Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, November 10, 1927, Page 4, Image 4

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    f
Thursday, November 10, 1927.
VEf IONIA EAGLE
FOUR
Ree sport—Contractor Ren strom
CHURCH OF CHRIST
¡recorded and unrecorded, there ha' been NOTICE OF CALL OF BOND
moves
92 000 yards rock and earth
(Christian)
'members of every community wl have Notice is hereby given to the
I in 5 weeks on Roscvelt highway,
holders
of
the
following
bond
’
of
| stood in he wr y of progress, some . self-
Bible school 10 a. m., “Hosea
City of Vernonia, Columbia i Preaches God’s Love,” Hosea 6, 11,
Silverton—local breeder sell. fine
ish reasons, others because of 1:
of < .:.e :nty,
Oregon;
Jersey
cows for shipment to Ha-
I 14. Communion and morning wor-
¡vision. Their pait in life seems to be
waii.
. ,ond No. 1 improvement
....._______ . district ,hip 11 a.m.
throwing the wrench into the machinery.
4, dated December 1, 1925,1
Hillsboro—Dr. Smith’s $50,000
Christian Endeavor 6:30 p.m.,
All greater buildeis, whether of empire, said bond being in denomination “The
Good and Bad in Newspapers new hospital opened for patronage.
large instil i.icns, ; $306.88; the above bond being j and Magazines,” George Bernar, Salem—Forty Marion County
S2 per year in Advance magnificent cities or
Issued every Thursday
have had to overcome obstacles created by edeemable at the option of said leader. Evening service at 7:30, dairymen start cow-testing associa­
city on December 1, 1927. That ‘
Entered as Second Class Matter, August 4, 1922 at the the visionless. Railroads, steamships, auto­ pursuant to said option, said bond . pecial Bible sermon. The public tion.
Post Office at Vernonia, Oregon, under the
mobiles, airplanes, telephones and all .v ’I be redeemed within 30 days I is : asked to bring their Bibles. Bibles Clatsop County cranberry crop
Act of March 3, 1879
the other gifts of inventive and industrial from the d-.ite of this notice, t. b/wit”1'11 d*fferent' languages are wanted, was larger than usual, and worth
genius to man were depreciated and re­ O.i t’i-3 First day of December 1927 aa we" as the oldest and oddest $15 a barrel.
MARK E. MOE, Editor
! ’ e y,,u nlay have. Let us make
tarded by these four-wheel brakes of upon presentation to the fiscal
the largest dis-
a > ncy of Oregon, in New York t'l‘s serv*ce onc
W. O. W. Vernonia - amp No. 655
WiDles ever made in the
C
to-wit: The National I’ark p'ay
AND NOW THE MODEL VILLAGE progress.
meets every Monday 1. ight nt sev'i.
Obstructionists and reactionaries play E . nk.
state.
at the Grange Hall. Visiting
community progress. Given the op- In case the holders of said bond Prnyermeeting and Bible study thirty
The irces that are working to make havoc
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Choir re­ members welcome.
poitunity,
they
tear
down
faster
than
f' 1 to present same at the time
ROBERT LINDSEY, C. C.
Ameri . 1 communities more attractive in
hearsal Friday at 7:30 p.m. The
can build. They resist every for­ a'fl place mentioned herein for ladies
C. C. DUSTEN CLERK.
appeal . ce will find encouragement in others
of
the
church
will
g've
a
step, often just for the sake, of go­ tr ■ redemption thereof, then the silver tea at the church parlors
the rep t of the United States department ward
Vernonia Loci e, No. 184 A.
■ rest thereon shall cease and
ing on record as being an objector.
<''
of ag ¡'.allure that country villages aie Though
ti
agency aforesaid will thereaf- next Wednesday afternoon, Nov­
F. A A. M., meets at Grange
they
are
ignored
by
the
knowing,
ember
16.
Friends
are
invited.
T
„
.
t< - pay only the amount >f such
improving in this respect.
Hall every Second and
harm they do is considerable and 1 too b 1 and the interest accrued there-
Theie is village planning as well as the
Fourth Thursday nights.
In The Recorder’s Court
often
underestimated.
o up to the said first day of
«
city pla ining, and its benefits are now That man is not a good citizen who op- E ember 1927.
Visitors Welcome
Clem
Bartley
plead
guilty
Mon
­
K. A. McNeill, Secretary.
manifesting themselves in picturesque poses a necessary public improvement be- Dated at Vernonia, Oregon on I day morning in the city recorder’s
hamlets which have got rid of their drab­ cause it docs not directly increase the tl 1st day of November 1927. court to charges of drunk and dis­
conduct, which
occurred
-.. ... ..._— * orderly
ness by paying a little attention to their value of his property. That man is not a
J. r*
C. r Lindley, Treasurer.
, according to the
City
of
Vernonia,
Ore.!
Saturday
night,
133
stieets, ¡etting aside tracts for diminutive good citizen who prefers to air out-of-
I.O.O.F.—Vernonia Lodge No.
complaint. Judge Reasoner fined
pa ks, : nd providing convenient ap- town business and industry. That man is Gold Hill—Beaver Theatre re-1 him
$25 and $20 respectively on 246 meets every Tuesday night
pr< aches.
at 8 o’clock, in Grange hall. Vis­
not an asset to his home town who is oy ned by Gold Hill “News” man. the two charges.
itors always welcome.
The department finds that although blind to all but its blemishes.
M. E. Graven, N. G.
nearly L 9,000,000 persons live in Ameri­ There is no room in Vernonia for the
John Glassner, Secretary.
can villages and a farming population of obstructionist.
30,000.000 depends on them for business,
AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY
educational and social purposes, such
STREET IMPROVEMENTS AT
Meets first and third Mon­
towns aie often ugly and make but a poor
days of each month at
REASONABLE OUTLAY
showing in comparison with the villages
the Legion Hall.
of other countries. Of course it may be As the tax bills climb and as towns and
McGraw, President
2-DOOR. SEDAN
said in p ill .ion that the charming Old cities wish street and other municipal im­
Vernonia Post
World villages have been settled for hun­ provements, the question becomes con­
119, American Le«
dreds of years and their inhabitants have stantly more pressing of how to secure
gion. Meets second
had greater opportunity to develop beauty these improvements and stay within reas­
and fourth Tues*
than are spiung up in a haphazard way onable expenditure budgets.
days each month, 8
p.m.
II. E. Mc­
and theie has not been sufficient time to From the standpoint of streets, Vaca­
Graw, Commander.
do away with the unsightly spots. It is not ville, California, has been squeezing the
to be expected that they would show from most out of its tax dollars. Old macadam
Nehalem Chapter 153, O. E. 3
Regular communi­
the outset the charm of European hamlets road bases, already well compacted by
cation first and
where lawns and gardens have been culti­ traffic, were corrected to grade with a
third Wednesdays
'The
vated for centuries and where there still leveling course of asphaltic concrete and
of each
month.
remain picturesque relics of bygone ages. finished with a relatively thin asphaltic
All visiting sisters
But n w that the civic spirit has pen­ concrete surface course. This practice sav­
and brothers wel­
come.
trated in o our country communities rapid ed the cost of tearing up the old pave­
Eessie Tapp, W. M.
progress towards appreciation and crea­ ments and also the cost of an entirely new
Leona McGraw, Secretary.
tion of beauty can be piedicted. Women’s base course. By following economical pav­ »
clubs and chambers of commerce are at ing practices, Vacaville has developed at
Mountain Heart
Even if the Pontiac Six did not command the high
resale prices that it docs, it n mid stilt enjoy the reputa­
work in the rural regions as well as in a relatively low cost an excellent system
Rebekah
Lodge No. 243
tion of being a “won lerful buy**. .. for it is the only car
No. 243, I.O.O.F., meets every sec­
urban c liters, and their efforts are gen­ of streets which have required very little
combining the advantages of superior six-cylinder per­
ond and fourth Thursdays in
erally in the direction of making their
formance and the luxuries of a Fisher body at a price of
Grange hall, Vernonia. Visitors al­
$745 • • • Hut with a high resale price which reduces the
communities attractive places in which to maintenance.
In the struggle for tax economy, one
ways welcome.
net cost of ownership, a Pontiac Six is actually more eco­
live. There is, of course, no reason why a community can profit by the satisfactory
nomical to own and drive . . . This is a direct result of
Mrs. Viola Treharne, N.G.
definite planning to design a low-price six that would
village ; lould not be as well laid out as experience of other communities.—Manu­
Mrs. Hazel Thompson, Sec.
win approval on the sound principles of genuine, long
a city, and the rural community has super­ facturer.
lived, inexpensive owner satisfaction • . • That is why
used car buyers are willing to pay more for the Pontiac
ior facilities for growing trees and flowers,
J. MASON DILLARD
Six when the original owner is ready to replace it • • •
which contribute as much as anything to­ ['onte wives’ attitude appears to be if
Come in — get a ride—and let us give you the facts.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
wards making a town beautiful.
they can not get all the money they prefet­
Next to Carkin Cleaning Works
New lower price» on all body types {Effective July 15 th): Coupe,
$745; Sport Roadster $745; Sport Cabriolet, $795; Landin Se­
Here Every Wednesday
to get alimony.
dan, $845; De Luxe Landau Sedan, $925. The Ntw Oah;and
COMMUNITY GROWTH
®!jr Urrmnita ïayk
t
t
Considering Its
High Resale Value
PONTIAC Sil t
JtsYouLess
To Own and Drive
While in a Persian marriage ceremony
Busy factories
actories are as vital to the city the bridegroom is not present, in this coun­
and tow n as good crops and fair market try he is merely among those present.
prices a e vital to the agricultural section.
The m i: ufacturing community—few Ame­ However, we notice that the cost of liv­
rican c< mmunities do not have one or ing isn’t yet l
sufficiently
high to make it
..........
more industries—does not appreciate the exclusive.
value ot its factories until a business de­
pression shuts them down and puts their This often seems to be the land of the
many employes out of work.
home of the easy.
Forme ly the inland community was a free and the
group o houses, a store or two, a church
Dealers say we are smoking less lobac-
and school. Its purpose seemed to have co, but don’t say more what.
been little more than a meeting and shop-
■-----------------
ping place for nearby farmers and their
Monday papers are interesting if you
iPiniln s Eventually, as the nation drift- care for mortality statistics.
ed toward industrialism, factories were
established in these little centers of popu-
Once the unsophisticated thought the
lation. These industries took what native world flat; now they think it square.
labor they found and acted as a magnet
for the surplus labor in the surrounding
It takes a lot of hard practice to give
area. The community grew and new in­ some girls that charming naturalness.
dustries and more labor came.
Today the process of industrial and Style hint: Divorce suits should be kept
community development is more complex. dark.
E p
e l as proved that, except in the
hugest cities, there is such a thing in the
Money talks, but not as much as man
community as a point of saturation. In­ talks money.
creasing the community population is not
a simple expedient of inviting new indus­ Most relatives are distant relatives when
tries to build there. Factories are built you are broke.
where there is a surplus of labor of a
kind required by the particular idustry.
Halloween is like one's back gate It
Steel mills are not established in a shoe can be carried too far.
manufacturing town, and vice versa. The
indust’v must go to the labor supply for Some women think the only way to keep
the labor surplus in this country is not a husband is in hot water.
so large tlm. industry can place its thumb
on ’’ any place.
“Auto is railroad’s greatest enemy,”
The community must build up its labor says an official. Yes. but when attacked
supply
it is to develop more industries ; by an auto a train wins.
■ —
hr a surplus of labor then the
community must extern! its industries. Profanity owes much of its technic to
Community developing is a scientific ra­ people who denosit used model chewing
ther than a hit-or-miss process.
gum on sidewalks.
THE OBSTRUCTIONIST
Exercise will prolong life, but so many
of those who have time to exercise are
Since the beginning of human history, not worth prolonging.
Alt-Amo icar. Six. $1045 to $1265. A ’I prices at factory. Deliver­
ed prices include minimum han ci . in g charges. Easy to pay on
the General Motors Time Payment Plan.
GILBY MOTOR COMPANY
Vernonia, Oregon
DR. ELLA WIGHT
DR. C. J. WIGHT
CHIROPRACTORS
Blood Pressure Examination
Rheumatism, Neuritis, Stomach,
Liver and Intestinal Troubles
Delayed Menstruation
LESTER SHEELEY
Attorney-at-Law
Vernonia
Oregon
DR. W. H. HURLEY
DENTISTRY AND X-RAY
Evenings by Appointment
Office over Brown Furniture Store.
Vernonia
Oregon
M. D. COLE
DENTIST
Vernonia
Oregon
MARK EVERY GRAVE
Memorials in Granite and Marble
At Reduced Prices
WRITE FOR PARTICULARS
MRS. M. N. LEWIS & CO.
| Fourth and MAin St.
Hillsboro
I — 1
■1
—■ 1—•
PORTLAND - VERNONIA
Truck Line
INSURED CARRIER
Vernonia Office
At the
I
Brazing Works
Avenue.
on Rose
Phene MA in 343
Portlrnd Office
Auto Freight Terminal
E. Water and Yamhill Streeta
EAst 8226
Office No. 11
DELIVER TO YOUR DOOR
a