SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 1918 THE MALHEUR ENTERPRISE t f i SR.: re is : FA i Br Jfflalfjeur nterprtsie GEORGE HUNTINGTON CURREY Editor and Owner MALHEUR COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT VALE, OREGON Entered at the Vale, Oregon, Post Ofllce as Second Class Mall Matter Subscription Rates in Advance One Year, $2.00 Six Months, $1.00 Advertising and printing prices given on application Saturday, January 26, 1918 DON'T HE A QUITTER. Some day, wo hope before long, the Warmsprings, the Willow Alder, the Owyhee and other irrigation projects will be waterting 100,000 acres of fertile land in Malheur county. Many benches and small valleys will be producing GO bushel wheat crops by a system of spring flooding. Oil refineries will bo keeping pipe lines flowing full with golden liquid from here to Portlnnd. Nitrate reducing" plants will be furnishing America with explosives and the Northwest with fertilizer. Woolen mills will bo manu facturing tho winter covering of our sheep into clothing and our stockmen, our farmers, our cities will prosper far beyond your best hopes. Don't be a quitter now, and bo sorry then. Stick to your home community and help each other to better things in store.. Pa Pa Pa Pa Pa KEEP THIS IN MIND. The Warmsprings project is one of the cheapest constructed irriga tion systems ever contemplated in the Northwest, figured on an acreage basis. It offers the minimum in difficult engineering problems, yet prom ises the quickest returns in both time and money. It is tho key to all kinds of development in Southeastern Oregon. Present prices of produce make this nn exceptionally opportune time to put the water on the land. Gov ernment aid would be gladly welcomed and was seriously hoped for. Yet one year's delay will cost more than the interest on bonds sold to private investors. Tho money market is not entirely inactive. A united and ear nest effort by all interested parties may yet be able to build tho project this year. Pa Pa Pa Pa Pa MEN SHOULD GIVE FUNDS, AS WOMEN DO WORK. The Red Cross workers of Malheur county are limited in the amount of work they can do by the amount of money they can secure to purchase materials. This important work deserves the support of everyone. A few large donations of one or several hundred dollars to the local chapters and auxiliaries would bo gratefully received and in no Other work will a dol lar go as far as it will in tho Red Cross. Of course, ten dollars, five dol lars, or one dollar, if that is all you can possibly spare, will bo just as wel come. However, we urge those who can give more to write a generous check so that others who cannot give money can do more work. That is a fair proposition. Think is over. Pa Tn Pa Pn Pa CAN WE DO IT? ' The president of the Deutsche Rank of Berlin said recently that tho people of Germany are now saving three billion dollars annually of what they used to spend in beers nnd liquors. There are about 70,000,000 peo ple in tho German empire. President Wilson has asked Americun men, women and children to save two billion dollars in ono year to lend to our government at four per cent to hcl) win tho war. There are 100,000,000 of us. Cnn we do it? We can. Will wo do it? We will. How? Simply by "cutting out" the little extravagances to our daily lives that add nothihg to our strength of character, nor to our health or happiness; by cutting down on our candy and gum expenditures; by going to the "movies" less frequently; by smoking less; by drinking water instead of fancy colored concoctions, and by practicing a hundred and ono little economies that will save a penny here and there. When tho pennies hnve been snved Uncle Sam has provided simple machinery with which to take care of them. Twenty-five cents buys Thrift Stamp. Sixteen Thrift Stamps pasted on n card given you when you buy the stamp with 12 cents additional will buy n War Savings Stamp Twenty Wnr Savings Stamps pasted on a War Savings Certificate, given . with your first War Savings Stamp, become virtually a government bond, for which the Government will pay you $100 in five years. A War Sav ings Stamp is just as safe as your country. And the more Stamps sold right now, tho safer your country will be. There will bo no centralized "drive" to raiso the $17,000,000 Uncle Sam, has asked Oregon to furnish by the sale of War Savings Stamps. The campaign will last throughout the New Year. There will bo no effort to "drive" tho people of Oregon into the purchaso of War Savings Stamps and Thrift Stamps. Uncle Sam wants Oregonians to develop and practice habits of thrift to such an extent that thoy will do their own "driving" and aid in sending Oregon "over tho top" with colors flying, n a p a r Wheat, hogs, coal, railroads, and many other commodities and insti tutions tiro being protected by standardizing prices. Why not limit the war profits of tho munition maker who Iins no profit except by tho misfor tune of others? Guns and ammunition should bo made only under govern ment management and ownership. p. pa r-z Pa Pa Join tho Vale Chamber of Commerce. It will cost you but two or three dollars a year and you will 'get thnt much benefit out of tho meet ings alone. It is a good investment for any town to maintain an organi zation to look after tho general good of tho community. P Pa Pj ms Pa The nearest example of what the oil rush in Vale will be like is the political scramble in tho hotel lobbies in Portland. Tho birth of candidates for state offices in Oregon is far exceeding tho death rate of the American army in Franco. Canadian Officers to Lecture FIVE YEARS AGO Interesting News From Enterprise Files Five Years Ago. Oregon Eastern westward from Vale. .s....o.. ff (From tho Enterprise, Jan. 1H-2G, '13) Hook Shower Held Tho Civic Improvement Club will hold their second annual Book Shower in tho Giuld Hull Tuesday evening, An interesting program of Charades, Guessing Contest and Music has been prepared. Every citizen of Vale is urged to come tuul help build up out Public Library. Approval of Chief George W. Boschke, general mana ger of tho O. W. R. & N., of Portland, and n number of high olllcials of tho O. S. L., including Carl Stradley, the chief engineer, arrived in Vale Mon day of this week by special train, to inspect new rail work. One result of tho trip, it has become Known, will be the retention of O. S. Osborne, who has given ovidenco of his valuuble services to bvOi rendu In building the Entertain Friends James Frost and sister, Mary Frost, last Sunday evening delightfully en tertained T. W, Davidson, S. L. Payne, Dan Patterson and H. P. Osborne at dinner. The interim between supper and bedtime was socially enjoyed mid tho Frost's ncclnimed expert hosts. Personals and Locals William Jones, big stockman of Juuturn, wus a visitor to the county Beat this week, W. W. Brown, contractor on the Or egon Eastern grading work 80 miles west of Vale, returned this week from Salt Lake City. Hardin Lockett, of lionita, and son of "Uncle Bob," paid his respects to friends in Vale this week. C. C, Wilson, popular attorney of Nyssn, has been a county seat visitor J throughout tho week, attending court- C, II, Ox m an was in from his Jam-' ioon ranch this week. , I Direct From the Battle Trenches in Europe, These Three Men Will Address Vale People Sunday, January 27. METAL PRODUCTION IN 1917 Oregon's Metal Production During the Past Year, By Member of Geological Survey A preliminary estimate of the pro duction of metals from Oregon mines in 1917, compiled by Charles G. Yale, of the San- Francisco office of the United States Geological Survey, shows a material decrease from that of 101G. The output of gold in 1916 was $1,902,149, and tho estimated out put in 1917 is $1,4GG.419, a decrease of $435,700. The output of silver in 191G was 231,342 ounces, valued at $lD2,Glfi, and the estimated output in 1917 is 115,097 ounces, a decrease of 115,015 ounces in quantity and of $58, 04G in value. The output of copper in 191G was 3,501,88G pounds, valued at $881,144, and the estimated output in 1917 is 1,508,039 pounds, valued at $410,349, a decrease of 1,993,247 pounds in quantity and' of $470,795 in value. A small quantity of lead was produced in 191G, but no produc tion of this metal has been reported for 1917. There are about a Tiumlred produc tive mines in Oregon, and although two-thirds of them are placer mines, tho larger output of gold comes from tho deep mines, and, of course, vir tually all the output of the other met als. There were no important dis coveries in any of tho mining dis tricts of Oregon in 1917, and no great 'ncroase in the output of any of the more productive properties. The en tiro output of orp from all the deep mines combined does not oxcecd 1G0, 100 tons. Most of the placer mines ire worked by the hydraulic system, but tho three dredges now in use pro duce far more gold than all the other placer operations combined. Tho larg ?st output of gold and other metals in 1917 came, as usual, from Baker county, which produces annually about 90 per cent of nil tho gold mined in the state. Josephino county is next in production. No uso calling tho Russians hard names they're accustomed to them. Brooklyn Eagle. So far as the war is concerned, we are not so much concerned about our aims as our hits. Nashville Southern Lumberman. f LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS 4 SUMMONS A FARMER'S SUCCESS DEPENDS I Upon His Enterprise, Management and Equipment ; Are you properly equipped? Have you adequate buildings? Better buildings mean better stock, an in creased income and a great pleasure to you and your help. We have an Architectural Department that gives you FREE SERVICE. We make a specialty of farm buildings. " uJ MA.nvrAtvitiii We plan to suit YOU When you are in town Call and see E. C. LONGWELL Sales Manager VALE, OREGON Western Soft Pine I THE NEW EDISON mHE new Edison Diamond Disc has I A I been called "The Phonograph with pjsljlfl a Tone," and to prove this, we invite you in to hear us play the latest Ed ison re-creations. : : : : : Notice of Sheriff's Sale By virtue of an execution in fore closure duly issued by the 'Clerk of the circuit court of the county of Mal heur, State of Oregon, dated the 27th day of November, 1917, in a certain action in the Circuit Court, for said County and State wherein the Alli ance Trust Company, Limited, as Plainltiff recovered judgment against Josephine Harris and William E. Har ris, Defendants, for the sum of Five Thousand One Hundred Thirty Five and 25-100 dollars, with interest there on at the rate of 8 per cent per an num from the 5th day of November, 1917, and for the further sum of Nine Hundred and Seventy Eight and 05 100 Dollars with interest thereon at the rate of 10 per cent per annum from the 5th day of November, 1917, and tho further sum of Five Hundred Dollars Attorneys fees, and tho fur ther sum of $ as costs and dis bursements herein. Therefore notice is hereby given that I will on the 28th day of Janu ary, 1918, at tho main entrance to the Court House in Vale, in said County and State, at 2 o'clock in tho nfternoon of said day, sell at pub lic auction to the highest bidder for cash, the following described real property to-wlt: Lots Three and Four and South- iirnof Hunrffir nf Wnrthwpst. Ollfirt.nr of Section Four, Township Nineteen, South, Range Forty Four, E. W. M., in Malheur County, Oregon, and also water rights taken from Bully Creek and formerly owned by Thomas Har ris. Taken and levied upon as tho prop erty of Josephine Harris and William E. Harris, or so much thereof as may bo necessary to satisfy tho judgment in favor of Alliance Trust Company, Limited, Plaintiffs and against the Defendants, with interest thereon, to gether with all costs and disburse ments that have, or may hereafter accrue. Dated at Vale, Malheur County, Oregon, this 27th day of December, 1917. BEN J. BROWN, Sherilf, By E. II. Test, Deputy, First Publication Dec. 29, 1917. Last Publication Jan. 2Gth, 1918. Kindly give any information as to the whereabouts of these animals to GEO. LYTLE, Parma, Idaho, Box 62, Rt. 3. jl9-t4p. $25 Reward To anyone telling me the where abouts, of the following horses: One blue roan gelding horse, weight about 1600, age 5 years, branded Man I believ on the left stifle. One bay saddle horse, branded "76", I believe on the right shoulder, ago 7 years, weight 1200 pounds. AMOS ROETHLER. d-29-t5 Westfall. Notice of Estray The following aescribed cattle are held by me as estrays. Owners may have same by paying ocsts and ad vertising. One red yearling steer, one red and white yearling heifer, one red with some roan yearling heifer. All branded I. C U on right side and marked slightly in right crop off left. !W. D. FANNING, Brogan, Oregon jl9-t2p. STRAYED Ono red row; ono black calf, nearly yearling; one red heifer, 2-years. All branded quarter circle over J-T-F connected, on left rib, and right ear cropped. Cow has other brands. Last seen on the south fork of Willow SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, For Malheur County C. II. ZEVELY. Plaintiff, va. PEAItL ZEVELY, Defendant. To PEAIU, ZEVELY, the above-named de fendant: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OR EGON, You are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint med against you in the above entitled cause within six weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons.to-wit, the 19th day of Jan uary, 1918, or within six weeks if served personally without this state, and if you fail so to appear and answer the plain till will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint, to-wit: For a decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony heretofore and now eslxtlng between you and the piaintiti, and lor an ansoiute di vorce from the defendant: and for an or- tier awarding to the plaintiff the care and custody of his minor child ; and for such other and further relief as to the Court may seem meet and equitable; and for his cost, and disbursements herein. This summons is published by order of the Hon. Judge Geo. W, McKnight, judge of the County Court for Malheur County, made In the aWnce of the Circuit Judge of this district from the .county, which said order directs the service of this summons tu be made by publication thereof in the Malheur enterprise, a wecKiy newspaper pub lished and circulating In this County and State, commencing with the issue thereof of January 19, 1918. and ending with the Issue thereof of March 2, 1918, and directing that a copy of this summons, and of the complaint herein, be forthwith mailed to the defendatn at ,her last known address, DAVIS & KESTER. Attorneys for Plaintiff, Residing at Vale, Oregon Jan-19-March-2. Other machines have been advertised to play Edison unbreakable records, but Edison sayg "No othsr phonograph but the Edison can reproduce the high qualities of its records. :::::': Have you a phonograph in your home? If not, you don't know what you are miss ing. It is a musical education, as well as a home necessity. : : : : : Vale Drug Store THE DREXEL HOTEL BEN W. MULKEY, Manager Steam Heat, Hot and Cold Running Water Rates 50c. $1.00. $1.50. nice Warm rooms by the month $10.00 and up European Plan Vale, Oregon 1"A"X"V' "t' '1' 'l"I"l''l"i."l1'l"l"lrl1 VALE HOT WELLS LAUNDRY Prompt and Reliable Service CLEANING anfl PRESSING Goods Called For and Delivered Phone 99 H. C. NEELY Vale, Oregon Manager p,..It.,ITlITIllTllT,,?,TllH,TlIT,.T,;j. Write a Letter for the People's Forum. Make it Brief and Pointed. RANCH LOANS on Tho llolshcvlkn will hurt their cause by bringing homo the ltussian prison-1 era from Germany, They have no iditotic delusions about the Germans, I -St. Louis Globe-Democrat, 1 Allied I'm -i rs on the llrlns lino at U-ns. MoJ. Prince Amerashot of Sinui bolus Hit" om In tho light coat. 2 IlrUIMi Imwii.crs In Wanders thnt n-irinuiilly Imnmior tho German lines. 3 Camp Mills, Long Island, after being niruKotl by a H'vero wind and smtw storm, FARM CREDIT BASIS You pay principal like interest and at the same time. This is an Amortized loan and be comes completely paid off in twenty years. You choose the date of annual payment. You can pay in advance or pay all at any time and save interest You pay at your own bank. Annual payments little more than average in terest rates in this county. Call and get particulars. ' C. C. MUELLER S Phone 33 Vale, Oregon 5 IlllilUlllHIlllIRimillllMNllNMlllllf I .1