Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, January 16, 1930, Page 3, Image 3

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    Thur-day, January 16. 1930
Vernonia Eagle, Vernonia, Oregon
Page Three
Form Bull
Livir g and Learning
Ti j new Oa'.Ie 1 /
assembly. The Z
po ver than its pr
ckvc2r.ps more than forty per ecu-, more
r.
i
Getting the
nf It
“Even the bluest of i.
bloods,” says the w«ir ' *u of
Sing i'.toon
cestry far back without » hi - >1
Ing the gallo s or a pri- n”
studying the family ri ( * '
is good news.- South i’
King's High-
In Englund they
<
the king’s highway. fn »i I
States we also have our !.:oI
way, but ours is the
I la
and heaven pity the h '
v
who gets in the way. -Eo- ...: 7
script.
“Continent” and “Islaid”
The distinction between a ron'l
nent and an Island is priu iiv
Bize. A continent, how» ver. also
differs from an Island in its struc­
ture, which is that of a large basin
bordered by a mountain chain.
i
in, v.’I h insert showing instrument board
ri
¡c, i ’
Think It Over
Use No Hook»
Where confidence Is wanting, the
most beautiful flower in the garland
of love is missing.
>! • >!• >n etiquette gives ns
i. I : When in doubt u a
W»»uid this suggest stick-
ork into your table ne •igli-
find out whether he wns
I
Angeles Timos.
Cm> Point cf View
No run on my bank can drain it.
for my w* ilth Is not p-.’s-ession but
enjoyment.
Opini
i of Women
Is m t ea- y for nieu to be open
nln>..‘boa.-il will, women be
e women have clo.-ìiii (1 to be
limi nlaivi board with th: m
Aitivi • Stringer, uutlior of
siimi nn.l I.’*
______________________
Ideil Arrangement
An expert says golf n< *1 r ’ ’n
torfere with business, but th.n not
the question. The real difii •i:l!y L
to arrange matters so tl •; husi
ness will not interfere with golf.—
Philadelphia Inquirer.
Venerable Tree
The “bald cypress” tr.ie which ha
been standing at Santa Marin del
Tula, Mexico, is considered to he
the oldest tree in the world
it
is climated to be six thousand
years old.
r ————————
Ec.rlieat Stringed Instrument
An ancient vlolinlike instrument
with three to six strings, used in
Ireland and Wales, whs the first
stringed instrument to be played
with a bow. It was called a crowd
And on the Run
“Lookin’ fob trouble.” said Uncle
Klien, “is a waste of time. Jes’
stand armin’ doin’ nuflin’ an’ trouble
will come lookin’ fob you.”—Wash­
ington Star.
•
*
Try
li s on Your Koy
U - a n
hr, tldiil;
er of Ilei ion go
; 1 e fun they li
lil e,
i: .1
. ..-lina S -.vs
- ---
! —
Florida has more ¡han 2.0. M) miles
Th y Would
of coust line.
Most W. ,.’n mJ .v 1.. o.. n€
It mala ' ch feel apart fro
All Blow
.ah- : • 1. -Woman’s
The more .’in automobile horn 1 :
honks tin* tv :s Important is Its lUC-r Compuntoti.
sage.—Ark msus Gazette.
Made an L-oprccsion
“Mother,” rem::>ked little
Th • VZr n- EnJ
yenr-olil .i.i.e, ’take this
The first mistake that inn.-t Job aw .y : slm 1 -.s snllntei s I
hunters m ike is to use shoe h*. :'ior toes.”—1’: t a i: nder Ma gaz! ne.
Instead of brains.—American Mag
azine.
A
good
homemade
damp­
proofing paint for cellar walls'
Minute Change Record ' 1
or floor can be prepared by;
A change in current as small a
ilvim parrafin ip gasoline
10,(XX).00(i,0(Xlth of un ampere h i
or kerosine warmed to 80 de-i
been Indica I cd on ti nilcronometer.
gre3S F. Several coats of 10 to!
20 percent - solution (3-1 tol
FLeJlcss Advice
Don’t hide your light und r a 1 Mi pounds of parrafin per gal-!
bushel; use a refl?c!or and make Ion of gasoline) are usually ap­
the most of It.—Chicago News.
plied. The more diluted the so-1
lution is best for stone and the1
True Greatness
heavier one for brick or con-
A true great man will neither Crete. Work of this kind should'
trample on a worm or sneak to un only be done where there is j
emperor.—Franklin.
good ventilation and, as gaso­
line is higMy explosive, no open i
Th-s Only Way Out
flame
houlil be permitted to.
She calls her hoy friend '‘Exit" be in the vicinity of the opera-;
because that's how she gets out.— 1 tions. The gasoline or kerosine
Exchange.
may be warmed in a vessel of i
water previously heated.
Lnng Coast Li.na
Claim» Against Government
The government of the United
St.-Jos e.'.nnot bo sued without its
own cm.•»•Hl. Statutes, however,
provide i suits for compensation
of claims.
“vV rp” and “Woof”
In weaving, the warp refers to
the threads extending lengthwise In
the loom, which are crossed by the
woof, the I breads carried by the
shuttle.
Early Stage Innovation
It is sahl that the first charac­
ter impersonated by a woman on
the English stage was when an
actress appeared In “Othello.”
G'ld Heavier Than Lead
A ruble foot of lend weighs n
A
(Ittle more than 707 pounds.
cubic foot of gold weighs a little
more than 1.205 pounds.
In a Nutshell
You cannot prevent the birds of
sndi. ss from Hying over your head,
but you may prevent tlmm from
«topping to make their n. i< there.
February, 1866, was In one re­
spect the most remarkable month
no *
In the earth’s history. It had “
full moon.
Referee*. Haven
Feed such as oats, flax and
bk m milk contains practically
ali the nutrients of whole nuik linseed meal give]-) to steers to­
except the butterfat and is an ward the last of the feeding
•xccuent feed for growing calves, >eriod will put them in bet-
gm hg and fattening pigs when ter condition for shipping. Other
used as a supplement to corn,1 grains and all laxative feeds, in­
growing chicks, fattening poul- eluding silage and bay, should
try And laying hens. Tie cash ’»e reduced at least half dur­
value of skim milk fed on the'»ng the last two or three days
farm in well-balanced rations is before shipping. Some dry rough­
equal to the market value of age such as grass hay should be
such amounts of other feeds as fed.
have the same feeding value!
For calves, about 10 pounds Oi ___
dry skim milk or 10 to 12
pounds of commercial or horn-
mixed calf meals will take the
fdace of 100 pounds of skim
milk. For pork production, when
fed as a supplement, 100 poun,
Het ¿.nd celti water
of stint milk has a feeding va'
ue equal to 11 pound of corn
rooms
Pcr
plus 7 pounds of tankage. F
week
new at
laying hens, 10 pounds of skim
milk will take the place of,
15 pounds
of meat _____
scran. I
-bout __
,_____ ________
(Jnly sweet skim milk should
be fed to calves, but either
sweet or sour skim mlik may j
ROOMS
Neltaleni
Hotel
Jeb
Painting
and
Artistic Sign Paint-
ing
J. C. Henderson
Phone 1021
Speaking
oí
i
”
Vernonia
Mother's ¡¡read
ice To Dog Owners
Make Your Shoes
Give You Full
Service By
Having Them
Repaired
emonia
Every per, >:i owning or keeping any
a license fee of two dollars ($2.) for
dog over the age of eight (8) months
within the State of Oregon shall, not
a male or spayed hitch do^s and three
later than March 1st of each year or
Hospital
within 30 days after he becomes own­
is open for
business
the county clerk of the county in which
said person resides, a license for
er or keeper of such dog, procure from
such dog by paying to the county clerk
I
Breakfast Is Important
Crispy Ctcon and Golden Waffles
Spicy Sausages and Griddle Cakes
Savory Hani and creamed Chipped Beef.
Freight
Delivered To
and Called
For At
YOUf
'
Oregon
American
Lumber
Portland Vernonia Truck Line
For Freight Orders
*’
Lindsay
Lumber Co.
Phone 7F51
An Account of an Irishman
. O. Ale : ander
/ o TÍ m Ü jmi ací ~
look I-^N?
~t/oFA CMOUW . . rr V o.<SUT OU MV
T? was <M-2 25û
/A OkO-WMUT ’
Provides a hot cereal breakfast
tLi
• » Try it I 9^1
Door
Treharne
Vernonia
¿0
each dog-
J. W. HUNT
County Clerk
Our idea of a good breakfast is one of
these :
acu all \
os veros irs I
\AATtPiHN¿7/ ✓
penalty an additional sum of $2 for
W. A. Davis, Local Manager.
Res. 1052
Office Phone 1041
With it’s tantalizing odor will pep up that
laggard morning appetite.
r
herein provided shall be required, upon
procuring Buch license to pay as a
Trucks Leave Vernonia
9 A. M. Daily
Meat
TINNEY Or THE FORCE
dollars ($3.) for female dogs.
Any person who shall fail to pro­
cure such license within the time as
E. H. Salisbury
Nehalem Market
& Grocery
JPER.RY Wheathearts
Vernonia Bakery
Vernonia
ACROSS FROM
WASHINGTON SCHOOL
Start The
Day Right
No Full Moon in Month
Tn Hawaii football Is played in
bare feet and the players don’t kick
anything but the ball.—Duluth Her­
ald.
It’s a. good idea to i.gure ou­
the daily herd’ n eds for feet
for the next j ar well in ad
v: nee of planting time. Thou
Ttioug;i
o!’ course the quantity of feed
varies with th. cow’s size and
production,
the
average-sized
cow that is on ] .sture in summer
will need almo.t two tons of
hay or I ton ox’ hay and 2 tons
of silage yearly. High-producing
cews require annual],, from one
to two tons of grain or even
more, according to their p -
duction. The yearling heifer
In the Midway
Apartment building
Knocking or Boosting?
Mtn do make a great L ips do­
ing i flings, but the fact that they
are doing is important—not. the
thing, hut the doing.— Woman’s
Borne Companion.
Association
Jud Turkins says there Is no
use wlshli
you could live your
life over. You might not make the
same mist, kes, but you’d make
George McDonald, G. G. Holt
others jus* as bad.—Washington
two neighbors, forming a socal
Star.
bull ussoe-...t:on recently secured
i l'rom Arthur Moulton, of the
...„
Get; ng Right Start
An old raying reads: "He that Middale Guernsey farm at Kidge-
would eat a good dinner let him lield, Wash., a young Guernsey
eat a good breakfast.” In other bull, regarded in one of the best
words, to enjoy the whole day, one to be brought into Columbia
must make the right start.
county.
The young bull is both typey
Greatest of All Plaasuro
Mental pleasures never cloy; un­ and from wonderfull productive
like those of the body they are In- lines of creeding. On his sire’s
creased by repetition, approved ii f side he traces two wonderfully
by reflection and strengthened by eastern bulls. “Langwater Fisher­
enjoyment.—Colton.
man” and “Langwater French­
man,” the former of which has
French Tricolor
a sister which made 1003 pounds,
The blue and red cockade was the of fat in one year. On his dam’s
badge of the city of Paris. The
union of this and the Bourbon white side he is a grandson ox “Lang­
In ed the tricolor, the badge of water Khedive,” whose sister
holds a worlds record of 804.
i am o since 1789.
pounds of butterfat as a two-
year old and also holds the
Raveling»
Y ,:g ILrburn was eating a ba world championship in the show
: i a. ;vh'?n >he remarked rather ring
•t ¡fitly: “Goodness gracious,
The bull was brought over in
iiamma, this banana has a lot of a truck direct from Middale
Guernsey herd, and members of
the group expressed themselves
Getting Better and Better
The span of life lengthens. Our as delighted not only with the
national diet becomes more ra­ bull but also with the herd and
tional, our public health work more farm from which he comes. The
effective.—Woman’s Home Conipan Middale Farm is located right on
Ion.
the Pacific highway 9 miles north
cf Vancouver, and the herd con­
One Reason
sists oí over 40 animals. It
“How is it Hint fat folk
has just recently been devoped,
a laugh more tlmn ordinary
und is now re?:>rded as one of
asks h corn spondent. Th
the leadin:- Gu tnsey farms in
more of U m to have a goot
that part of th country.
needs small quantities of grain salt. If wood ashes are avail- equal part of oats or barley
and about one-half as much pas- able they may be added to the may be fed about once a
turage and roughage feeds as mixture with advantage at the week with good results. Clover
a mature cow. It is well to rate of one-third of the mix­ bay may be substituted for al­
plan for a little surplus of ture by weight. The mineral falfa if the latter is not avail­
roughage feeds, as any not con­ mixture should be kept where able. The hay should be cut in
sumed can be carried over to it will be dry and available at to inch strips before feeding.
next season.
all times.
Rutabaga», potatoes, cabbages
A good daily diet for rabbits mangels and lawn clippings are
Bred sows and pigs need some
bright
oats, . good
green
feeds. Greens --------
should
of - clean,
calcium and phosphorus in their consists
.
-------. —
-—-----
-
-
icy, well-cured
WEH-CUTCU UlXUllU
ration. Any combination of min- rolled barley,
alfalfa always be ixeau
fresh «11L*
and W«
clean and
étais which contains sufficient'^ay and a small quantity of'should be fed in limited quan-
lime and phosphoric acid and is green feed, preferably carrots, tities. Feed the rabbits twice a
palatable enough to be eaten Wheat bran mixed with an day^
freely will be satisfactory. The
following mixture, which is rec-
commended by the U. S. depart­
ment of agriculture, is palatable
contains the elements for sup­
plementing the grain feeds and
may be fed to the hogs on pas-
ture or dry lot: 50 pounds of
steamed bone meal, 25 pounds
ground limestone or airslacked
lime, 25 pounds 16 per cent acid
phosphate and 5 pounds common
_ i ruj¿ ISS OLOtR