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About Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974 | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1925)
fia glc Herminia Volume 3, VERNONIA, OREGON, FRIDAY JUNE 26,1925, MOUTHPIECE of the NEHALEM VALLEY EVANGELIST IS WANTED FOR HERRIN, ILLINOIS RELIGION “HELL BENT’’ FOR HEAVEN CITY THAT GOD HAS FORESAKEN Commandments Are All Dropped; Bible of Mini ster Must Have All Pages In It. The liXWin News, Herrin’s first established and oldest newspaper, has sent out the S. O. S. call for the evangelization of a city that many think God has forgotten, an(| the following open letter, sent to Lay man Evangelist Howard S. Williams, who is now closing series of meet- Ings in Mctropolis, III., follows: OREGON HAS BEES BUT IMPORTS MUCH HONEY Although Oregon has 100,000 colonies of bees, 10,000 beekeepers and $1,500.000 invested in bees and beekeeping equipment, many car loads of honey are imported into the state annually. The state is capable of supplying enough honey to meet the demands of immediate consump tioif and still tive enough remaining to supplant all of the syrup and much of the sugar now used in the state. Oregon has more tran 200,000 acres of alfalfa and at least as much fireweed. With a substantial in crease in the avreage of clover and Hungarian vetch in the Willamette valley and Douglas county, the state could provide bee pasture for at least 500,000 colonies. Advocates of increased production are making special effort to locate prospective beekeepers in <he most desirable but unoccupied places. A better understanding of the weather soil and marketing in particular lo calities will further successful bee keeping. The annual loss from Am erica) foul brood is estimated at ap proximately $25,000. This disease can be controlled or eliminated en tirely from most sections by using the area clean-up method, combined with adequatt follow-up inspection. Number 46 --------- COLUMBIA COUNTY--------- Advertising Medium of a Big Pay Roll Community r America’s Red Letter Paul Robinson, Editor and Owner Day The Fourth of July Is Notable for Other Happenings than the Declaration of Independence (By Earl W. Gage) i there were 6,000, and the aborig- , . i>»Bl Indian population numbered Although our greatest Fourth of, perhapa CapUin John cJ July came in 1776, when fifty-six Fremont had been sent to California daring men adopted the Declaration on an exploring expedition the year of Independence and this country previous. He was on his way to ’ became a nation, yet, before that Oregon when he was overtaken by event, the date played a strange part an officer from Washington with in the affairs of the brave men and message, ordering him to wait and women who had come from across cooperate with the Pacific squadron the seas to set up a new nation in in case of hostilities with Mexico.| the wilderness of the New World. The message had been in writing, This July 4 is a real red letter day; but the officer was obliged to de deep students of our history could stroy it while crossing Mexican ter enumerate all these events: ritory, after committing it to mem-' TO ALL FARMERS OR THOSE INTERESTED Arrangements have been made for conducting a farmers’ excursion from Columbia county to the John Jacob Astor experiment station near Astoria on June 29th. This will be Columbia county day at the experimnt station, and wt would like t ohave you arange to visit the station on this day if pos- sible. The branch experiment station near Astoria is doing a lot of work on pasture and forage crops, which is of special interest to farmers in Col umbia county, and you will have an opportunity to learn a great deal that is of value along this line. The plan of the excursion is to leave points in Columbia county in time to reach the Hotel Astoria a little before 10 a. m. At ten o’clock sharp, we will leave for the branch experiment station situated about four miles from Astoria, and assem- ble there at 10:30 for the purpose of visiting the crop experiments at the station. Mark this date, Monday, June 29, on your calendar so that you will not forget. Plan to attend the station on Columbia county day. Will you kindly advise me if you plan on at tending the station on that day, so I will know how many to expect to make th etrip. Geo. A. Nelson, coun ty agricultural agent, St. Helens, Or. ory. Accordingly, Fremont returned to California, and took up his head- quarters at Sutter's Fort. *1 A few days later a party of four-' teen Americans organized a small revolution on their own accord, cap- I against the government of Mexico. Needing a flag and not daring to use that of the United States, they THE HERRIN NEWS OFFICE July 4, 1754, Col. George Wash made one from a Mexican’s rebosa, Herrin, Ill., May 9, 1925. ington surrendered an army to the a yard wide and five feet long: The Mr. Howard S. Williams, enemy. It was only a small army, middle of the flag was occupied by Layman-Evangelist, but a fort was included. He exper- a picture of a grizzly bear, beneath Metropolis, HI. . ienced on this occasion his first de- which were the words, “California Dear Mr. Williams: feat in war, at the hands of th- Republic.” The temporary govern-1 Upon my return to Herrin yester French. Altrough at that time only ' ment thus established is known in day, I was told that you called at twenty-two years of age, Washing history as the “Bear Flag Govern the Herrin News office eurly in the ton had been placed in command of ment.” I ” ' ' week to see me. 1 regret that 1 WÜH a small body of troops, which was 1 Meanwhile, news had come of, II out of the city, for ever since our marching toward Fort Duquesne- At the outbreak of war along the Rio U GOVERNOR PIERCE AND MANY mutual friend, Judge Dewey of Ca- a point on the Monongahela river, . Grande, and July 4 Fremont called NOTABLES SPEAK. ———’ rio, called at my office in Spring less than forty miles from his des a meeting at Sonoma, which for-' THOMAS DOAN, ST. HELENS, field a few weeks ago and told me tination, he heard of the approach i mally proclaimed the independence ACCIDENT VICTIM so many worthy thingr about you; Large Attendance of Over Two of a party of French and Indians, > of California. He was appointed its Hundred sad Fifty are Present and insisted that you were the very ( sent to intercept him. Accordingly, > first govenor. • I * at Grange Dinner. River Boat Employe Slips Into man of the hour for Herrin’s present' he fell back to the Great Meadows, Soon afterward there came word Water; Search for Body needs, I have looked forward with fifty miles from Cumberland, and that Commodore Sloat had arrived Approximately two hundred and I Begun by Captain. no little pleasure to meeting you hastily erected a stockade which ho at Monterey, July 7, and had r*ised fifty people were present to a won and tell you what a harvest awaits called Fort Necessity. And it. was the American flag; also that by his Doane Sutherland, 17, son of Mr. you in thia -community which a lot1 derful banquet given by the Fern well named. i j orders Commander Montgomery of Hill community on Saturday, June and Mrs. C. D. Sutherland of St. of people from away think that God With the aid of a friendly Indian the United States sloop of war Ports- Helens, Ore., was drowned in tre 20, 1925. The music was furnished , has forgotten or deserted altogeth Sachem, Half King,Washington ad- mouth had taken possession of San Willamette river Tuesday night near er. Sometimes I am nearly persuad ' by the Menz-Tarbell orcrestra and vanced at night. Their commander Francisco, which was very much appreciated. the Eastern A Western lumber mill, ed to believe that there is a bit of was killed and several prisoners were' Sloatt having heard of he hos- foot of Twenty-first street, when he Governor Pierce gave a heart to truth in it. In the twenty years that I have heart talk on taxation with figures taken. It was the first bloodshed in tilities with Mixico, had sailed im- slipped and fell from the deck of a published a newspaper here I know of unusual interest, among them be the French and Indian war. A few mediately from Mazatlan for Cali- boat. ___ Oregon __ ___ ___ ____ ' days later Fort Necessity was storm- fornia, where he took possession has ____ more than At a late hour harbor police had of no time that Herrin was more ing that athirst for an oldtime religion, the doubled the bonded indebtedness of ed by 1,500 Indians ■»nd French, un- the country and raised the Ameri- been unsuccessful in an attempt to kind that the song says that “is good any state, making the average state dor De Villen, and; Washington can flag on his own responsibility. recover the body. Details of the drowning could not enough for me,” than right today.' property tax equally high; that the surrendered on honorable terms, ra- He was none to soon, for exactlly a We have endured for a long spell Oregon state property tax had been1 ther than have his entire company week later,July 14, the British man- be learnel, but it was believed the now a spurious brand of religion, lowered one anj one half million massacred. This was on the morning of-war Collingwood, commanded by lad fell into the water from the deck a sort of “Hell Bent for Heaven” dollars in spite of the repeal of the of July 4, 1764. Washington march Sir George Seymour arrived at Mon of the riverboat Tahoma, on which he sort, that teaches that God is hate1 income tax which would have ren-1 ed out with his army of 400 men, terey to proclaim British sover was employed as a deckhand and income tax which would have re-'drums beating and flags flying, and eignty. ____ ----- It --------------- — only a nar- of which his father is part owner. was thus _ by instead of love—that God is a God duced the state property tax by he and his soldiers returned peace- * row chance that England did not Captain Shepherd of the Tahoma of Vengeance. They have us all I become the possessor of the Golden assisted in the search for the body. mixtd up on the Commandments? another one and one half million ably to their homes. ( On this same Fourth of July, Ben- State, which he had coveted for Young'Sutherland was one of the The ’not' has been dropped, probably | dollars. State Senator Pete Zimmer- -- ---- waa a delegate .. . a'many years. _----- _ , | most prominent boys of the St. Hel man of Yamhill county, also Mr. jami n FrankliiP to fur convenience sake, and someone Nine wagons of anthracite coal ens younger set. He had graduated has inspired our people to kill, to Horrace Addis, field editor of the council held with the chiefs of the' bear false witness, etc., etc. Instead | Oregon Farmer, Rev. Jackson of | Six Tribes. The great statesman and were hauled 106 miles to Philadel- this month from the St. Helens high of obeying the injunction of “keel Rainier, Orris Kellar of Fern Hill far-sighted man made a speech, in'phia, July 4, 1812. Two of the loads school, where during the last year he ka a 1 _ Ll.l U._ 1J a.1__ ____ -fl___ -A. I saw . • . . ^ *1 _ _ _ --1 ing the Commandments,” we have Grange were peakers who had inter which he said the time was close at j sold for cost of transportation and was president of the student body, esting things to say. Mr. A. H. Tar hand when the various colonies the remainder were driven away His father is purchasing agent of "broken them,” broken nearly al) bell of Warren had charge of the would have to be brought together'without a buyer. Times have changed the St. Helens Lumber company, of them, over and over again. program and it was one to be long The father was notified of the in one great brotherhood, “for de- The sale was afterward denounced If your Bible has all the pages in it if the Commandments are there’ remembered. Fem Hill is to be con fense and other general purposes.” as a fraud, because the stuff was tragedy by telephone. Mrs. Suther intact, if Paul’s great essay on love gratulated on the kind of community Then came July 4,1776, with its “nothing but tones, and would not land, it was said, was vacationing at spirit which makes possible a day many events, chief among them be-' buTO«” fact beh*«- of coun,e’ Seaside, Oregon. is there, if the Sermon on the Mount Doane, better known to all the is there and you preach these things,1 such as last Saturday. ing the adoption of the Declaration that P*°P|e did not know how to U8e It is some undertaking to Mt high school boys of the county by come on to Herrin posthaste, for of Independence. The following year coal- I I the good tables and provide all the name of “Suds” was a star of here you are needed—needed more there was a celebration throughout July 4, 1826, Thomas Jefferson than any missionary was ever need-j things that were served on those the young republic. Of one of these died, aged eighty-three years. On the St. Helens high school in both I ed in Abyssinia, more than Liv- ( tables, but the Fern Hill ladies are I John Adams, future President of the the same day died John Adams, aged tootball where he played quarterback of an un and in the basketball team where past masters at that kind ingston was needed in darkest Afri United States, wrote: “Had either ninety-one yean James Monroe died he was one of the forwards, and is dertaking and everything moved as ca. General Howe or his roval master on the Fourth nf July, 1831, aged . considered one of the best players If you can accomplish only a few smoothly as though those in charge been on hand the show would have seventy-four. things, .you will have done great were professionals. Only community given them both a bad heartache.”( july 4> 1848> work waa 8Urted on in the county. good to Herrin, make us believe cooperation makes these things During the Revolution, the Fourth the Washington Monument in Wash- that God is love—that we should possible. of July seemed to be the date upon! ington. On that same day the theaty THREE BUILDINGS really love our neighbors, not to| TO RISE FOR FAIR which big events swung. The Ind- of peace with Mexico was proclam hate them nor carry guns to kill BIRTHDAY PARTY ians attacted Boonsboro, Kentucky,' ed at the capital city. July 4, 1851,1 them with, if you can only get peo f ’ GREATLY ENJOYED July 4, 1777. July 4, 1778, Major amid pomp and ceremony, President ST. HELENS, Or., June 21.—(Spe cial.)—The Columbia County Fair pie who have known each other fori Clarke captured Fort Kaskaskia Fillmore laid the corner-stone o f ten and twenty years to simply j The home of Mr. and Mrs. Louis from the British. The terrible mass-' the two great white marble Wings of board has „ begun work on three buildings at the new fair ground site greet one another when they pass Boeck was the scene of a very lively acree of the white settlers by Ind- the Capitol building. | on the highway, a short distança on the streets with a brief “good party last Saturday evening, when iafns and British in the Wyoming ju|y 4> ;1861, Abraham Lincoln morning,” surely you will have ac-j about a dozen of their friends mot valley took place on the same dato.'^^ congress for 400,000 mon. In south of Deer Island. They are the school building, complished a thing which we have to help remind Richard that he waa And it waa July 4, 1781, that Lord there was a nation-wide peace al) f tiled to bring about with long another year older, of which ho I Cornwallis evacuated Williamsburg, jubn<< on july 4. ln i»i^ when 30x60 feet; agricultural building, 46x70 feet with 14-foot walla, and anj patient efforts. fully realized before the evening Virginia. , th« nation'« birthday came, there waa art building, 30x60 feet. 'I am taking the library to hand was over. The evening was spent in JMy 4, 1828, the corner stone held in New York a great patriotic Concrete foundations have been you herewith my personal check for! dancing and playing games. A de of a mint building was laid in Phil- ' celebration in which Americhn citi- placed for the stock barn, which $50. which will assist in bringing lightful buffet supper waa served at your party to Herrin. Once here, Ii midnight. The guests departed hi adolphia. On July 4, 1845, the Tex-'sens of more than forty nationaMt- will be 60x100 feet and have accom > 1 modations for 125 head of cattle. want to assist you further finan the wee small hours of the morning, aa convention voted ^®r annexation ioe took part. to the United States, and bua *tort- Roadways will be constructed with Our Patent Bureau was ■ estab I cially. In addition, as publisher of wishing more such birthdays. Those lished on July 4, 1836, and on July the idea of permanency. There are the Herrin News, the city’s oldest | present were: their daughters, Mrs. ed the war with Mixico. July 4, 1846, the independence of 4, 1870, California’s constitution waa 100 acres in the fairground site. Tax and first established newspaper, I Anna Bond and daughter Helen from want to pledge you the unlimited Portland, also Mrs. Creson of Bend. California waa declared. There were formally adopted. July 4, 1912, both payers of Columbia county voted a at that time in California—then New Mixico and Arizona wore made special tax for the purchase. freedom of its news columns for. your work and, in addition, to give- Judge W. A. Harris, Mr. and Mrs. i part of Mexico ee m e 200 Ameri- 'states of the Union. Thus, wo have you irre .cv«»., w.w» any w d str.nearly all of them men of ex- many reasons for holding the Four-' Vernonia's “Flying Apes are you also also free access, without W. . t. „an, Hal), w. W. u. O. uauoway Galloway an and Mr. making Ufe worth living, to-day, in charge whatsoever, to its advertis- Egelus were in Portland on a buai- J coptional vigor of body and alert- th of July in patriotia reverence. National Republic.' Prineville. Ceatiaeed en RP • It was July 4, 1636,. that Roger Williams founded his settlement at Providence, Rhode Island. July 4. 1676, the colonists in Virginia de manded and were granted important rights by legislation. It was on July 4, 1744, that a v. st tract of land, containing the Blue Ridge country was bought from the Indians. NEW INDUSTRY NOW RUILDING IN VERNONIA PLANS AND CONSTRUC TION UNDER WAY MEANS ADDED PAY ROLL TO CITY Johnson - McGraw Shingle Company to Build Six Machine M i 11—Thirty Men to be Employed. Local men have formed a company, money up, plans all settled, machin ery bougrt and actual construction started this week on the large new shingle mill at Vernonia. The indus- try will be known as the Johnson- McGraw Shingle company. AU the cedar needed for many yean is assured and the building will be a large one and one of the best equipped mills in the entire north west. They are building a six-machine mill at the present and will employ about thirty men to start with, an added payroll to Vernonia of about $6,000 per month. Vernonia shingles will be on roofs from coast to coast and a great deal of the products will go to middle west and eastern states. Vernonia is glad to see thia new industry for the city as, with others bound to came, the city wUl keep its name as an “Industrial City." Here is success to the new shingle mill and the shingle weavers will be thrice welcome to our midst. REWARD FOR RECKLESS DRIVERS To the police department of all cities in Oregon, to traffic officers and the public in general: The executive board of the Ore gon State Motor association at its regular monthly meeting held in Portland, June 15, 1925, adopted the following resolution: “Be it resolved: that the Oregon State Motor associaiton, incorpora ted, will pay $100.00 reward for in formation leading to the arrest and conviction, under the Oregon Motor Vehicle act, of any driver of a motor vehicle who, through carlessneea or recklessness, causes the death of one or more persons through an auto mobile accident and fails to prompt ly report same to the proper authori ties as provided by law, and “Be it further resolved: that the Oregon State Motor association, in corporated, will pay a reward of $60 for information leading to the arrest and conviction, under the Oregon Motor Vehicle act, of any driver of a motor vehicle who, through carloM nesa or recklessness, causes injury to one or more persons through an auto mobile accident and fails to report same promptly to the proper authori ties as provided by law." The Oregon State Motor associa tion by, Joseph E. Dunne, president Geo. O. Brandenburg, secretary. MR. JOHNSON DIES ” All Vernonia was shocked thia week to learn that H. S. Johnson waa dead. Henry Johnson, the “Shingle Man,” as so many spokt of him. Mr. Johnson died in St. Helena Monday morning, we hear, of throat trouble following treatment for a cancer. Very few in Vernonia were aware of the fact that his condition was at all alarming. Mr. Johnson waa presi dent of the McGraw-Johnson Shingle company that are just ready to con struct a large mill in Vernonia, aa related eleewhere. His death at thia time in a great disappointment to Ma sorrowing company as well aa to the many friends in the community.