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Mutual’Creamery Co.
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Vernonia
Portland
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