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About Malheur enterprise. (Vale, Or.) 1909-current | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1915)
a?c Four v. ,. Saturday, July 3. 101 1 j. Vale and Malheur County-Land of GreaterfOpportun 1 ft 7 r? g ,- ?0r - i v "Vv rc I v 3 : If j I ? 's - i J rx . y ' " ''y j S f y 1 r nm wTkt - fC r : iViip 5? n i S Ta Li i mttm jT .-ffT tN I X I rr I -. 1 ! 1 1 1 ' L 1 V. . HO,iDIL Vv p I 'fV --: -v 4 (f i -1 I '"'fiii N J -5w Tv J vv (g) I j jjt . rj y r-zdL j : y ST?1 To? ToT 32 Ts : -vVT Vi- J Illustrating irrigation resources, great railroad facilties, and acres of rich bench lands tributary to Vale S U M M () N S. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Malheur County. TIIK ALLIANCE TRUST COMPANY Limited, a corporation, I'luintiff, vr. JOSEPHINK HARRIS and WILLIAM E. HARRIS, her hus band; ELLA WOODRUFF; and ELLA WOODRUFF as Adminis tratrix of the Estate of Moses A. Woodruff, Deceased; and A. W. PARKS, Defendants. To Josephine Harris and William E. Harris, of the above named defen dants: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON, you are hereby requir ed to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitl ed action, within six weeks from the 3rd day of July, 1!15, the date of the first publication of this summons, and if you fail so to answer, for want thereof the pluintiir will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint, to-wit: for the foreclosure of that certain mortgage executed bv you upon lots 3 and 4 and the SW4 of the NW'4 of Section 4, Township 19 South, Range 44 East Willamette Meridian, containing 120 acres more or less, which mortgage was dated June 6th, lDl'J, and was made to the Alliance Trust Company, Limited, to secure the payment of a loan of $f,000, with 8 per cent inter est thereon, as evidenced by certain interest notes; and also to secure the said interest notes with 10 per cent thereon, after maturity, and provid ing for attorney's fees in case of suit or action, and decreeing the said mort gage to be a prior lien to any right, title or interest you may have in said property, and for an order of sale of said property to pay such judgment as may be recovered herein, and for ever barring and foreclosing you and all persons claiming by, through or under you, except the statutory right to redeem. This summons is published in the Malheur Enterprise, a weekly news naer published and circulating in Malheur County, Oregon, by order of the Honorable Dalton Higgs, Judge of the above entitled Court, which order waa made and entered on the first day of July, l!Uf, and directing the publication thereof for six weeks, 1k ginning with the issue of July .'rd, 1915, and ending with the issue of Augut 14th, 1915. CEO. E. DAVIS. Attorney for Plaintiff. First publication July S, 19I.V lui.tt publication August 11, 19U. SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Malheur County. lirmv Nwl Morris, Plaintiff, vt. Hugh 0'!knnell anil Mary O'loii- ttell, hi wifa, IWtiidanta. To Hugh O'Ponnell and Mary OI.-ii- nll, tU wifa, IfefvndanUi In I ha nam of the Slat of Oregon, )ou and aach of you ara lmiiy ia iiilril to aprar and atir Ilia ri'in )dlnt Mm tfaint you In lha above 1915, suid date being more than six weeks from the date of the first pub lication of this summons. If you fail to appear and answer, plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief de manded in her complaint, namely, a decree foreclosing that certain real entitled suit on or before July 30th, estate mortguge executed by you to this plaintiff on the 18th day of De cember, 1911, wherein you mortgaged to plaintiff the real premises describ ed as follows: The Northeast Quar ter of the Northeast Quarter of" Sec tion 35 Tp. 15 South of Range 42 East of the Willamette Meridian in Malheur County, Oregon, and which said mort gage was recorded on December 29th, 1911, in Book "N" of the Records of Mortgages for Malheur County, Ore gon, on page 197 thereof, and secur ing your certain promissory note for the sum of $2000.00 of even date therewith. You are further notified that this summons was ordered pubished by the summons was ordered published by the Judge of said Malheur County, Ore gon, by an order made and filed on the 1st day of June, 1915, wherein it is ordered that this summons be pub lished in the Malheur Enterprise, a newspaper published weekly at Vale, Oregon, for a period of six successive weeks. C. R. CHAP1N. Attorney for the Plaintiff. Newberg, Ore. July 3-Aug. 7. ing facts as antidotes. It the threat ened dangers become facts in this country, the blame will be upon the employers of labor for neglecting their duty to inform their workmen; if the present damage is suffered to continue, the blame will fall in the same place. A NATIONAL CREED DRY ARGUMENT GONE IGNORE THE DEMAGOGUE AND APPEAL TO THE MAN Every informed thinking man sees not alone the threatened dangers of but the damage now being wrought by the propaganda of radicalism in this country. Hut so few are in formed. The threatened danger is that the uninformed, led by self-seeking, dis honest demagogues, will lie swept off their feet by their specious argument and, thus, the country will be swept into social chaos. The present dam age is that of what we call "social unrest" strikes, destruction of prop erty, loss of wages, a spirit of law deflance, and worst of all, class ha tred. And as thinking men, we admit that both the threatened danger and tha prehent damage. Hut what ara we doing about it ? Thin can be the only annwer thinking men must maka it their bus imiks to tearh lha uninformed think In man that along tha way the deitu goguea ara living to lead him lies madnas. Tha radical Udr ara M'caklng In him evciy day with po' nrd tiiimv and in luild atf ait Itiin rHi i'niiiiig and tlf ton trine- Now comes the psychopathic labora tory of the Chicago Municipal Court, speaking through Chief Justice Harry Olson to the mayors of New York State at Troy, N. Y., and explodes the favorite "dry" argument that drink ing alcoholic liquors excessively caus es insanity. On the contrary the lab oratory sharks claim, a man has to be crazy before he drinks to excess. "The laboratory has examined hundreds of chronic alcoholics," Judge Olson said, "and we have yet to find the first case where there was not at least a psy chopathic constitution, epilepsy, de mentia praecox, manic depressive in sanity, or feeble mindedness as the basis, with the exception of a few cases where there was a physical bas is, such as diabetes or tuberculosis, and the man was whipping up his flagging energy with alcoholic stim ulants." Judge Olson claims the lab oratory's investigations prove that the cause of excessive drinking will have to be removed before we can cure the drunkards. He said the state of Illinois spends 28.1 of its total expenditures for charitable institu tions, of which the mental, nervous and insane group make up 28.1 per cent. The Chicago Herald suggests the following as a national creed by which the men, women and children of Amer ica may affirm their Americanism: "I believe in the United States, one and indivisible; in her mission as a champion of humanity as the friend of the weak and distressed; in the singleness and inviolability of Am erican citizenship; in the validity of our national traditions; in peace with honor; in friendship with all nations that respect our rights; in entangling alliances with none; in reasonable pre parations for national defense by sea and land; in shirking no sacrifice that is needed to hand down to the fu ture the priceless treasures bequeath ed to us by the past; in the necessity of keeping the western hemisphere free from the intrusions of European institutions and ambiiions; in the ca pacity of free men for self-government; in the love of the homo and country; and in the unflinching reso lution that government of the people for the people and by the people shall not perish from the earth." history, and the real business of hos tilities is disagreeable and mussy for those who carry it, and for those at home who furnish food for the sol diers, and bear their share of sorrow and suspense. People naturally tire of war quicker than the potentates who bring it about and watch its op erations from a safe distance. But we doubt that they can end it. Of course, if all men would refuse to fight, that would end the war, and might be a sensible course, but all men are not likely to agree on any thing, and the military law is harder to overthrow than the civil kind, which has more or less influence on the lives of men. However, public sentiment is an influence, even in the autocratic realms, and there may be a hope of peace in fact that the people are tired of war. graph to San Francisco t'he whole city took a holiday, and great whis tles blew for many minutes from the tops of tall buildings, to announce that California was to be host to the world In 1915. The San Francisco Exposition' will be the world's greatest, since It Is the latest. Nothing made more than ten years ago may be entered for competition. It is the first exposition held to celebrate an event just at hand. All other expositions, and there have been a number. In the last century especially, have been held to cele brate the anniversary of an event t'hat took place from ten to one hundred years before. The Phila delphia Exposition in 1876, for In stance, was known as the "Centen nial." Centennial, as you know, means 100 years, and that exposi tion celebrated the 100th birthday of the Signing of the Declaration of Independence In 1776. It appro priately was held In the city In whicJh this great historical event happened. WORKMEN LEAVE Til El It GOVERNMENT JOBS Scores of skilled workmen are leav ing the employ of the government ar senal at Frankfort to accept jobs with private concerns that are supplying orders for munitions of war for the European belligerents. For the first time in years the arsenal is suffering from a shortage of employees. The officials fear that the situation may he coma serious. The men dnUr they have pi given threa-year contract with private firms at higher wag than tha government pay. Araanal ortnul y that fedarsl ktatuU make it unlawful fur piivai nun-nil (a ua promt of higher Wsg lo ln.lu Menial inly (i av lUa guvti imuiiiial ivu. TIRED OF THE WAR Col. House, the president's friend, lately returned from Europe, where he visited warring capitals of both sides in the controversy, and reports that the rulers of both sides are con fident of ultimate victory. However, he didn't devote his entire sojourn abroad to mingling with the mighty; he found time to mix with the pro letariat a bit, and his observations are among the plain people of all the countries and is that they are weary ing of the war. That seems reason able, and is easy to believe. Which ever nation started the trouble, a ques tion on which people will never agree, it can never be said that the people of the guilty nation were responsible. Indeed, they were probably as much surprised and as greatly shocked as those of innocent Belgium. But, when it was started, who lor the burden, and are ktill bearing them; who will lar them, indeed, when long after the diplomat have signed a peace treaty, and changed tha map of F.u roH) according to tha ttandartl of tight. And it Un t stranga that lhy h..il. wrl) ut il. pailiculaily Mitre it d'M-ni'l M'tiil to ba gvlting nywlivia in iti ulai. ,t f IS irh'iy vf war I In .- and iuiy i,4 it is States t'he The St. Ixiiils Exposition, ten years ago. cjlehrated the anniversary of the purchase of the Louisiana Territory by the I'nited States. And so on down the line of Expositions which are now written Into your histories. Each was a celebration of a past glory. The Panama-Pacific International Exposition celebrates an event of now, the present, and an ovent that is the greatest engineering achieve ment In the history of the world, the se.verine of two eontlnpnta hv the cutting of a great ditch across the Isthmus of Panama. And the most glorious thing about that It was our own lTnitd that did it after 1V.I,l:bo Frenchman. h:ni tried i oh u and after the scientists of the world had said It was an Impossibility. The scheme was greater than the promoters realized, and they did not have money enough to complete the work. But more Important than the lack of money was the lack of knowledge of sanitation. That was not the fault of tlu French people The world did no" think seriously along those lines as it does now ninu d.rl.ici o,. ;, pVlKslii.ui to celebrstt the coinpleiclon of the caiiil nia;iv otlur cities beside s,tn rran.-Seo usled to have the honor of bol.lli; O.,. Kl4l H0.,(1 ((in, greM. ut San FrancUro inn and women nude it meat effort to have the preident and conures name tha -etern port . the kite of the Kr"t celebration. They .ent long pet It ion. o n.nureh slid pledge,! many mil. I on. of dollar private loiitrilm. Hon lotrJ the .udltuiv, n(Ve.. Ml to luv ,u.ir..f(, aipoMUo,, III l, i, pioliiliirlll men and " l0 liln.., pe'-.il.ll) iilrni.a,4 tli in i -.. ... ,. ,, llr,,lt Mi l I . in,, .. ,,, tl. len .liui , O. & C. LAND IS TAXABLE ii I Iki w , Washington. The state of Oregon, In the opinion of officiala of the de partment of justice, can collect from the Oregon & California railroad com pany back taxes on every acre of the unsold portions of Its land grant andi can continue to collect from this com pany until title Is passed to other own ers. As the department Interprets the decision, the court holds the lands are still owned by the railroad company and therefore the state is entitled to collect taxes from the date of Judge Wolverton's decision, on which date the railroad company ceased to pay taxes. To this extent, aald depart ment officials, the state won before the supreme court. The Intimation is made that the de partment of Justice, after digesting the decision, will Institute aulta against the railroad company for Ball In Its lands In numerous Instances In tracts of more than 160 acres and for more than $1.50 an acre. The railroad ha realized 12.000,000 or 13,000.000, tha department contends, to which it was not leiully entitled. The govern ment may sua to compel tha railroad company lo psv bark, either to pur chs.ers or to III lovrrtiiuetit itself, this bonus Al tha same time il Is admlttad thai purchasers who bough' al nuns than 1160 an sera may ui ! siiprruia rourt derision as bash (r ilti Buiia again! lha rallna ruuit,au lo r.nitrf IU dlffviaiits ba Imi J to an t, i, u,, ,rlV n(,y lawl aw-, iv tfHfMir?rr vv' t a - fa? 1 j i..s ,v W-.niii, rM -. j mtf-mv (g) I 0