Amateurs Will Fight Portland, Ori (Special)—The 1930 Pacific Coast Amateur boxing champinships will be held in Portland at the Civic auditorium Friday night, Feb- ruary 28th and Saturday night, March 1, under the auspices of Multnomah Amateur Athletic club. A large number of entries is expected. Boxers from the Pacific North west winning any of eight titles or those making the best show- ing will be sent to the National championships at Boston with all expenses paid. Practically all the winners and a large number of entrants in last year’s Pacific coast ama- teur boxing championships have turned professional. This will mean a large number of inex- perienced boxers entering the comin championships, with an equal chance of getting into the finals. Entry blanks may be had by writing to James J. Richard­ son, care Multnomah Amateur Athletic club, Portland, Ore. Wo Found More The college professor who says that there ore 507 known annoy­ ances In the world should make an­ other count. After changing a tire In the rain one man discovered that there nre almost that many con­ nected with that one operation.— Pathfinder Magazine. Denotes Authority The word •’plenary’’ means full and In a legal sense means com­ plete so far as authority Is con­ cerned. A plenary action Is one In which all parties concerned have full power of authority to act River Changed Course The Shenandoah river has not al­ ways pursued Its present course. It apparently crossed the Blue Ridge through Snickers gap, eight miles east of Berryville, Va., and contin­ ued eastward nearly parallel to the Potomac. They're Wi*e The wisdom that comes with age may be great stuff, hut we never have heard of a seventeen-year-old lass dolled np to look like sixty to give the Impression that she had It.—Cincinnati Enquirer. Chooee Company Wiiely It Is certain thnt either wise bearing or Ignorant carriage Is caught as men take diseases one from another; therefore let men take heed of their company.— Shakespeare. Hone*! Parent* - 1 and valid child study moth gin first of all with a willing n the part of the parents to they are not expert ‘ If they i are not—Woman’s Home • ' inion. Height of Jealou*y atlful birds are Jealous of one >r, says a naturalist; and one era to think wliat the feeling en peacocks and birds of par- must be.—Farm and Fireside. Long, Long Chance Idea of a smart man Is one, ’, who has a wife who has a • opinion of him after they nre _>d than she had before.—IIllls boro News-Herald. Unselfish Love Love never reasons, but profuse­ ly gives; gives, like a thoughtless prodlgnl. Its all, and trembles then done too little.—Hannah lest It has ‘ More. Of Danish Origin I State Board ot Health P rfectad Air Brake George Westinghouse In the au- uinn of 1803 completed bls work- tig model nlr brake. According to Scribner's “History of American In­ vention," the event took place In Pitt-burgh. After some difficulties In putting on a demonstration, a trial was made on the Panhandle railroad, and a dramatic Incident, which resulted In saving the life of a drayman during this trial, as­ sured success to the new device. Cason Transfer LEADING FLORIST 387 Washington St. Portland, Ore., Phone BEacon 3162 MARK EVERY GRAVE Memorials in granite and marble at reduced prices WRITE FOR PARTICULARS Oregon Monument Work> Fourth and Main St, Hillsboro In cooperation with U. S. Public Health Service Frederick D. Strieker, M. D., Collaborating Epidemiologist Common Sense Diets taken from the hatchery ail vice for hatching, it should be American potash industry, the lilcamd and thoroughly disin- United States still spends $18,- Union. Most of the coast streams fected to I destroy disease orga- 000,000 a year for potash im- A Just chastisement may bene­ . -v ----- — t ported from Europe. excellent fish- nisms before the eggs are — put' fit a man, though It seldom does; Arp K ure pr°v idin r /VI V- C 1Y111CU iVlllCVl ing. When clear water prevails, into it. Be sure that down and I Daily livestock reports of the but an unjust one changes all his blood to gall.—Oulda. _____ I the angler has little difficulty dirt have been removed from! b reau of agricultural economics _ . _ , , in taking the limit of steelhead the incubator. Disinfect the in-( aie now broadcast to South Cougar hunters of Oregon had or sahuon in most any of the terior of the machine as well / merica and Porto Rico from Record for Flatnea. The flattest surfaces In the world their best month in years when Btream# lhat run into the Pa- aS the egg trays and nursery station KDKA at Pittsburg. The are three disks In the bureau of in December they bagged a to- cqtlc drawers with an effect!.’0 dis- report includes the Pittsburgh, standards made from clear fused tai of 37 of the big eats. The Within the past two weeks, infer tant, such us saponified J.isev City, Lancaster, Chicago, quartz or silica glass. majority of the kills were made 40 yyy silverside s;;___ _ salmon have cresol rolution. i St. Louis and Kansas City mar- in those sections of the stale been released in the Rogue river Th1 ugh rapid progress is be- ki ts and the Boston wool mar- Two Thing* that are the favorite * ... 1 haunts hy the hatchery department ot establishing an ket. made "It’s not the big tilings that trou­ of deer. Charles H. Erwin of ble us,” observes a correspondent. lloaglin led the list for the the state game commission. A total of 10,000 salmon wera True! We can sit on a hill, but month with the slaughter of planted in Big Butte creek, not on a tack. -•'X and was pressed for honors tributary of the Rogue. by John Oblack of Molalla with Salmon eggs or trout c. Not So Pretty Scientists say the whale's sight a total of fiye. Gard Saunders are furnished by the state game of Elkton and Bud Kintzley of Isn't good. His looks aren't any­ commission to the public schools thing to boast of, either.—Arkan­ Fall creek each killed four cou-1 of the state for nature study. gars while Clay Ulam of Milo Hardly a week passes but what sas Gazette. and Dale Bonney of Drew each some teacher writes to Proddsd Onward accounted for three of the cats. Ryckman, superintendent Occasionally a man makes his Erwin in addition to killing the hatcheries, requesting eggs mark tn the world tiecnnse his wife six cougar bagged a wolf. the nature study classes. makes him too It—Capper's The planting of more than , The Rogue river is providing Weekly. / 100,000 trout ir> the streams of excellent fishing ; for southern Yamhill county 'has be'en started 0re8°n anglers according to a Famous Prison Spring by the hatchery department of letter received by Matt Ryckman The spring In Andersonville of hatcheries prison broke out In the center of the state game commission. Most superintendent the space between the stocknde and of them are being placed in the from R- M. Parr, deputy game the dead line. It was thus located not th Yamhill river and its tri-■ warden. "Fine weather and ma on the forbidden margin over which butaries and the work is being '^*s*’ ‘n R°K'le, “e re* no person was allowed to pass. carried oh under the direction Ports- Thus In order to have the benefits of M. F. Corrigan of McMinn­ of the water It was necessary to ville, a member of the commo-‘ The housewife should refuse have Captain Wirtz give permission to accept a can of food from to have It brought within the lines. sion. “Central and southern Oregon V*e grocer when the can shows Bird.’ "Flight Feather.” holds no corner on all the good signs of leakage, bulges at the It Is believed that In the devel­ fishing in the state,” declared a end or snaps back when pressed. opment of wings and powers of LaGrande sportsman when vi­ Upon opening an apparently good flight In birds those feathers near­ siting Portland a few days ago. can, if the food is mo'.dy, dis­ est the body were the first to be­ “We have the Wallowa rive:-. integrated, cloudy or otherwise come serviceable, but now the most Wallowa lake and Minam and abnormal, it should not be eaten. Important flight feathers are those of the outer margin. Wing feath­ other streams where trout of Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co. ers vary In strength, shape and pow­ large size are plentiful and await er of Hight according to the mode the man who has the average chased Willamette telephone com- of life of the different birds. skill with the fly.” During the pany which serves Dallas, Intle- past year, ,as in previous seasons pendence, Monmouth and Falls Country’* Boundary Line* the state game commission had City in Potk county, The Canadian boundary line Is planted a large number of trout 3,986 miles, the Mexican border, of various species in Blue Moun- Before the time comes 1,744 miles. The Atlantic coast tain streams Most of them are putting the incabator into ser- line is 2,026 miles, the Gulf coast, 1,573 miles, and the Pacific coast, 1,860 miles, making a total of 10,- 698 miles for the boundary line. The coast line measures not take Into account th« Indentations of small bays and river mouths. Injustice Rankles There have been, and ure, ma- ■ ny diet fads. Going without breakfast is a fad. It may be all right in individual cases, but generally it is all wrong. These people frequently eat enough Copyright Procedure The copyright luw Is specific as dinner to last twentyfour hours to the place where the copyright no­ over-working their digestive sys- tice shall appear and as to the form terns and throwing a sodden load thnt the copyright notice shall lake. on their organs of excretion, Many court decisions have been Common sense in eating, with handed down ruling that if these a balanced diet and cutting such specific requirements are not fol­ I foods as are not properly di- lowed, the copyright Is Invalid. I gested or excreted and noting Other decisions have established i gvaav.wi azvcMVal Of the indi- that publication without proper no­ ! the general health tice Is a dedication of the material vidual is the only way to acquire the end desired by a change in to the public. diet. Food should not be eaten too Individual As we cannot gain strength by fast and should not be taken watching the physical exercise of too hot or too cold. Any __ , vio- others, or mental power by their lent exercise after meals is in­ study neither can we gain spiritual advisable; neither is it advis­ strength by admiring their faith and able to lie down and sleep after good works. We determine our own strength or weakness by what we a heavy meal. There is no more do with the powers thnt have been harm, if one requires it, in tak­ ing some simple, easily digest­ given us.—Exchange. ible food at bed time than there is for a baby to be fed and Ireland’* Bottomle** Bog* The Irish hogs are almost aa put to bed. When one is very tired, he great In extent ns those of Ger­ many. While the latter nre from should not eat immediately as 0 to 20 feet deep the Irish vurlety digestion will be prevented. Most often reaches 10 feet, and are some­ any nervous disturbance ___ and times apparently bottomless. It has pain of any kind will interfere been calculated that each acre of bog contains 18,231 tons of peat­ with digestion. This is typically true of the ordinary case of eye stuff. strain, headaches and when the digestion of a meal is inhibited; Many "Passion Play*” The name “Passion Play,1 hns when nausea and vomiting oc­ been given the plays representing cur the stomach may evacuate the passion of Christ These plays food taken many hours before. On the other hand it is wrong became numerous between the Thir­ teenth and Sixteenth cetnurles, es­ to withold small amounts of pecially In Germany and the Tyrol. easily digestible food because The most Important survival Is one the patient has a fever. His that takes place every tenth year nutrition must be kept up, if in the village of Oberammergau In possible, throughout the fever the Bavarian highlands. process. This does not ____ mean that during the first day or Art of Giving He who gives things only gives two of an acute disease one little. The real part of any pres­ should not be on an almost star­ Crude Railroading ent Is the Imaginative sympathy vation diet. Such management In New York city, Baltimore and through which one has understood is frequently very beneficial, Philadelphia In the early days of and responded to a desire In some but if the illness is prolonged steam railroads, the cars were other human being and has put privation of food must not be through the cities by horses. something of one’s self Into the continued more than two or drawn In the outskirts the engines were choice of that which will gratify three days at most. During this taken off. strong liaises attached this desire.—Woman's Home Com­ starvation period, the patient and cars pulled slowly through the panion. cities. Probably this method was should receive plenty of water followed In other centers of popu­ and fruit juice. Take, an Awful Beating With ordinary sensible foods lation. Gold beating Is an art that can­ digestion should be almost with­ not be done other than by hand. Early Artificial Teeth Gold, 23 carats tine. Is rolled Into out sensation, When there is The use of porcelain as a mate­ thin ribbons, cut Into squares, then an abnormal amount of stomach rial for artificial teeth was first pro­ many layers of It are placed be­ or intestinal gases, when there posed by Fauchard tn 1726, but the tween parchment and beaten four is pain and when there is vo- manufacture was first begun by Du- hours. The “ squares are quartered, miting or nausea the cause chateau, a French chemist, between placed between goldbeaters’ skins, should be sought, If the indi- 1774 and 1776. beaten for four hours and then vidual recognizes the cause, the again for six hours. "Wife Silencer" indigestion can be corrected by An Austrian claims he has Invent­ himself. However, as soon as he All Help ed a device, occupying no more than No doubt the world ought to be does not reegnize the cause he nine cubic Inches, that can be made better, and abolishing llllt- should seek medical advice, In- turned on at will to silence all eracy, adopting voting machines, digestion may be caused by noises. When the device is going etc., help the good fight But be­ any one of the following: the he claims you cannot hear your ing amiable, liking life, exercising eating of indigestible food, too wife's sermons. common sense, knowing right from much spice, too much condiment wrong, these help, too You don’t too much sugar, too much fried Law and the Man learn them In books.—Boston Iler- food or too much soup; eating A good many of us complain aid. too rapidly; drinking too much nhout the laws being oppressive. ice water between meals; smo­ Yet one can’t help but observe that A Sure Friend king too much; eating too soon the law seldom Inconveniences the I know nothing which life has after laborious work; working man who attends to his own busi­ to offer so satisfying as the pro ness.—Atchison Globe. found good understanding which too soon after a hearty meal or can subsist, after i-mr-’i exchange of being to tired mentally or phy­ Salem—Approximately $29,- good offices, between two virtuous sically to eat. 600,000 will be expended in Ore­ men, ench of whom Is sure of him­ public self, and sure of his friend.—Em­ Beaverton—Bank of Beaverton gon during 1930 for provements. erson. opened to public. Astoria—Application filed Burns—Times-Herald and the Height of Joyfulne*« constructing two log booms ‘ Burns News ’ consolidated. Life's highest Job belongs to him Young’s river about four miles St. Helens—Building permit south of here. who stands, after a struggle, on some spiritual summit and looks for 1929 reached $154,000. Springfield—State highway de­ first down upon the valley from Stayton—The American Le­ partment improved approaches whence he lias ascended, and then up to some higher penk which shnll gion Post leased Nehama dance at both ends of new Springfield bridge. become tomorrow’s goal.—II. B. Os­ hall for coming year. born. The ! word "maelstrom" is Don- Ish. Malen means "grind.” and Strom, “stream." The Danish mael- «from Is a great whirlpool In the milk room, never in the ham. sea. In making Boston brown bread be sure to steam it for about The Reason The reason women pay to see the 3 '■* hours in well buttered fat woman nt the circus Is thnt molds before baking it to dry they wnnt to see somebody \rfio is out the top. in worse fix than they are. Clean milk put in a sterile container and packed in ice New York’s Oldest Church will remain sweet for weeks. St. Paul's chapel. New York city's On the other hand, milk which oldest church building, located In is not cooled and kept cool may the heart of the down-town section, sour in a few hours. was erected In 1764. A combination of salt and sugar and saltpeter, makes a And Doesn't Disturb Younger Don't worry about the younger good “cure” for pork, Salt used generation. Worry merely makes alone is apt to mnke the meat the older generation older.—South rather harsh and dry, but the sugar mellows the cure and im Bend Tribune. proves the flavor of the meat, The first requirement of A good grade of dairy salt or aweet clover is lime. Probably table salt should be used- more failures with sweet clover in the corn belt are due to lack of lime than to any other cause. Seward Hotel In some sections a ton of finely ground limestone, or one half of HOUSE OF CHEER that* amount of hydrated lime, TENTH AT ALDER well worked into the soil will Oregon Portland be enough, However, in many Excellent meals at pop- sections, it is better to make nlar prices. Coffee shop. fairly liberal applications, from Merchant* Lunch 25c, 35c. 2 to 3 tons, preferably of lime- Dinner* 40c, 50c, in dining stone. If sweet clover is to be room. Breakfast 25c and rotated over the entire farm, up. Luncheon* 35c, 5Oc. lime should be applied to each Dinner* 55c. 65c, 75c, $1. crop before the crop is sown on W. D. McNair, Manager it for the first time. An excep­ W. C. Culbertson, Prop. tion to this rule may be made1 in limestone sections where al­ falfa is known to do well natu­ rally, or where actual experi­ ence has shown that sweet clo­ ver will grow successfully with­ out applying lime. Milk should be strained in the Martin & Forbet Thursday, January 16, 1930 Vernonia Eagle, Vernonia, Oregon Page Six Local and Long Distance Hauling Phone 923 Office in Workingmen’s Store 37 Cougars Vernonia Trading Co. ('ass Berirersoii THREE IMPORTANT BENEFITS If you order today’s groceries from Vernonia Market and Gro­ cery, you will benefit in three ways. First, through the always- excelient quality of the food. Second through the prompt deliv­ ery. And by reason of the attractive prices that prevail. Finer Foods—Which W iii Meet With Yom Vernonia Market & Grocery Always ;0n the Job/ ; EXPERTS HERE! OLKS are spending a lot of money today for insurance. You buy protection against loss by fire, windstorms, theft, injury and even death. Premiums may seem high, but you know the benefits are worth the price. Men who know machines—men who have had long years of training and experience in getting every possible atom of power out of motors— men who are personally acquainted with each nut and holt throughout your car. That’s why your car performs 100 per cent efficiency when we do repair work. Drive in today—it means economical and pleasurable motoring for you. There is one form of protection, however, that all of us in this community enjoy every day and it does not cost us one eent! We never can know how many lives it has saved, how much sickness it has prevented, how many hours of content­ ment it has brought to our homes. Vernonia Brazing & Machine Works This protection is the service rendered by the business men of our town, who quietly and faith­ fully meet our daily needs. No matter what emergency may face us, they continue to supply us with food, shelter, clothing and the other necessities of life. ▼ C. BRUCE LUMBER Wholesale and Retail Vernonia You will find their ads *n this paper. They solicit—and deserve—your generous patronage. They are your friends in time of need! Read the Ads in this Paper and save yourself money by trading at home