Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, July 14, 1927, Image 4

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    Thursday, July 14, 1927.
VERNONIA EAGLE
Farm Reminders
I at his post, bu> he is futile if he sleeps,
Elm trees of Oregon face de-
j Thus to recognize and to improve the I iruction
by elm leaf beetles un-
opportunity one must be broad awake to ■ss
,ss ruuiv
„. control measures are
radical
lit with the keen edge of the senses whet- npiied, says Don C. Mote of the
I ted. The Worker Who brings Only part Of xperiment station. In badly ln-
I his mind to his task is not worth the whole -sted districts the attacked trees
nf tho
nnv he
ho rirnwa
Ho will
defoliated unless
of
the pay
draws. He
will mis«
miss ehanros
chances I ■ protected
r® completely
by control
measures.
$2 per year in Advance not merely for himself, those that quick­ | eath to the tree results if the
Issued every Thursday
ly seized may promote his own fortunes, ivages of the beetle are not sLop-
Entered as Second Class Matter, August 4, 1922 at the but for the concern that when it secured ed.
Post Office at Vernonia, Oregon, under the
every bit of the m°. 1 he is. He must not To be successful sugar beet fac­
Act of March 3, 1879
expect a worker’s pay unless he serves ories must have plenty ci beets
f >r a long run and must have them
with all his senses aware.
'..'ARK E. MOE, Editor
season, points out G. R. Hy-
Urrtuniia îiaglr
STYLES S /ING BACK
T IE OLD PARLOR
very
slop, professor of farm crops at
ie Oregon experiment station. So
i addition to right soil and climate
irms and farmers and plenty of
bor and transportation are essen-
to enough beets every year
‘r r a a suecessfu
successful ] factory
factory run.
run. if|
If
the 6th day of August, 1927. said
date being more than six weeks af­
ter the date of the first publica­
tion of this summons herein; and
if you fail to appear and answer
or otherwise plead to plaintiff’s
said complaint, for want thereof
the plaintiff will apply to the court
for the relief prayed for in his
complaint, to-wit, for a decree for­
ever dissolving the bonds of mat­
rimony now existing between plain­
tiff and defendant, and for such
other and further relief as to the
court may seem equitable and
nroper.
This summons is served upon
ou by publication for six consecu­
SUMMONS
tive weeks in the Vernonia Eagle,
.a the Circuit Court for the State n pursuance of an order of Hon­
orable John Philip, judge of the
of Oregon for the County of
ounty court for Columbia county,
Columbia
Oregon, made and entered on the
.tizyna Jablonski,
:2nd day of June, 1927, in the
• bsence of Hon. J. A. Eakin, cir­
Plaintiff,
cuit judge.
vs
Date of first publication Thurs­
m Jablonski,
day. June 23, 1927. Dats of last
Defendant,
publication Thursday, August 4,
To Adam Jablonski, above named 1927.
Dillard & Dillard, attorneys for
<.< fondant:
plaintiff.
Residence and post of­
In the name of the State of Ore- fice
address, St. Helens, Oregon.
on, you are hereby required to
appear and answer the complaint
filed against you in the above suit
on or before six weeks from the
date of the first publication—of
this summons, to wit, six weeks
from June 2, 1927, and if you fail
W. O. W. Vernonia camp No. 655
<o so appear and answer said com­ meets every Monday night at seven
plaint, for want thereof the plain­ thirty at the Grange Hall. Visiting
tiff will apply to the court for the aembers welcome.
relief demanded in plaintiff’s com­
A. F. KOSTER C. C.
plaint to wit:
C. C. DUSTEN CLERK.
For a decree of absolute divorce
Vernonia Lodge, No. 184 A.
dissolving the bonds of matrimony
F. & A. M., meets at Grange
heretofore existing between plaintiff
: nd defendent, awarding plaintiff
Hall every Second and
all of the real property owned by
Fourth Thursday nights.
plaintiff and defendant in Wash­
Visitors Welcome
ington county, Oregon, for the sum
K. A. McNeill, Secretary.
of Nine-Hundred and Seventy-five
dollars, and for such other and
further relief as to the court may
seem meet and equitable.
I. O. O. F.— V ek NONI a L od GE, No. 246,
This summons is served upon you meets every Tuesday night at 8:00
by publication for six consecutive o'clock, in Grange Hall
O. E. Enstrum, N.G.
weeks in fhe Vernonia Eagle, in
G. B. Smith, Sec't’y.
pursuant of an order of Hon. John
Philip, Judge of the County Court, . .MERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY
of Columbia County, Oregon, made
anjl entered on the 31st day of
Meets first and third Man-
May, 1927, in the absence of Cir­
days of each month at
cuit Judge of said county.
the Legion Hall.
Mrs. H. E. McGraw, President
Lester Sheeley,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Vernonia Post
Residence and postoffice address,
119, American Le­
Vernonia, Oregon.
gion. Meets second
Date of first publication June
and fourth Tues­
2nd, 1927. Date of last publication
days each month, 8
14th day of July, 1927.
p.m.
H. E. Mc­
Graw, Commander.
ie yield of land is from 150 to
00 pounds. Potatoes ta ce from
(!5 to 100 hours per acre In the
c orn belt where large mac ines are
used in level fields a b ishel of
corn can be produced with about
,0 minutes labor, but in the south-
rn states it takes about 2 1-2 hours
to produce a bushel of corn. The
tops which take the most work
..re cotton, tobacco, sugar beets,
potatoes, fruit, and truck crops.
< orn, the grain sorghums, and
--------
There are a lot of folks who call them-
Somebody has waked up all at once to¡selves conservatives and laugh at young
the fact that the old parlor is gone. No, panblubbers with nn itically full and flap-
only here in America but in London and py trousers. But let (hem beware lest they . iong w;th these things fuel, wateri
all over England and almost everywhere open themselves to the recounting of some' , nd limestone may be had without
I xcessive cost, a successful factory
in the Western world. And the queer thing discomfiting history.
about it is that nobody seems to have seen It isn’t necessary io be a centenarian to, | location is indicated.
The commonest form of white
it go or going. Yesterday it was the core, bear witness to the 'istorical fact that the1 clover
pasture mixtures is the
the heart, t ie arcanum, the central sanc­ flaring trousers and high-buttoned jackets common for white
or little dutch sort.
tum sanctor. n of every full-fledged house. in vogue were cop od in their entirety ; is expensive but might well be
Today it is no more. Along with the old from the styles o' 50 years ago. Speci­ ; rown in the Pacific northwest !n-
room of state, the company headquarters mens from the ortgnal patterns exist in < .uding Oregon, says the experl-
> tent station. It is sod-forming
where the family put its best foot forward those rural homes where the head of the ljng-lifed
many
with
and stood tiie horsehair furniture around family is using his wedding costume for 1 aves rnd perennial
trailing branches that
in every sol' mn posture of the very prim­ hisSunday best. It isn’t more than a few : rike root at the joints. It is quite
mest propr. ty, there was the drawing­ years ago that the v . 11-groomed town boys 1 ardy and but little trouble with
room, too. A parlor and drawing room were “guying” the country rustics for the jests or disease. It is widely dis-
together lifted any house fortunate enough same wide trousei and short and high cibuted over the United States and
found in all moist districts of
to possess t.iem clear out of the common buttoned coats now gracing the windows < regon.
and gave t ;em caste and rank and glory of the most exclus’.e city tailors.
Several thousand acres of Ore-
If so muc i architectural grandeur were But let those who are prone to make on small grains fiave been certi-
still further buttressed in relief by a sit merry over mode'-' styles, whether for: ied by the experiment station ev-
ting room, dining room and perhaps a men or women, and to pride themselves! < ry year since 1918 resulting In
reat improvement of the type of
fiist-floor den, there was nothing more upon being the pro luct of a more sen­ t grain
produced. In some ceunties
needed of mortal distinction.
sible generation of youth, hearken back improvement from certification has
Anw now, complain certain elderly ro­ to the days of the Ascot tie which con­ I been so great as to make further
mancers, dreaming of times past, parlor sumed more silk then a shirt, and of the | c ortification work unnecessary. In
and drawing rooms have gone out and no­ Prince Albert and other obsolete cut­ other parts of the state the need
certification is pressing. Cer­
body saw them go. Of course, the explana­ aways, which would precipitate a riot if lor
tification may be undertaken by
tion is very simple. In all the old houses displayed in public today; and of the ' application to the county agent.
where parlor and drawing room layout light gray and bi ’ght lavender pants, Many crops of little value are
remains the same, a new fashion of use which without exaggeration would make often w.de’y advertised and plant­
and enjoyment has swept in and oblitera­ two pair of the most extrem e specimens ed, says II. A. Schoth of the ex­
periment station. As soon as their
ted the old boundaries. Families gradually of the modem make.
1 ck of worth, is found out adver-
got to living all over the house instead of With styles in clothes coming and go­ t sing an I sales slow down or stop
parking themselves in certain restricted ing over night, it ill behooves the most ? .together. This dormant period of­
parts of it and barring the rest from use conservative dressers to criticize or ridi­ ten lasts only a few years when
except on state occasions. In the new cule others for the manner in which they again seme enterprising person or
will renew the advertising and
houses the parlor was simply forgotten decorate their persons. We may be wear­ r f rm
ake frequent sales.
SUMMONS
and every room made for daily use.
ing tomorrow that which we laugh at to­ Exper.s have found that it takes In the Circuit Court of the State
In the beginning the parlor was intend­ day and, after all, while the city boy has l ore work to produce an acre of of Oregon for the County of Co­
lumbia.
ed for use. It was the part of the house been calling his country cousin a rube the tobacco
than any other crop. An Joseph W. Clark, Plaintiff, vs.
where the family was to have its private country boy has been calling his city cous­ acre of Burley tobacco yielding I Carrie Clark, Defendant.
To Carrie Clark, the above nam­
life pleasuie and comfort, safe from every in a boob.
from 800 to 1,000 pounds requires,!
ed defendant:
for growing and for preparing for!
intrusion. Nobody has ever told just how
In the name of the state of Ore­
the market, all the way from 350 to
it got away from that simple intention and
gon: You are hereby required to
VALUE OF A NAME
400 hours of labor. Cotton in the appear and answer the complaint
became the formidable and formal and
* istern states takes from 100 to filed against you in the above en-
stiff and forbidding thing it came to be.
What’s in a name? The answer for gen­ 125 hours of work per acre where titled suit on or before Saturday
In these latter days it has succumbed for erations back has been “nothing.” True a
T—-’T"
the very good reason that houses have rose by any other name would smell as
I .7
»
shrunk to the actual necessities, and the sweet but try to sell it under a different I’
old-time spaciousness ministering to pride name if you would better estimate the T
has been outlawed by that master econ- value of a name.
omist known as H. C. L.
The name of Alexander, Hannibal,
Caesar and Napoleon evacuated walled cit­
THE CHANCE GOES BY
ies, turned whole armies into disastrous
retreat,
and conquered empires. Those
A man does not always know his names obtained their magic from the
chance when it comes to him, but if he deeds of their owners.
lets it pass, he will learn in time that it Because his name might have been
went by. T r n, too late, he will overwhelm Smith would not have prevented Shake­
himself with reproaches for not seizing speare from writing his elasse tragedies
I
the golden opportunity.
and in spite of their common names Geo­
Business men decry tardiness in those rge Washington and Abraham Lincoln
whom they employ, for that means not won immortal fame. Genius is as acciden­
simply the waste of time that should be tal as its name.
Goodyear 1 ires
spent in work, but the failure to be present And yet American manufacturers spend
when opportunity, coming without warn­ millions annually on names. For the pur­
ing, knocks peremptorily and, being un­ pose of establishing a trade name business j
answered, summarily departs. Returning i enterprises conduct nation-wide and even
FU
belate , one may listen eagerly for a re­ I world-wide advertising campaigns. To
State
Laundry Company
petition of that summons to li e and com many manufacturers the name of their
fort Destiny face to face, but it does not product is their fortune, a fortune which I
FOR GOOD LAUNDRY WORK
come. The great chance appeared unher­ j could not be amassed without the aid of
alded and it unci us wanting and went a- advertising.
We call and delive' TUESDAYS and
way, leaving no address with which we Modern business had learned that the
FRIDAYS—Leave orders with S. Well
may communicate.
hive essentials for success in merchandis-i
Tailor, Phone MAin 891
For our chances do not come with brass­ ing are a worthy product, a trade-mark
band mus e and pennons waving. They ’ud an adequate advertising campaign, I
stealthily approach; they seldom advert s>. Advertising is as essential to retail bs
They come, like successful burglars, when iness as to the manufacture.
we expect them least. “If only we had
known!” we cry with vain regret. But they A hustler has no time for bad luck.
promptly went where there were others
waiting foi them, with trimmed lamps. The best nation in '.he world is explana­
These others seized what migh have been tion.
our own, and all our boasts of what we
might have done had our "luck" been dif­
ferent is unavailing.
f.
What is lu k? Most of the time it mean?
to be in the right place at the right mo­ There may b? safety in numbers, but
ment The oi e who is there is the winner not in auto numbers.
t
L
over one who is elswhere. And he who is
there must be present not simply in the The United States, with seven times as
physical sense; he must attend with all as much capital invested in the electric
nis faculties. As Shakespeare reminds
industry as has England, produces 12
it is of no use to have our eyes open f times as much electrical energy which is
i
“their sense is shut." A sentinel may be sold to 10 times as many customers.
. <11*
KUK .1VV1IC
»»»«JI
MV
..cv.
.V..Vv.v
<■
OAKLAND, PONTIAC,
CHEVROLET, STUDE-
■ BAKER.
I
rou arc always certain
of light food with_
J Crescent -
the Double Acting
Baking Powder
Lodge Directory
lichalem
Chapter
153,
O.
È.
S.
Regular communi­
cation
first and
third Wednesdays
of
each
month.
All visiting sisters
and brothers wel­
come.
Bessie Tapp, W. M.
1 cona McGraw, Secretary.
VERNONIA
GRANGE
The Vernonia Grange meets on th
second Saturday of every month a
~ :30 P. M. Any members of th
Grange living in or near Vernonia
i r visiting in the community, ar
< ordially invited to attend.
Mrs. Minnie Malmsten, Secretary
MOUNTAIN HEART
REBECCA LODGE No. 243. I.O.O.F
I'eets every second and Fourth
1 nursdays in Grange Hall—Vernonia
Visitors always welcome
I rs. Edna Kilby, N. G.
MRS. IRENE SPENCER. Sec’y
J. MASON DILLARD
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
I'ext
to Carkin Cleaning Works
Here Every Wednesday
DR. ELLA WIGHT
DR. C. J. WIGHT
CHIROPRACTORS
Rheumatism, Neuritis, Stomach,
Liver and Intestinal Troubles
Delayed Menctruation
LESTER SHEELEY
Attorney-at-Law
Vernonia
Oregon
DR. W. H. HURLEY
DENTISTRY AND X-RAY
Evenings by Appointment
C flee over Brown Furniture Store.
V inonia
Oregon
M. D. COLE
DENTIST
Vo: nonia
Oregon
MARK EVERY GRAVE
. morials in Granite and Marble
At Reduced Prices
WRITE FOR PARTICULARS
MRS. M. N. LEWIS & CO.
Fourth and MAin St.
Hillsboro.