Thursday, May 5, 1927 VERNONIA EAGLE Shr Rrrnnitia fcaijli’ Issued every Thursday $2 per year in Advance Entered as Second Class Matter. August 4, 1922 at the Post Office at Vernonia, Oregon, under the Act of March 3, 1879 MARK E. MOE, Editor MOTHER’S DAY Mothei’s Day will be widely observed throughout the nation May 8. Probably no day set apart for unofficial observance has had such extensive recognition in so short a time. The answer is obivious. No differences of religious faiths, no geogra­ phical frontiers, no chauvinistic race pride can qualify the universal affection man­ kind has for motherhood. Only where woman is a chattel, will the appeal of Mother’s Day fail to reach. Elswhere it has equired only the sugges­ tion to make Mother’s Day an occasion of devotion and adoration. So pervasive is the spirit of Mother’s Day that those who have only her memory' to cherish observe the day with the same propriety as those whose good fortune it is to have a mother to embrace or to hon­ or by message or floral symbol. Blessed is that son or daughter whose privilege it will be on Sunday to be in the presence of their mother. Cursed by their own in­ gratitude will be the son or daughter who neglects the opportunity to pay homage to her. Satisfied as the average mother is with so little, no child wil let Sunday pass with­ out in some fashion letting her know of the love in which she is held. THE ROSE Roses will bloom again soon, and the growers thereof will find it no hardship to rise early and abor late over their be­ loved bushes, nor any expense too great to bring these blooms to perfection. Ask the rose-grower why this is so, and he will reply something like this. “Other flowers seem to have limits beyond which their culture cannot be pushed. But the rose is the flower of infinite possibilities. No matter how perfect one bloom may seem, we can safely say that a still more perfect bloom may be achieved. There seems to be no limit to the culture of this wonderful flower.” The rose over who realizes the truth of this general statement has stumbled upon the Infinite among the flowers. The mas­ ter Cultuist is pressing toward the same revelation of beauty and harmony in the life of man. The rose is a symbol of life. Walt Whitman used to say that he found letters from God dropped every­ where along the street, and it some were passed by ignorantly or unconsciously, oth­ ers would promptly come. The rose, in its message of infinite per­ fection, beauty and growth, is such a let­ ter. tomers that vrices were lowrer and quality higher at another mercantile establ ;li- ment? In ether case the disloyal employe would loose ids job and the respect of all. But isn’t the citizen w'ho trades out of town just as disloyal to his home town as the employee who deprives his employer of business? Those wno buv by mail or go away to shop are telling the patrons of their town that they could do better elswhere. They take away from the home town merchants not.only their own bus­ iness but that of others. Like bargain-hunting and window-shop­ ping, buying at home, *with practice, be- :omes a good habit just as out-of-town trading grows upon one as a bad habit. And u is feared that most mail order and ocher foreign buying is from force of hab­ it rather than from any hope of profit or gain in satisfaction. Seldom is there a leg­ itimate excuse for trading elswhere than it home. What would be the dividends payable io Vernonia if every citizen on December 31, 1927, could truthfully say he or she had not violated a community resolution for 1927 to “buy at home?” The extra dividends that would accure to the bene­ fit of the comunity and each of its citizens would be more business for its merchants,, more money in ciculation, more employ­ ment and more prosperity for all. THE GRADE SCHOOL With the bond election voted down, local folk are now wondering what should be done to give the pupils classrooms that they need; it is certain that they should be taken out of the unsanitary rooms they now occupy in the basement of the Wash­ ington school. With the changing population in Ver­ nonia from single men to married men, we have a condition here of a growing child population in much greater propor­ tion to the increase in adult population. The school census shows a probability of an increase of about 80 in the grade school enrollment for next fall. Where room will he found for them is not known, but with the conditions rapidly becoming worse, it is apparent that something must be done about it. The school building that was proposed would have classroom facilities to accom­ modate the expected increase of the num­ ber of children for the next five years only. At the end of that time a cry would go up for more classrooms. And the ques­ tion of the taxpayers’ ability to pay at that time is a poor issue upon which to gamble now. The debt would take about 15 years to pay off; and every few years another bond issue. No, that is not right, nor good ’ business. A method of procedure for the future must be worked out which will not entail unnecessary expenditure of money and dill have the school needs amply provided for. That there may be no misunderstand­ ing again, let a public mass meeting be called where this matter can be threshed out to entire satisfaction. A GOOD RESOLUTION THE INVISIBLE SLAVES What would hapen if an employe of a bank should tell its patrons to do their China has four times as many people banking business elswhere, or if a sales­ as the United States, but the United States man in a store should whisper to the cus- has the equivalent of ten times the number of effective workers found in China. In an article in the Atlantic Monthly, Thomas T. Read lays down the principle that the only way to have material things is to work. Then he subjects this princi­ ple to further subdivision as follows: First, work must be done to avoid re­ petition, as piping water from the spring instead of continuously carrying it. Second, work must be annalyzed to do awav wth false motion. His third and last conclusion is that • the worker must be multiplied bv mach­ inery. The comparative output of work per Subscription Order Blank person in various countries varies as fol­ lows: China. I: India. 1 1-4; Russia. 2 1-2; F’-anee. 8 1-4: Germany, 12; Great Britian, 18: Canada, 20; United States, 30. Although the average wage is high in Enclosed is ($-‘.) (JC.Y.OO) far which \merica, the average cost of work is low. please enter one year's (two years'} Tt takes the European workman approxi­ subscription tor The Vernonia Eagle mately 10 times as long to make an auto­ to go to the following address: mobile as it takes the workman in Our Country, because of the highly efficient Name •hinerv and vast quantity of power which are the invisible slaves of our work- Address i men. VERNONIA EAGLE Note the special price of $3.00 for two years. On the showdown, a crook is always. ; shown up. Refor mwill continue as long os there is money in it for refomers. The Majestic Thomas Meighan forsakes the big city in his current Paramount ef­ fort, “The Canadian,” which arrives nt the Majestic on Saturday, and emerges a full fledged he-man of the open spaces, A complete corset manufacturing plant, with tons of machinery, hun­ dreds of workers and thousands of dollars worth of material, was con­ structed at Universal City for the filming of “The Wrong Mr. Wright” the Universal-Jewel pro­ duction starring Jean Hersholt which comes to the Majestic theatre Sunday. In which the hen-pecked hus­ band comes into his own. While W. C. Fields’ latest Paramount pic- .uie, “So’s Your Old Man,” which comes to the Majestic theatre Mon­ day, isn’t dedicated to the fathers of the world—it does give dad a hearty pat on the shoulder. “Blizzard,” the character piayed by Lon Chaney in "The Penalty, Tuesday and Wednesday, is a his­ trionic achievement that, once seen, will never be forgotten. This role is unique in the annals of the screen. Blizzard, the ledges master of San Francisco’s under­ world, whose satanic hatred of hu­ manity is tinged with the fantastic ■ruelty of an unbalanced mind, is perhaps the most unusual hero ever presented in a motion picture pro­ duction. a crowded brooder house as the pu lets get larger. The same limit­ er: area is used too long if they run in it until they are mature. It makes the yard less safe for future use in its regular rotation. W. O. W. Vernonia camp No. <41 The poultrymean who desired to meets every Monday night at seven protect his business income and thirty at the Grange Hall. Visiting safeguard his investment will, when members welcome. the pullets are roosting and fully A. F. KOSTER C. C. feathered, move them out on free C. C. DUSTEN CLERK. range, away from brooder house crowding and brooder house dan­ gers. Under average conditions the »4 Vernonia Lodge, No. 184 A. poultryman’s next move is to get his pullets out on free range by F. i A. M., meets at Grange the time they are ten weeks of Hall every Second and age. Fourth Thursday nights. Visitors Welcome The 22 national forests of Ore­ K. A. McNeill, Secretary. gon and Washington furnish sum­ Work in the fellowcraft degree mer grazing ■ grounds for nearly a April 28. million head of livestock. Included in the 1926 totals were 775,700 head of sheep, 108,900 head of cattle,- as well as smaller numbers of horses, goats and hogs. I. O.O. F.— V f . knonia L odgb , N o . 246, meets every Tuesday night at 8:0$ o'clock, in Grange Hall 'Lodge Directory O. E. Enstrum, N.G. G. B. Smith, Sec’t'y. To Your Credit AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY Meets 2nd and 4th Wed­ nesdays at the Grange hall. Mrs. H. E. McGraw, President Mrs. Earl Washburn, Secretary. A beautiful, tender and heart­ throbbing drama of a woman cor­ roded by jealousy who seeks re­ lief in a “good time.” The story of a woman who sacrificed her husband’s love for all that money can bring, and found the price too high. “The 4th Commandment,” at the Majestic Thursday and Fri­ day. Vernonia Post 119, American Le­ gion. Meets secend and fourth Tnes- days each month, 8 p.m. H. E. Mo- Graw, Commander. 153, O. E. 3. Regular eemnui- cation first and third Wednesdays of each month. All visiting sisters and brothers wel­ come. Bessie Tapp, W. M. Leona McGraw, Secretary. Nehalem 'Chapter Farm Reminders Ordinary window glass absorbs I the ultra violet rays from sun­ shine, thus prohibiting the real value of the sunshine from reach­ ing the bodies of the fowls. Poultry house windows sohuld be higed so they may be raised during days of sunshine in cases where direct sunlight is not reaching the fowls through open fronts or outside ex­ posure. Some use is now made of a glass substitute in brooder and laying houses, because they admit both sunlight and the ultra" violet rays. The average poultrymen supplies only charcoal, hard quarts, grit and oyster shell, to supplement the 1 mineral matter in grain and masn I ration. Where only one shell ma­ I terial feed is fed, there is no question but that oyster shell is the best source. However, in com­ mon practice it is best to provide a supply of granulated bone and a limerock grit, in adidtion to the three named above. A high per centage of Oregon poultrymen are now brooding their chicks on clean ground each year, informed H. E. Cosby, extension poultry specialist of the Oregon agricultural college. Some use port­ able brooder houses and move them to clean ground for each brood. Others use the permanent brooder­ houses with alternate yarding sys­ tems; with concrete runs; new gravel or sand yards or new soil hauled in and old soil removed. Such methods of management | re luce the dangers of a large num-1 ber of rhicks for a short time, i To leave pullets in any brooder­ yard until they are matured, even though the yard is new, is playing with fire. Ventilation is poor in When you stop at the receiv­ ing window of this bank and pass in a part of your earn­ ings, the a- mount is cred­ ited to your ac­ count, starting to earn money for you from the day you place it in our care. VERNONIA GRANGK The Vernonia Grange meets on th second Saturday of every month a 7:30 P. M. Any members of 8h Grange living in or near Vsrneaau or visiting in the commusity, ar cordially invited to attend. Mrs. Minnie Malmsten, Secretary MOUNTAIN HEART REBECCA LODGE No. 243. I.O.O.F Meets every second and Fourth Thursdays in Grange Hall— Vernonia Visitors always welcome Mrs. Edna Kilby, N. G. MRS. IRENE SPENCER. Sec'y R. I. HALL, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Office Phone 891— Residence 284 Vernonia, Oregon BANK OF J. MASON DILLARD ATTORNEY-AT-LAW VERNONIA Next to Carkin Cleaning Works Here Every Wednesday DR. ELLA WIGHT DR. C. J. WIGHT CHIROPRACTORS Rheumatism, Neuritis, Stomach, Liver and Intestinal Troubles Planting; Time Is Here at Last Delayed Menstruation LESTER SHEELEY Attorney-at-Law Vernonia Earliest of all Certified Seed Potatoes. BURBANK AND WHITE STAR Oregon DR. W. H. HURLEY DENTISTRY AND X-RAY Evenings by Appointment Office over Brown Furniture Store* Vernonia Oregon M. D. COLE No. 3 Malotte, slightly used cream Separator. $110.00—Cort new $145.00. DENTIST Vernonia Oregon MARK EVERY GRAVE Vernonia Trading Co. Memorials in Granite and Marble At Reduced Prices WRITE FOR PARTICULARS MRS. M. N. LEWIS A CO. Fourth and MAin St Hillsboro. *