Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, September 05, 1929, Page 4, Image 4

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    THUR., SEPTEMBER 8, IBM
VERNONIA EAGLE, VERNONIA, OREGON
PAGE FOUR
YOUTH IS SOUGHT
Hope Naw. ef Boy Will Prolong
Grandmother's Life
Somewhere this very morning
a lad is roaming far from hi*
Springfield, Mass., home—if in­
jury or deah has not befallen
him—the while his mother, Celia
Chodrofve, is sending queries to
all parts of the country in hope
of getting word of him.
His grandmother is critically
ill, and it is hoped that news of
his safety would prolong her life.
Hi* name is David J. Chodrowe
but his mother thinks he may be
using the name "David James.”
For those who may have seen
the lad, the mother gives this
description :
His height. 6 feet 2 inches;
weight, 195 pounds; complexion,
medium; eyebrows, dark and
heavy; eyes, hazel color; “quiet,
unassuming,
doesn’t
make
friends”; uses perfect English
and is a constant reader of good
literature—visits libraries.
His mother will be glad to
know if any one has seen him
any time in the past year, and
where.
Write to Mrs. Celia Chodrowe,
121 Daviston St., Springfield.
Mass.
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The wheels to be shown will
be original in effects. There will
be a predominance of wheels
and everything else too, for that
matter, with a comic element in
them. Everybody is assured a
good laugh ahd one darned good
time.
The American Legion golf
Don't forget Vernonia day tournament, which started Sun­
which is Thursday, September 12. day, is now well under way,
with many worth-while prizes to
be awarded in different flights.
Along the Parament
At the last regular meeting of
Raymon Casselman visited with Vernonia post, the members went
Edwin Harris at St. Mary’s hos­ on record approving a benefit
pital at Astoria, Ore.
Legion smoker which may be held
within the next few weeks.
Arthur Hixson spent the week
end visiting relatives at Van­
Legionnaire Voanick, who has
couver and returned to Verno­
been convalescing in the Veter­
nia Tuesday.
ans’ hospital at Portland, will
Robert Biard of Portland vis­ return to his home in the next
ited at the Heath home this week. week or two.
THE NEHALEM
VETERAN
Mrs. Bertha Holden of Natal
Coast-to-coast radio hookup
visited over the week end at service bus been arranged for
the Heath home.
the American Legion junior
world baseball series, which will
The Oriental exclusion law was justly enact­
Mr. and Mrs. Christenson and be explained by Graham McNam­
ed for the protection of American labor. It was
family spent the week end at ee, famous sports announcer who
Seaside and returned home Mon- will broadcast the games play by
realized that no American could raise a family,
day evening.
play. The National broadcasting
educate children and live up to American ideals if
company has given the Legion a
compelled to compete with Orientals.
Rev. and Mrs. Heverling from powerful network to carry the
Bellingham spent Sunday with boy baseball classic to the entire
The immigration laws are strict in prohibiting
Mr. and Mrs. Mamsten.
country. The junior championship
the further entrance of Chinese and Japanese into
of the world will be played in
Mrs. Lillie Malmsten, Mrs. the American association park at
this country yet, as far as the northwest lumber
Minnie Mamsten and Mrs. H. Louisville, Ky., September 4, 5
employee is concerned, the competition from COUNTY FAIR NEXT WEEK Strong
attended the county W. C. and 6. Each game will start at
Oriental labor is just as bad as it ever was for, Next week is the week of the T. U. picnic
at St. Helens last 2 p.m. central time and will be
while we have the front door shut, the back door biggest and best Columbia coun­ week.
broadcast continuously until fin­
ty fair that ever was or could
ished.
is wide open.
Otto Mitchner returned to
be. The trouble with most pre­
It is a known fact that 45 per cent of the em­ vious county fairs has been that work Monday after a four weeks
September 17 the constitution
Mr.
ployees of the sawmills and shingle mills of British they were too slow; there was lay-off caused by sickness.
of the United States will be 142
Wilark.
Mitchner
works
at
Columbia are Chinese, Japanese and Hindoos. They little of the spectacular or excit­
years old. Constitution week,
ing about them. But wait till you
September 15 to 21, will be cele­
Jack
Taylor
from
Scott
Mills,
work for wages and under conditions that no Ame­ see
this year’s Columbia countv
brated by many Legion posts
Ore.,
is
visiting
with
his
mother
rican could survive, yet the product of the sawmills fair of September 11-12-13-14, Mrs. Mitchner.
throughout the United States.
Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and
Daniel Webster, speaking at Con­
and shingle mills of British Columbia is allowed to Saturday.
will be some­
Miss Lillian Merrill left for cord, N. H., July 4, 1803, said:
come into this country free of all duty. As far as thing doing There
every minute, and Astoria Sunday to be at the “When we speak of preserving
American labor is concerned the situation is just then some. With horse racing, funeral of her chum, Miss Amelia the constitution, we mean not
bronco busting, performing trick Schults. Miss Amelia Schults died the paper on which it is written,
as bad as if the Orientals were here working in dogs,
there’s not a dull mo­ at the Columbia hospital August but the spirit which dwells in
our own mills, in fact it is even worse for, while ment etc.,
in any of the fair days.
27, at Astoria and was buried it’”
our mills and camps throughout Oregon and Wash­ But by far the greatest and September
1, at Oceanview ceme-
chief
attraction
of
the
fair
will
ington are operating five days per week in an ef­ be the mammoth display of fire­ tary.
Ex-service
men—Only four
fort to hold production down so that the markets works which will be set off on Bill Jackson returned to work months to go and veterans will
forever barred from filing
will not be glutted, the product of plants employ­ the 12 and 13th of September. Monday after a short layoff be
for the benefits of adjusted com­
These come on Thursday and Fri­ caused by illness.
ing Orientals operating six days per week is pour­ day
pensation. Remember, January 1,
and are respectively Verno­
ed into our markets at prices which our mills can­ nia day and St. Helen's Day. Dale and Kyle Clark returned
Gates, Ore., after spending
not meet and to just that extent the payrolls of Should it happen to rain on the a from
week visiting relatives.
evening of either one of those
Oregon and Washington are cut down. In other two days, one of the fireworks
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Allen re­
words, Americans are worked less to make allow- nights will just be postponed turned
to Vernonia Tuesday
one day.
anee for this foreign competition.
evening. They have been visiting
We have it from competent friends and relative* in western
Northwest lumber manufacturers have ask­ authority that the fireworks at
Oregon and California. They
ed for a duty on lumber and shingles, such at least the county fair will be even leave
for Salem Wednesday even­
more
specacular
than
those
fired
as Canada has for her own protection, for it must in Vernonia last Fourth of July ing.
be remembered that while the Canadian manufac­ during the stampede celebration. Mr. and Mrs. Dove Knight
turers ship their lumber into this country free of Many new effects, some of them will leave for Portland Thursday,
unheard of will be shown. One where they expect to make their
duty we cannot, with the exception of rough lum­ of
these, “The Coming of the future home. Mr. Knight will
ber, ship anything into Canada without paying a Zeppelin,
’’ is declared to be a work in the S. P. & S. freight
masterpiece of pyrotechnical art. depot.
25 per cent ad valorem duty.
something that has never
A powerful lobby maintained by a few con­ It been is seen
Mack Snider and son made a
before, but something
cerns having interests in Canada has been syste­ that, due to its originality and trip to Portland Sunday.
matically fighting the duty on lumber and shingles. striking qualities, will surely be Mrs. George Boss and chil­
by the various fireworks dren from Portland are visiting
Almost 100 per cent of the lumber manufacturers copied
companies In the future.
Mrs. A. W. Ridge and Mrs. A.
in Oregon and Washington are in favor of the duty Rockets of all sizes and shapes B.
Wridge.
will
be
used.
All
the
way
from
and within the next three or four weeks, when the
ounce baby rockets to eight
Albert Holmes of Rainier made
matter is again to come up for discussion, every two
pound monster rockets with ef- , a business trip to Vernonia the
man in both states regardless of what line of bus­ fects that will make everyone first of the week and visited
’ with his father, A. R. Holmes.
iness he is in, should in some manner, either gape with astonishment.
ORIENTAL LABOR
1930, is the dead line. If any
person knows the name of any
ex-service man who has not filed
for his compensation, turn his
name over to your post service
officer, who will assist him as
much as possible.
October 6-12 has been pro­
claimed by the president of the
United States and the governor
of Oregon as Fire Prevention
week, and clean-up week. Any
Legion post can render a service
to its community, state and na­
tion in joining in on a program
of this nature.
Scale insects which attack the
house ferns are controlled by
frequent applications of common
laundry soap, says the Oregon 1
experiment station. Four ounces
of soap is used to a gallon of
-
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-fj
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an abundance of litter. Soni*
cracked corn with the wheat
make* the feed more complete.
water. It is beet to wash the so-
lutiin from the plants about two
hours after application.
Wheat not suitable for thresh­
ing is sometimes stored away
after binding and fed by poul­
trymen as scratch feed in win­
ter. Grain fed this way furniahes
Klamath Falls—Construction »s
underway on hard surfacing road
south of here on The Dalles-Cat-
ifornia highway.
- sj ■■■- :mr-'-w
res
JOY
® Theatre
Coming Attractions
“THE TIP OFF ’
S. P. & s
Stages and 1 rains
Leave for Portland
STAGES
Starring Bill Cody—Thursday and Fri­
day, September 5, 6.—Friday, Sept. 6,
“The Manhattan Player»”
“IT CAN BE DONE”
Starring Glenn Tryon and Sue Carrol
Saturday
Evening and Sunday
September 7, 8
Matinee
WILLIAM BOYD IN—
Via St. Helens 7:00 a.m.
daily, 11:10
daily,
5:50
p.m. daily.
Via Forest Grove 7:00
a.m. daily except Sundays,
2:30 p.m. Mondays, 3:30
p.m. daily except Saturdays
and
Mondays,
5:30
p.m.
Saturdays.
>
“THE FLYING FOOL”
Liner Picture.
A Talking
Picture. SunJav
Sunday
Evening, September 8, 9,
Prevost and Tom O’Brien.
and
and
With
Montlav
Monday
Marie
Ted Well. In—
“THE BORDER WILDCAT"
Pirate, of Panama, A Talking Comedy
Tuesday and Wednesday, Sept. 10-11
United Rya. Train
11:50
a.m.
daily,
Portland 2.00 p.m.
arrive
M. W. Mumbach, city agent
Phone 863
R. M. Aldrich, station Agt.
Railway Station
Phone 161
United Railways Co.
S. P. & S. Trans. Co.
KNIGHTS OF THÉ ROARING ROAD
through a civic organization or by an individual
communication urge our senators to get behind the
tariff on lumber and shingles, for without the unit­
ed support of the entire state it is liable to be lost.
The lumber industry produces 60c of every
dollar that comes into either Oregon or Washing­
ton. It is our basic industry and as it cries for help
every man, woman and child should lend a
/■
Richfield
VOTERS KEPT POSTED
Probably at no previous election in this dis-
trict were the people furnished with a more com-
plete descriptive outline of the grade school con-t
ditions prevailing, the assessment of taxes, etc.,
than at the bond election held Tuesday.
Two members of the school board, W. w.
Wolff and A. C. Knauss furnished facts, figures
and all other information for the benefit of the
resident district tarpayer who was eligible to vote,
so that he could go to the polls, with an actual un­
derstanding of increased taxation.
The findings of the Citizens Advisory Board
committee which had been appointed by the school
board to assist in determining means to improve
grade school conditions, were published in a series
of articles in the Eagle, and letters were also mail­
ed by members of the committee, to those eligible
to vote, so that every conceivable fact regarding
the proposed school bond election, and the purpose
of holding such an election was brought to the at­
tention of the public.
The Eagle congratulates the students and
teachers of. Washington school on their prospects
of soon being housed in a modern beautiful school
building, and the home paper also wishes to thank
Messrs Wolff and Knauss for unselfishly giving
their personal time, advising the voting public, the
absolutely necessity of a new grade school, supply­
ing the individual resident taxpayer with straight
clean cut facts before the election.
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=aes=
Grcftt RacinÉ i
Drivers use0
Oie Gasoline of POWEK
A nnouncement
We have an
important
meiaage to convey to our
cuatomera and eapecially
thuse patronizing reatau-
rants.
Effective September 15
Hollywood Cafe
will be under
New Management
ouis M eyer , 1928, A. A. A.
Speedway Champion,
Harry Hart:,Leon Duray,Tom­
my Milton, Bob McDonough,
Ralph Hepburn and other
world famous drivers! On the
speed and power of their cars
depend fame and fortune—oft­
en their very lives! For them,
only the finest of everything.
I
The
i ASOLI!IE|
OF POWE,
the new manager»' name»
will be announced at •
Their choice of gasoline is sig­
nificant. With the pick of any
later date.
Of moat importance are
LINDSAY
LUMBER COMPANY
the—
PRICES
which are sure to meet
with the approval of ea­
TREHARNE
Phone 7F5I
pecially the wage earner,
the workingman.
Cu» Cohen
gasoline they wish, they have
chosen Richfield, and depend
on this famous California gas­
oline for their most grueling
tests of speed and endurance.
You can get powerful, easy
starting Richfield gasoline for
your tHtii car. Give your mo­
tor the best there is—Richfield
and Richlube Motor Oil. At
every blue and gold Rich­
field station—where you see
the famous Richtig
shield.
RICHFIELD
California’s Jwimous Racing" Oa jardine
Available at the following dealer’s-
BRIDGE
Q. W. Johnson, Manager
STREET OARAGE
Vernonia
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