Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, September 29, 1927, Page 4, Image 4

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    FOUR
Thursday, September 2fr, 1927
VERNON!/ EAGLE
I
Twenty-two persons have been
apprehended and prosecuted for
Press Service
Where there is no vision, the hu iting or killing migratory water-
fo jsts perish, and the people.” Dr. fo. 1 with the use of airplane sitisi
The difficulty of being yourself will C. A. Schenck.
th< federal migratory-bird treaty
r yr”
be admitted by any one who has ever
act became effective, in 1913, ui>-
There are 60 species of oak in
the administration of the Bi-
iaci'.' . i apologized for his own words or deeds by; the United States. Only about 14 de
survey of the United States
■ saying, “I was not myself when it happen­ of these are of commercial impor­ ological
department of agriculture. Viola­
ed.’' Perhaps this poor substitute for your tance as furniture woods.
tions of this character have occurr­
$2 per year in Advance better self is the creature of worry, or ill
Issued every Thursday
ed in 11 states. In 11 cases the
Furniture wood at the time of
ness, or some intemperance of body or I manufacture should have a mois- defendants were convicted and fines
Entered as Second Class Matter, August 4, 1922 at the spirit. But even the best of us experience'
|tur> content of about 6 per cent. totalling $240 imposed ranging
Post Office at Vernonia, Oregon, under the
$10 to $50 each. In two
the difficulty of being always at nis best. This is about the average of the from
Act of March 3, ¡879
cases the grand jury failed to re­
I
mo
sture
it
wil
lcontaln
during
its
To be at your best physically is a dif-
life, although this fluctuates with turn a true bill, and the remaining
MARK E. MOE, Editor
ficult achievement. The great singer must I the
nine cases were dismissed.
seasons and with the humidity
train his voice hour after hour before his in the
atmosphere.
Good dairy cows while milking
audience can listen to it in comfort. We
Oats make a splendid feed for should not be overly fat. They
SUNDAY SCHOOL
often remark: How naturally he sings! Yet dairy cows if they are ground and can well be fed enough to put on
behind that simple naturalness are years properly mixed with other con­ > I some flesh during the dry period
centrates. They are about as high I and should be fed so as to keep
The Sunday schools of the land are of grinding practice.
How much more difficult then it is to in digestible crude protein as wheat in good condition while in milk.
getting under way again after a period
br;in. They should be mixed with The general principles for correct
be
ourselves in that realm of intangible other
of vacation or desultory attendance. Those
feeds, such as corn, wheat feeding are (1) feed a balanced
who take upon themselves the burden of thing called personality. There seems to br.;n, and cottonseed meal.
ra ion, (2) feed according to pro­
the religious education of youth are ready be a certain depravity into which we nat­ A flaming meteorite, 25 pounds duction, all the good roughage that
cow will consume and generally
to buckle down as they did a generation urally gravitate. We set out nobly to be in weight, is reputed to have caus­ tfie
1 pound of concentrates for each
at
our
best,
and
fall
far
short
of
that
shin
­
or two ago. The reason why would be in­
ed a recent forest fire in the Walla
3% pounds of milk produced,
ing goal. We do the thing we should not W. 11a section of the Umatilla Na­ 3 If to a balanced
teresting and valuable.
ration is fed and the
tional
Forest
in
Oregon.
The
mete
­
have
done,
and
leave
undone
the
thing
cow gets too fat, the amount of
Time was when every child in every
orite,
according
to
reports
to
the
feed should be reduced somewhat.
community dressed in his best on Sunday that we should have done.
Forest Service, broke off a 28 Inch If she is producing heavily and
morning and started off to the church Yet out of this never ending conflict tire 20 feat from the ground and getting
too poor in flesh, she is
school fortified with his lesson learned of the spirit, comes peisonality, power and loc'ged in the stump.
either not receiving enough feed
during the week. He memorized the gol­ influence. It makes us what we are. It is American cuckoos, with a gene­ or the ration is not properly bal-
den text anil likely as not, a considerable the secret of such tremendous personal­ rally undesirable reputation deriv­ anced.
ed from observations upon the
number of verses from the Bible. A whole­ ities as Lincoln or Roosevelt.
St. Helens to build $58,000
Eu-opean species, are most highly sawer.
some taste for Biblical literature and a 1 Being one’s true self is not easy. But regarded
by
scientists
of
the
Biolo
­
facility in Biblical quotation were usually j beyond its accomplishments lie the re- gical survey who have studied their Russian Soviet agents buy 452
Iwards of life. The great Bard was right: food habits. Cuckoos feed largely blooded Oregon sheep for export
imparted in the Sunday school.
___
,
.....
„„„„
.u-*^
But times have changed. A college pro-' 0 thine own self be true, and it must on caterpillars. The stomach of to Russia.
fessor recently discovered that his class!
a$ the night the day, n „thou canst one cuckoo examined by a biolog- Oregon dairymen won first and
ist showed remains of 250 tent second butter prizes at California
in English literature could not identify 20 n°t then be false to any man.
caterpillars and another had eaten State Fair.
per cent of the Biblical allusions to be
217 fall web-worms. Cuckoos are
Portland—Thirteen ocean steam­
“THANK YOU”
found in a selected group of Tennyson’s
also fond of such pests as grass­ ers in port at one time, for full
hoppers, sawfly larve, and other cargoes.
poems. Familiarity with the Bible and at­
Oregon has 50,000 miles
tendance upon Sunday school are marked
Two little words that make the world in.iurous insects.
Stye Wrttnttta E igk
by the same ratio of decline.
The Sunday school today contends with
competitors never thought of in the olden
days. The waning power of parental auth­
ority is another enemy of stated religious
education. But the great weakness lies in
the antiquated equipment and the out­
grown practices of backward churches.
The contrast between the public school
and some Sunday schools is pathetic. The
child feels this disparity even though he
may not analyze it.
Happily, the churches understand this
weakness and are boldly attacking it. The
period of transition is upon the Sunday
school and upon methods in religious ed­
ucation. The problem is a big one but it
can and will be solved.
That it must be solved is the conviction
of every true American, whether church­
goer or not. Religious education is every
bit as fundamental to the welfare and hap­
piness of a democracy as secular educa­
tion. It must not decline either in favor
or usefulness. It must not even lag be­
hind.
'
*
U
ON BEISG YOURSELF
ran more smoothly, that ease the hard
places of life and absorb. many of its
shocks, are ‘‘Thank you.”
They are the sign of a gracious spirit.
They bespeak a generous attitude that
would not withold praise from those that
deserve it—a commodity with which too
many of us are stingy.
The majority of us take too much for
granted. In a land of plenty and among
a people of infinite resources, we expect
much and accept everything as a matter
of course.
Yet one’s best friend likes to hear an
appreciative word. While a compliment
deserved by an outsider and extended
frankly and generously will often convert
an enemy into an ally.
Appreciation, like charity, begins at
home and among those nearest and dear­
est. The prince of good fellows is a failure
and a hypocrite unless he takes his reputa­
tion home with him at night and arrays
it with smiles and pleasant words at the
breakfast table in the morning.
These two little words, “Thank you,”
makes the world run more smoothly.
Learn to speak them. No praise is ever
APPLES
wholly undeserved. Encouraging words are
Of the fruits that delight the eye and are as great a miracle worker as this old
please the palate, none is more deserving world knows.
of praise than the apple. Since prehistoric
times apples have been known and their
RENDEZVOUS
cultivation began in a remote period. With
the exception of those regions of ex­ The home has ceased to be a mere port
treme heat or cold, apples grow every­ of last resort and becomes a cherished
where. Even where the fruit is small the
And the radio is responsible.
trees are prized for the blossoms. There rendezvous.
If
one may eat dinner at home and at the
are almost as many varieties of apples as same time hear the melodious strains of
there are soils and climates, and they dif­ a symphony orchestra, if one may roll up
fer in size all the way from the Siberian the parlor rug and dance to the jazz jang-
Crab to the pound Pippin, and in flavor lings of a metropolitian dance orchestra,
from the tart Greening to the insipid Ben if one may sit in smoking jacket and slip­
Davis. Yet, common as the apple is, it is pers and not miss the evening church ser­
not commonplace nor has its popularity vice, there is no place like home.
ever waned. Alongside the peach, the pear The home is indebted to those new
the plum and the apricot, tne apple holds gold-dust twins, Neutrodyne and Hetro-
by general consent a sort of priority.
dyne, for bringing back the wandering
Whichever way you eat an apple, flock. The player- piano, the phonograph,
whether you pare and halve it with a the library, the open door all tried their
knife, or following the homespun fashion, skill at vamping with little success. Where
eat it out of hand, skins and all, it is they failed the radio succeeded. It isn’t
good. “An apple a day’’ may not ,‘keep the guaranteed against fading but the fireless
doctor away," altogether, but as a whole­ wave is overworking the hall hat rack.
some and healthful fruit, the apple is just­
When McCormic and Bori sang for the
ly famed, l’ies may come and pies may radio, theatrical producers predicted the
go, but apple pies go on forever. As for ! early decline of drama. The radio is in
apple butter, well, there may be better competition with late evening movies. As
“spreads” but up to date they have not long as the radio programs offer talent of
been invented or discovered. Sweet apple a high order the radio-owning public will
cider is the only interesting temperance stay home to hear and go out only to see.
drink in the world, and oh boy, to think
of an apple cobble swimming in a bowl of
A cowcatcher is what is put on engines
jersey cream!
to
catch autos.
The apple days are here. Fill up the bin.
»
The long evenings have come. Keep thet
home fires burning in the open fireplace., God made the country, but the car in
and likewise a plate or basket of red ap- front makes you eat it.
pies on the table in the living room. As
long as there are apples, particularly red
The hardest thing about loafing is buy­
apples, life is worth the struggle.
ing cigarettes on credit
Civilization is just a slow business of People who worry about everything will
giving wives a firmer grip on the reins. worry about nothing also.
S. Department of Agriculture
EARL SAY’S
X
!
When you take Your Car to a
Beginner, You are Financing
His Mechanical Education
Why Experiment on an In­
vestment, Such as you have
in Your Car.
roads, 4468 in the state highway
system.
-
,
Salem—Largest freshman regia-
tn tion in Willamette University
hit tory, 176 on opening day.
Hood River dairymen end poul-
try men plan cooperative buying aa-
sociation.
Baker—Medical Springs market
road surfacing costs $23,460.
Forest Grove—Post office prop­
erty renovated and improved.
W. O. W. Vernonia camp No. 655
meets every Monday night at sevcu
thirty at the Grange Hall. Visiting
members welcome.
A. F. KOSTER C. C.
C. C. DUSTEN CLERK.
Vernonia Lodge, No. 184 ▲.
F. «
& A. M., meets at Grange
A UaU I every Second and
> Fourth Thursday night».
Visitors Welcome
K. A. McNeill, Secretary.
I
r
I.O.O.F.—Vernonia Lodge No.
246 meets every Tuesday night
at 8 o’clock, in Grange hall. Vie-
itors always welcome.
Work in the 1st Degree Tuesday
October 4.
M. E. Graven, N. G.
John Galssmer, Sec.
AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY
Meets first and third Mon­
©
days of each month
the Legion Hall.
at
McGraw, President
Vernonia Post
119, American
.
La.
gion. Meets second
and fourth Tues,
days each
I
month, 8
jSS#’ P-m.
H. E. Me
G raw, , Commander.
Nehalem
Chapter
153,
O.
ï.^'.
Regular communi­
cation first aa4
third Wednesday»
of
each
month.
All visiting «¡»tara
and brothers w»l-
come.
Bessie Tapp, W. M.
Leona McGraw, Secretary.
Mountain Heart
Rebekah Lodge No. 243
No. 243, I.O.O.F., meets every sec­
ond and fourth Thursdays ia
Grange hall, Vernonia. Visitor» al­
ways welcome.
Mrs. Viola Treharne, N.G.
Mrs. Hazel Thompson, Saa.
J. MASON DILLARD
Earle’s
Repair - Works
Repairs to Anything
We Repair, Because We are Not
Trying to Sell New Ones
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Next
to Carkin Cleaning Werka
Here Every Wednesday
DR. ELLA WIGHT
DR. C. J. WIGHT
CHIROPRACTORS
Rheumatism, Neuritis, Stomach,
Liver and Intestinal Troubles
Delayed Menstruation
LESTER SHEELEY
Attorney-at-Law
Oreg«»
Vei nonia
DR. W. H. HURLEY
DENTISTRY AND X-RAY
Evenings by Appointment
Office over Brown Furniture Store.
Vernonia
Orefo*
M. D. COLE
Oregon=
American
DENTIST
Oreg«B
Vernonia
MARK EVERY GRAVE
Memorials in Granite and Maibl»
At Reduced Prices
WRITE FOR PARTICULARS
MRS. M. N. LEWIS & CO.
Fourth and MAin St.
Lumber
Company
HiHabere.
PORTLAND - VERNONIA
Truck Line
INSURED CARRIER
Vernonia Office
At the
Brazing Works
Avenue.
on
R om
Phone MAin 343
Portland Office
Auto Freight Terminal
E. Water and Yamhill Streets
EAst 8226
Office No. 11
DELIVER
TO
YOUR
DOOR
Ik