Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, September 11, 1925, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    VERNONIA EAGLE
A-fvvrtMi’Y Rate«
Seta
per
incK
We eoUaet tue orfvertMiag the ftrwt
of every month.
PAUL S- ROBINSON.
E ditor
and
O wner .
Issued Every Friday.
Î2 00 Per Year.
and a lot of other truck for the toothsome “hot dog” here
comes a doctor to declare that “they are ruining the
stomachs and digestive organs of the American public.”
That’s afine indictment to return against our new national
dish, the nearest thing to a square meal that a dime will
purchase. And just at a time when the joys of driving
along a nice smooth pike lay in the fact that it was dot­
ted every mile or so with a “hot dog” stand. But such is
life. The things we learn to like most are sooner or later
marked “poison” and put on a top shelf where we can’t
reach them. And all because we haven’t yet learned that
about nine times out of ten the fellow who want to make
us believe that something isn’t good for us is only try­
ing to boost aomething else that ^e can get a profit out of.
M. A.
W. W. ESSELSTYN
VERNONIA BOOK « AR I STORE
Everything in Magazines Stationeiy, Pictures and
Books—School and Office Supplies
Art and Novelty Goods
We do Picture Framing of All Kinds
THE WORD “DADDY”
Several more murders the past week. One down by
Independance when a garage man was murdered because
the murdered wanted the owners Ford. He will probably
turn out to be crazy.
-------- o--------
IS THIS FACT APPRECIATED
T means money for you and a good boost for Vernonia.
The Vernonia Eagle has added 600 subscribers during
the past three weeks; that is going some. 3000 eyes now-
see your advertisement in the Eagle. Keep your name be­
fore them each week—make it a household’ word I Ad­
vertising is talking to your customers and inviting new
customers. Advertising rates in the Eagle are 25 cents
per inch, single column measure each week.
-------- o--------
SILVER ADVANCE MEANS EMPLOYEMENT
wonder if the average Vernonia man or woman
know what the word “Daddy” means to a child
W i 4, really
5 or 6 years old? To the boy. Daddy is an ideal, a man
so skilful! that he can set the pace in any impossible game;
so wise that he can build boats and slingshots and kites
that soar high; so heroric that he can go out each morn­
ing into the big world and come back each evening with­
out a scratch. To the girl daddy i§ the source of candy and
dolls and nice dresses; the teller of stories that delight
her; the big, strong man who catches her in his arms and
squeezes her “most to death.” He is her ideal, too- of man­
hood.
All around us as we go and come- we see these little
manife<ations of child-life, but we don’t think much
about them. They are taken just as a part of our every-day
life. Then there come*, through the columns of the news­
paper, perhaps, a call from a little child whose father ha*
strayed from home, and we begin to realize just how-
powerful Daddy is, and what he really means to someone
A few days ago we read of an instance of this kind, the
case of a little Milwaukee girl who died of a broken heart
because he Daddy had taken sick and “gone away.” Her
playmate, her child’s ide?.!, was absent and she refuse»'
to eat or to be consoled. Impossible, you say, in a child o
4. No it isn’t Just multiply a few times the intensity o.
child love that you see about you right here at home, am
you will have just that thing.
What does the word “Dad(|y” mean? Well- joined with
the word “Mother” -it means just about everything in the
child’s life, including at one end the material playmate
and the other divine power and love.
-------- o--------
THE HUMAN SIDE OF TELEPHONE SERVICE
A Waterman'» Ideal Fountain Pen ia
a useful gift that always makes the
boy happy.
We'd like to meet your youngster in our
•tore and fit hi* little hand with a Water­
man'«. Yea, the dip faatener adD hold tha
pen tight; he juat can't lone it.
May we tell you all alxiut the «poon feed and
Waterman*« uo-timc Limit guarantee?
J7 \ ER^ penny advance in the price per ounce for silver
means greater profits for hundreds of mining proper-
ties in the western states. The white metal is now selling
at around 70 cents an ounce.
Ore bodies which could not be profitably mined with
silver selling at lower figures can now b eworked and this
means prosperity for many states. There are few mines
that do not produce some silver as a byproduct.
Mining i5 a bread and butter industry, and its prosperi­
ty to a great extent influences the financial status of Our
Country.
-------- o--------
It was an awful air disaster that of the buckeling up
and falling of the mamouth American made airship
“Shenandoah.” The ship that cost two million dollars.
HE writer was recently in a telephone station in a
Fovrteen men met death in the plunge. Why will men
small mountain town. He had just placed a call for
keep on experimenting? The fowls of the air, the birds,
his office two hundred miles away. As he turned from
were created to fly. The fishes were created to swim and giving the necessary information to the operator, a portly
live in the water. The beasts, animals, of which man is lady with a baby in one arm and two children holding her
the chief, were created to walk or ride upon the earth. other hand, stepped up to the window and said to the op­
Would we defy the devine workings and plans set forth erator :
in the beginning? Yes man is never content and death is
“Do you know Dr. Black of Poitland, Oregon?”
the result. Flying to the North Pole was a failure. Flying
Naturally the operator did not, probably never having
to Honolulu was a failure. Every day we read of like fail­ been in Portland.
ure.-, and death from experiments with air craft. The
But she said, “What are his initials?”
auto kills fast enough, but there are a great many more
The lady with the children wasn’t certain, but in a
autos in every day use than air ships. Man had better keep courteous manner the telephone operator started out to
close to old Mother Earth where he belongs.
find Dr. Black- in a city 250 miles distant. A few moments
-------- o--------
later, the anxious mother was telling her story to the doc­
tor.
In the meantime I had talked with my office and w’as
Rev. Billy Sunday is the chief drawing card in Port­
land for the present and the big meetings will continue on my way.
This incident, a daily occurrence at thousands of tele­
for six weeks. Billy Sunday is a money getter and he sure
would have a good chance of getting the automobile if he phone stations, emphasizes the invaluable aid of the tele­
were soliciting Vernonia Eagle subscribers in the auto phone in American home and business life. No people on
contest. Besides getting the money, which is the main earth use the telephone as do Americans, because no other
point with Billy, he is a splendid conversationists, and country has such a telephone system.
-------- o--------
too, an orator, a public speaker, a spell-binder who drives
GROWING SERIOUS
his remarks home with gesture that have a first street Jew
storekeeper backed off the map. Mr. Sunday is a religious
THIN twenty years, says a recent bulletin issued by
man, in fact- his nightly lectures would indicate that. We
the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse
believe he is absolutely sincere and we believe he does
University, paper, as it is now is made, will become too
some good. You will enjoy hearing him talk, and his
Materials now’ considered oi
hobby is the “Old Time Religion,” where he calls a spade costly for ordinary use.
a spade and the devil the devil. The biggest objection to little value in the manufactuie of paper will have to be
Billy is the slang he uses, but this is an age of slang, and used for the printing of newspapers, magazines and
perhaps his remarks reach home better when salted with books. There are but two alternatives—either a good
modem slang. Our admiration is drawn to him for the substitute for wood pulp, or a reduction in the amount of
originality of that slang. As a speaker Sunday equals printed matter turned out—and the American public will
former President Roosevelt.
never consent to the latter.
-------- o--------
While some time ago lumber mills moved their chief
operations
to the Pacific coast and the South, some plants
A COFFEE STRIKE
still exist in the East, with their raw materials being
a considerable distance. Because their costly
C EVER AL months ago the price of coffee began shoot- brought
equipment
cannot be readily removed, paper plants re­
ing skyward in this country, and even now we are main for the
most part in New York and New England
paying considerably more per pound than we were pay­ states, but each
the source of supply of wood pulp
ing one year ago. But Vernonia coffee drinkers will be goes farther and year
farther
the north. In New York
glad to know that a break is in sighLand that, according state- it is said, only four into
companies have enough spruce
to a big eastern coffee merchant, it should come about as forest to insure steady operation
for ten years, and only
quickly as the advance came. Brazil controls the world’s one company is prepared for a twenty-year
Should
coffee market, and she shot the price up on a flimsy ex­ the Canadian government carry out its threat run.
of
an
em­
cuse- she doesn’t relish robbery in any form. So when the bargo on the exportation of spruce wood and wood pulp
price went up Americans here and there cut down a little a large part of the $200,000,000 investment represented
in their coffee drinking reduction was figured, Brazil
the American paper industry would be of little value.
was loser. She was actually getting more money when the in Reforestation,
the very thing we have urged for yeara,
price was low, because more coffee was being used. So aH citizens of Vernonia
can testify, is declared by experts
now, having learned her lesson, she is hunting for an ex­ to be our only salvation.
20 years from now
cuse to shift the price back toward normal—and it is may see us at the mercy of Otherwise
the
world
so far as paper for
safe to wager that she will not be long in finding that
printing purposese is concerned.
excuse.
-------- o-----
-------- o--------
M & M PHARMACY
Vernonia Hotel Bldg.
Across from Gilby Motor Co.
T
W
è
NO, COMPANY’S NOT COMING
I
F you drop a dish doth, company won’t coma, aava
as a matter of coincidence. Popular superatitiona Ilka
this are losing ground; ao ia the superstition that
there ia aomething mysteriously better about “eastern"
motor lubricants, merely because they coot more and
are made in the east
•
The Right Way to Judge Motor Oils
Mere than ever, motorists are discovering that the
teat of an oil is not where but how it is made, and how
h lubricate». That’s why Zerolene—refined from se­
lected western naphthenic base crudes—ia today suc­
cessfully lubricating more cars in the Pacific Coast
atatoo than any other oil made.
I
An Exclusive Process—What it Does
Lubricating qualities have never been more carefully
or successfully preserved than by the proceaeeo urr*
at Standard Oil Company refineries for the refining of
Zerolene: the Zerolene high-vacurm process, the Zero­
lene process of filtration through 40 tons of Florida Ful­
ler’s Barth, the refineries’ 15 positive checks for quality I
f
I
What Zerolene Will Do For Your Car
Zerolene will give your car better lubrication! it
increaaee the gasoline mileage, reduces cnrbon-removal
and maintenance costs and lengthens the life of any
engine in which it is used. Why pay tribute to a super­
stition? Insist on Zerolene. Always ask for Zerolene
by name.
ÿ
!
a
J
J
I
1
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
(CALIFORNIA»
MUZZLING THE DOG
i thought so. .Just about the time Americans acquired
the “hot dog” habit, and every carnival and country
fair and roadside stand began to popularize it and we
had learned to forego cheese and crackers and bologna
W
• •• <
•