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About Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974 | View Entire Issue (May 1, 1925)
» ——J ■■■■ VERNONIA EAGLE I Advertising Rates 25c ta par inch, single oulumn measure, each weak. We collect for advertising the first of every month. PAUL S. R 'BINSON. E ditor and O wner Issued Every Friday. The Original Hom« Paper, Standing for Progress, Fair Play, Home Pat $2 00 Per Year. Entered ns second-chss mutter August 4, 1922, at the post office at Ver nonia, Oregon. under the Act of March 3. 1379. ronage, Schools Law Enforcement, Good and The Home Beantifnl. Ail Accounts Must Bo Settled in Full ANOTHER KIND OF HOG . The ideal season of the year is upon us again, and thousands of people are taking advantage of the pretty Sundays to motoi about the neighborhood in which they live. Nature is putting on her spring dress, and displays something beautiful and attractive along every road that a car can be driven. If it is not something bright and beautiful growing within handy reach along the high way. then it is something attractive growing in some one’s yard. There were many complaints last spring of depre ciations around Vernonia along about the time the motor ing season opened—cases of valuable fruit trees being broken and damaged while in bloom, of yards being entered in the absence of the families and flowers ruth lessly snatched away or uprooted. We do not feel that our town people were entirely guilty of this; we want to believe it was the work in every instance of motorists from other sections who were driving in the region from which the offenses were reported. But regardless of whoever it was, it is the wrong thing to do. Love of nature and pride in our state should be strong enough to stop the breaking and tearing up of trees and shrubbery along our highway, and common sense ought to teach anyone that they have absolutely no right to enter the yard of another and take and destroy even a blade of grass that is growing there. If it is not stopped it will lead to serious consequences, and maybe a tragedy too shocking to contemplate. And it will also mean such widespread destruction that the next generation will curse us for—the des. auction of the natural beauty of the community in which we live anad which we should feel under moral obligation to help keep beautiful. WHERE IT GOES Whether we farm or not, we are dependant upon farms, so that is why it ought to interest everyone in Ver nonia to know that experts have just figured out where every penny of a farmer’s dollar goes. Hundreds of farm homes were included in a census recently taken, and from which a general estimate was made. It showed that food, rent and fuel are practically the only items directly provided wholly or in part by the farms. Twenty- six cents of each dollar spent by the farm family goes to the clothier, drygoods man, shoe dealer and milliner. Another 23 cents is divided between the grocer and the butcher, while auto upkeep, coal and other running ex penses cut out another slice of 21 cents. A dime of each dollar spent by the farmer’s family goes into school expenses, reading matter, vacation trips lodge and church support. The doctor, dentist and drug gist together get seven cents out of the dollar bill, while four cents goes on household goods, sewing, laundry sup plies and canning equipment. Life, health and fire insurance eat up another four cents, and the other four cents goes for tobacco, candy and haircuts. You will observe, of you study these figures, that a pretty generous slice of the faim dollar has to be spent in town. This shows us that the towns of this country are as dependent on the farms for prosperity as the farms are dependent on the towns. So, taking the two together, we have a mighty good reason why there should at all times be perfect harmony between town and farm. A MAN’S JOB 1 is a savings bank hook. It means freedom from worry, ability to seize opportunities, comfort and plenty in days to come. Why not own ! • h u v.i ,i<ieru1 book? A very few dollars will | i. u in possession and every entry made by the receiving teller will make the book more valuable. Do It today. •k°r. Henry Ford let ighbo have $5,000 orth tsock ' en he first tart auto plant and a few irs : g o that neij bor stock for $21,000,- v n look all of There isn’t a man in Ver nonia who wouldn’t resen1 being called a cucker, ano yet there art few among us who are not Mark T?. lin wrote his u vn life story, tl t’a'l , 9! in uices when and in it he admitted tha i n we (Oil’d have made he was a sucker to the ex g od r orey, b i g money, tent of putting $190,000 of hit f >1 so:n. s icker step his earnings into a typesett t ok in io wiong direct ing machine that wouldn’t io* But i no < isgrace to set type. But another man F /e been i sucke . to have started i n on the same i 'de a ’ . ke. The dis- thing and built a successful ■.ace cons ss in bemg a < the time, in one, so the whole world i veke* • all r* profited through Mark *OV pl • * -iig by th( mis* ii<! make. Twain’s experience a s a1 ikes \ BANK OF VERNONIA Vernonia, Oregon 3Î thi-. utr. t id MS fi' y Vo vili i ¿tí n nip! VERNONIA STEAM LAUNDRY K( JI D TR Í» I \Ri.S QUA'J . Y WC \K GUARANTEED St. Paul bl.25 Chici. ;o i'll.1 5 o. ¡er Sale M f 22 Vei onia .. Poin to .»ept. .tion, Modern in Every Respect YOUR CHOICE OF i'ine-t .rains Lin: tl vic S., P. A S. N. p. Two of Arier’ca’f •>. North Cap C. P £ O. C ental ! rnited -i;* S ., P. A S., C N C. Q. & Q. T eke s, I iri*. sr T emails, Etc r.f J. T. I ' >Y M. ALD Uu.; Aft. Gen. Phone Main jl • LWAY CO DR AND DELIVER UNITED Q«Kk Service Mac Says When Public Officials bloom out VERNONIA . Population, 2000. I High School and Standard Grade School. Pay Roll City—Mills, Logging. Farming. Dairying, Fruit, Vegetables P. A. & P. Ry. Town growing fust. On Inland Loop Highway Between Portland and Asteria. A Large Territory to Draw From. 49 Miles From Portland, 35 M’lcs From Forest Grove, 27 Miles From St. Helens. Many Opportunities in Vernonia. Best Hunting, Trapping and Fishing in the Northwest. An Industrial Center. r with new MONUMENTS Uniforms From now on you can purchase it’s time Monument* and Markers for eveiybody Tn both Marble and Granite For a great reduction in price, saving to the purchaser of from 10 to 25 per cent to spruce Come and be convinced M. N. LEWIS & CO. up a little Cor. 4th and Main Sts. Hillsboro, Oregon y I That car Typewriters would Late Models For sale on easy terms, or for rent, i • Vernonia Representative Wholesale Typewriter C J. G. C. Olsen Beall Electric Building r —-------------------------- —— I • look a lot better washed and polished. I Sponges I The insanity defense of various criminals is getting on the nerves of the patient public. Girls murder their mother and “get by” on a well paid lawyer’s plea. Jazz boys murder and plea insanity, mail robbers, highway men and all use the plea. And now comes “Inch and a quarter Jimmy,” claiming to be crazy and not respon sible. Rats, no wonder the public is getting disgusted. Suppose if all the Vernonia Bootleggers were arrested they would plea the insanity defense. 11 VOU CAN OWN Eugene may have her oil fields and Gold Hill her! gold and silver, but it’s in the little town of Wheeler,| on Nehalem Bay, that they ate finding diamonds in the rocks along the railroad tracks. We wouldn’t have be lieved it if Editor Nunn had not so stated. bit. A man’s job is his best friend. It clothes and feeds his wife a d children, pays the rent and supplies them with the wherewithal to develop and become cultivated. The least a man can do in return is to love his job. A man’s job is grateful. It is like a little garden that thrives on love. It will one day flower into fruit worth while for him and his to enjey. If you ask any successful man the teason for making good, he will tell you that first and foremost it is because he likes his work; indeed, he loves it. His whole heait and soul are wrapped up in it. His whole physical and mental energies are focused on it. He walks his work, he talks his work, he is entirely inseparable fiom his work, and that is the way every man woith his salt ought to be if he wants to make his work what it should be and make of himself what he wants to be.—Geribaldi News. ■ THE BEST BOOK Every 30 Days Editorial ■ ■ Why try to overlay or claim more than ones share. Seattle may claim Camp Lewis or Point Defiance, etc., but why should Portland spoil a perfectly good Rose Festival with a “Bathing Giris Parade" Leave that to [ Seaside. Be good sports, Portland, you’re intnging, and getting away from the subject. AS TO “SUCKERS” % Beat Weekly At! Medium VERNONIA EAGLE Fishing and Hunting and chamois Obtained Send model or sketch anil wc will promptly send you a report. Our book on Patent* ami Trade-marks will be sent to you on request. skins at the M. & M. Pharmacy Corner Across from Gilby Motor Co. PATENTS I D. SWIFT & CO. — PATENT LAWYER3—— 305 Seventh St., Washington, D. C* Emmott & Culver VERNONIA MEAT MARKET : r Choice selections of fresh killed Steer Beef. Fancy Veal and Grain Fed Hogs Specials For Saturday Beef Boils lOc-12 l-2c lb. Choice Steaks . 25c lb. Pot Roasts j r»c lb. Fresh Hamburger......... 15c lb. Pure Pork Saunnge . 25c lb. Weiners and Bologna 18c lb. Fresh Whipping Cream 35c pt. Kippered Salmon 30c lb. PURE OPEN KETTLE RENDERED LARD Bulk Ln rd, per lb............... 25< 2 lb». .. ................... 45c 5 lb. pails fl. 10 10 lb. pails ............. »2.05 Fresh l>ill Pickles 3 for 10c We Hnndlc nil Kinds of Fa Cheese W p carry a lance vnriety of Luncheon Meats Over 34 Yrir-.’ Experience___ I « /