Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, September 26, 1930, Page 4, Image 4

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    X
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1930.
VERNONIA EAGLE, VERNONIA, OREGON
FOUR
-I
stream in the state for its pisca­
torial pleasures.
There are ’many ideal locations
in the Nehalem valley for trout
■7,—
I
hatcheries where the supply of
water is sufficient the
year
around and anyone who has in­
County Official Paper
dulged in the Waltonian arts
From
the
Nehalem
Journal,
has hud the fact attested that
SUN MON TUES WED THU FRI sat ! Member of National Editorial
Assn, and Oregon State Edit­ September 2, 1889 (Vol. 1, No.
therb are enough crawfish, the
orial Assn.
1).
Gua H. Bynon, Editor, Wm.
j natural food for cut throat trout,
H. Bradon, Business Manager.
| in the Nehalem river, to feed
M- zk
! all the trout a dozen hatcheries
“It is rumored pretty strongly
i could supply.
;
that there will be a paper start­
| The Gales Creek plant was or-
ed at Vernonia. We hope the
: dered closed, as I stated before, •
brother quill-pusher will succeed,
To the Editor: The Portland ' on account of lack of water, so
but he goes to a very thinly papers _
__ ago carried
______ 1 if water is the only reason, then
a _______
few days
Pacific Coast Representative
settled section to begin.”—Ore­ the announcement that the State ** would be a good time to get
Arthur W. Stypes, Inc.
«Tv
gon Mist.
Fish and Game commission of action on this matter for it would
San Francisco
* * •
■ Oregon had authorized the dis- cost no more to maintain and
The'managers of the grist mill
operate a hatchery in this valley
$2.00 Per Year in Advance at Pittsburg have sent for a | continuance of the Gales Creek than it did at Gales Creek and
Issued Every Friday
trout hatchery, giving as their
Entered as second class matter August 4, 1922, at the post new set of burrs to enable them | reason, the lack of water. Matt a plant here could amply take
office at Vernonia, Oregon, under the act of March 3, 1879. to do first class work.
I Ryckman,
superintendent
of care of the needs of Gales
* * *
¡hatcheries has been ordered to Creek and its tributaries as well
The warm, sandy soil of the close the hatchery and sell the us the Nehalem river.
Advertising rates—Foreign, 30c per inch; local, 28c per inch'
legal notices, 10c per line first insertion, 5c per line succeeding Nehalem is especially adapted to property.
S. J. SMITH,
insertions; classified lc per word, minimum 25c.
hops . . . with a railroad to give
It
seemes
to
be
an
opportune
cheap transportation to market,
time for a delegation of the
ASHLAND—-(UP)— Although
RAY D. FISHER, Editor and Publisher
Nehalem will become in the near leading
or representative sports-1 many persons live on it, Jack
future one of the principal hop­
growing districts of this state. men of the Nehalem valley to ap- i Wurtz found cooing didn’t suit
pear before the State Fish and| his temperment or desire to sleep.
* * *
THE WATER POWER ISSUE
Em Sheeley is rapidly recov- Game commission at their meet­ Doves in an adjoining cote was
ing in October and ask that a I
cause for the matinal distur­
It has long been a favorite trick of politicians to erect ering from the effects of his trout hatchery be established in the
bance.
recent
accident.
He
was
thrown
a man of straw, pelt him vigorously, and look around for from a wagon against a stump the Nehalem valley.
popular applause, as a celebrated evangelist is said to and the hind wheel passed over Lying as it does in close proxi­
his chest, injuring him severely. mity to Portland and within, easy (
have bowled over an effigy of the devil in a prize ring.
* * *
reach of thousands of people in |
At the last meeting of the the Willamette valley this river
Such appears to be the situation with reference to
Evangelical church the officers is entitled to more consideration
the power issue in this state. Some politicians would for
the ensuing year were elect­ in the future than has been be-'
have us believe—to quote from a speech which Julius ed, board of trustees, P. Peck, stowed upon it in the past by
Meier is reported to have recently made in Tillamook— I president, John Campbell, secre- the game commission. Ranked
and T. H. Lavender, trea- in the past as a wonderful trout
U. S. Royal Cord Tires
“The power trust is stifling the very life blood of the | ¡ , tary,
surer. It is the intention of the stream it has through neglect
I church
people of Oregon.”
society to erect a com­ in keeping it stocked, been al-
She’l Products
modious house of worship in the most depleted of its finny in­
Puzzle: Find the power trust, Pepco of course most near future.
habitants, and if properly Taken
Dependab’e Mechanics
♦ ♦ ♦
care of " now, could in a few
nearly fits the description, but it has to meet the very
Thomas
E.
Mills,
residing
two
years
be
brought
back
to
that
Shop Work Guaranteed
vigorous competition of another large corporation, the miles below town, met with what stage where it would equal any
Northwestern Electric company, and if either were to at­ may prove to be a serious ac-
tempt much stifling its business would shrink to the cident last week. While dress-
vanishing point. Scattered throughout the state are a ing a stick of timber, his axe
glanced and cut a deep gash
number of power companies, home and foreign owned, in in his left foot.
* * •
no way dependent upon Pepco or the Northwestern Elec­
Surveyors for the Astoria and
tric. Not much power trust at present.
'outh Coast railroad are search-
Conceivably, of course, there might be one some day, ing for the most desirable route
Vernonia to Jewell, hoping
and legislation to prevent unrestrained monopoly of Ore­ from
by this means to shorten the dis­
gon’s natural resources is much different from clamor tance from their starting point
about a power trust that does not exist. To safeguard in Washington county to Astoria.
* * *
the interests of the public by providing for reversion of
The people of this part of the
rights that are abused, to regulate rates fairly, to re­ valley are rather anxious to have
quire essential though not always immediately profitable the county surveyor fulfill his
service—should be the policy of the state. On the other promise that he would return
hand, to prohibit the development of water power by pri­ at his earliest convenience and
stablish several lost corners in
vate capital on the theory that the state or a municipality Vernonia. It has been nearly
might at some indefinite time in the future want to-go eight years since the matter was
into the power business for itself would inflict upon in­ rirst agitated, and settlers are
beginning to wonder at the de­
dustry a bad attack of anemia.
lay.
• • •
Another point that is often overlooked is that water S. P. Donkel’s oxen ran away
power is not the only economical and effective means of with hi swagon, crossing the riv-
generating electric current, The Diesel engine is prov- er with it three times, breaking
it and Mr. Donkel’s temper in
ing highly successful, particularly in communities of mod­ several
places.
erate size where sufficient water power is not readily ac­
• « «
cessible. Take for instance the city of McMinnville, right­ Following are the local adver­
ly pointed to as one of the best examples of municipal own­ tisers in this issue of the Jour­
nal : R. W. McNutt and Co., gen­
ership in the state. Originally it depended upon a water eral
merchandise, (Main store at
power plant some ten miles distant. As the city grew, Cornelius); Vernonia Mill Com­
service became inadequate, and interruptions in stormy pany, S. J. Brown, manager;
weather due to fouling of the transmission lines were an­ Thomas Lavender, general black­
smithing; Lewis Brothers, car-
noyingly frequent. Accordingly the city installed a Diesel nenters and builders; J. C. Coul-
Urnunna
Eaglr
Forty-One
Years Ago
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16, 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
j
28 29 30
ter, market; T. L. Adams, nurs­
ery; Campbell and McNutt, real
estate; Israel Spencer, notary
public; C. H. Newth, physician
and surgeon; Vernonia House, A.
B. Lewis, manager; Joseph Van
Blaricom, real estate.
Our prices
on printing are not
always the
lowest... but our
work is always
the best
E NSilSRE with an
Si HOUSE —
The Open
Forum - -
SQUARE Df/L
SERVICE STATION
Here’s Power Equipment
for Every Man’s Harvest
The McCormick-Deering 15-30
To stand and admire the big McCormick-Deering
15-30 Tractor will make your hands itch to get hold
of the steering wheel.
To sit in the seat and jig'tle
the controls will make you anxious to start the 4-
engine, listen to the deep throated exhaust,
and get the feel of the vibration-free power on your
cylindcr
own
important
work.
Think of yourself on the seat of one of these
tractors, pulling the most modern farm machines across
your acres.
Think of the increased efficiency, saving
in time and labor, improved crop yields, and reduced
costs
this
equipment will
make
possible---- then
let
us
chow you the mach nes in our store and demonstrate
them on your own farm.
We are also showing the
McCormick-Deering and
all-purpose
Farmall.
Veraaeiaia Trading Co.
ED TAPP
CASS
BERGERSON
TO THESE
TIRE SAVINGS!
*
plant in town, which furnishes the chief supply and
Baker creek plant is merely auxiliary.
After all, is it not the little fellow for whom the in­
dependents are ostensibly waging a campaign? They are
not concerned over enterprises like the Oregon-American I
or Clark and Wilson, who can buy their power or manu­
facture it themselves, according to their own best in­
terests. The small consumer wants cheap electricity which
the big man is in a position to get anyhow, and he wants I
a sufficient amount for his purpose. The farmer craves
electric power for his pump, and his wife for her wash­
ing machine, while both, perhaps, desire a radio. Away
from the centers of population or the source of’ supply, a
Diesel plant, municipal or private, is the more promising
agency for that desired power.
Leave
Your Kodak
work at
LINCOLN’S CANDY
KITCHEN
We give you a 40 cent en­
largement free with each
50 cent order of Kodak
work.
This Tire keeps going in Spite of Punishment!
To change the straw man figure, the independents
fabricate a grotesque balloon, duly inflate it, and then
shoot it bravely with an automatic. They annihilate
the power trust of their own imaginations.
ICE day. Country road. Motor
humming. Then . .. BANG! You
N
knew it! That bargain-counter casing
on the right front wheel!
Another good day gone wrong ... and
not helped by the fact that you’d been
wondering how long that tire was going
to last.
You know how it it! Sodowe! That’s
why we have Cavalier* on our racks.
Goodrich built the Cavalier for people
who want to keep their tire investment
at the minimum. Built it to suit them
in price . . . and surprise them in per­
VERNONIA NEEDS AN AMBULANCE
Picture for yourself—it has happened more than once,
and can happen again: A man lies in a logging camp, ser­
iously injured. A call goes to Portland for an ambulance,
which comes as soon as it can. but there is an unavoidable
delay of just the length of time it takes the ambulance
to make the trip to get the patient. Pain is unassuaged
........... Life hangs in the balance. An ambulance stationed
in Vernonia might have saved the life; certainly it could
have brought prompter relief.
By all means, Vernonia should have an ambulance.
1CKA—(IT)—A. N. lloerflcr stag. Les Kindred and John Adair
didn’t want to see his $1000 prize shot a 200-pound five pointer
hog die in the ignomy of a sty. I in Warrenton city limits, two
When he whistled in a familiar miles from the business center.
manner, the pig fo'lowing him
from the p?n, dropped dead.
ASTORIA—(UP)—When Jack,
friendly Irish terrier was neces-
WARRENTON—(UP)— While, sary to the success of a pet pa-
other huntsmen withstood untold rade here, radio broadcasts asked
sufferings to bag the coveted his whereabouts.
Order Prices
formance. Built it to live up to Good­
rich standards . . . and still cost less
than just ordinary tires.
So you'll find the Cavalier big and
husky in every particular. Oversize in
air cushion. Stout in carcass and side­
wall. Tough and slow-wearing in the
tread. And good to look at, too!
If you want to take tires off your mind
. . . see us. Our stock of Cavaliers in­
cludes your size . . . and two sizes for
trucks- Specially priced now ... not apt
to be much longer. Come In while the
savings are even bigger than usual.
»
Goodrich
Cavalier
Sii ver view Service Station
Itili Heath
Phone X57
»