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About Malheur enterprise. (Vale, Or.) 1909-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 9, 1919)
SATURDAY, AUGUST 9,1919. MALHEUR ENTERPRISE, VALE, OREGON PAGE SEVEN " !4 .... . It ill ill ill ill ill ill -T- "'-lull Houses and Homes ANYONE CAN TAKE A FEW BOARDS, SOME TWO-BY-FOURS, A FEW NAILS. AND A DAB OF PAINT. AND MAKE A HOUSE, r -BUT- U. 3. LAND OFFICE FILINGS A BARBED WIRE pose of their corn through the corn I grower's association. Some day all the dads in this state will see the ! Christy Walsh Gives a B't of Timely light and the farm-boy exodus will be j Mvicf to SoMierg Back on i.irgeiy a ming 01 ne past, ininK fmBBnmBBMSBmaBEBm 41 r 1 Is it a house you want? We are inclined to think not. We believe that a great majority of people want a HOME. With this idea in view we have organized one of the most complete architectural departments in the entire west. We have placed at the head of this department the very best talent in this particular line that money can secure. We have given these artists carte-blanche in the exercise of their creative genius. Our only instruction to them is: HONEST TO GOODNESS HOMES FOR OREGON PEOPLE. Make Unstinted Use of this Service. It is Yours IT IS FREE! F. L. GILBERT Sales Manager Vale, Oregon All Homesteads and Other Entru-s Filed at Vale Office During Week. I 4'' ' J' i ii ! i (July 26 to 31) John A. Burton, Unity, Oregon, Add'l Homestead, NV4NWW, Sec. 23, SSW, Sec. 14, Tp. 13, 37, 160 acres. Albert J. Thomas, Ilwaco, Washing ton Homestead, NV4NW, Sec. 32, J p. 19, R. 12, 80 acres. George M. Tetreau, Isolated Tract, Durkee, Oregon, SE'ANEVi, Sec. 13, Tp. 13, R. 42, Lots 10 and 12, Sec. 18, Tp. 12, R. 43, Finlay Mac Kenzie, homestead, Rock ville, Oregon, NWNEU, Sec 35, W Vs. NWV4NEU, Sec.' 25, SEV4, EH NEW, Sec 16, Tp. 26, R. 45, 640 acres. Annie Mac Kenzie, Rockville, Ore., District Land Entry, NEV4SWV4, Sec. 24, Tp. 26, R. 45, 40 acres. Finlay MacKenzie, Rockville, Ore., SHSEM, NWSE, Sec. 23, SWV4 SWV4, Sec. 24, Tp. 26, R. 45, 160 acres. . o .iie county agent. A Good Start The- above -is true in Oregon ns well as in Maryland and altho Mal heur County has no agricultural a gent the Vale Milling and Elevator Company has started u "Pi;? Club" to which manager Armit:gton invites every boy to join and ,hra the coop eration of the United Suites National Bank will loan them n sow to be paid for out of the profits of thd investment. The Job RURAL LIFE SCHOOL WHY THE PIG CLUB The County Agent And The Farm Boy Problem From The Mary land Farmer Western Soet Pine I Try a Classified ad in the Enterprise I mz ;iiiiiiii:;:;ii;iiiiniimii:iii)iiii;iiiiMimii Read This! SEATTLE Shoes will trn higher. As leather cannot be bought long to make them at the prices they are now bringing. When the upward movement in leather will stop, we do not know, but tanners are today buying hides in Chicago and putting them in their vats at the fol lowing prices: Green Hides 50c to 52c per lb., Veal Skins 75c to 80c and Green Calf Skins 90c to $1.00 This means that shoes will be from 100 to 200 higher this winter. We have some dandy men's and boy's shoes at late 1918 and early 1919 prices. Are you going to wait ? I Agents for j Vale Saddlery 1 H. Company Uanna Canvas Dam iiltiiiiimTiiiiiiiiiTiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiwminis Maker g gh Grade i i Harness and I 1 Saddles .T;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiinin;iii!niiMiiL uiiiiniiniiiimiiiuniiiiiiM Service Motor Trucks Still Selling at Old Price MOST OF THE TRUCK MANUFACTURERS HAVE RAISED THEIR PRICES IN THE PAST FEW DAYS. THE SERVICE SLOGAN, EXTRA BIG VALUE, IS STILL MAINTAIN ED. SERVICE TRUCKS IN MALHEUR AND HARNEY COUNTIES HAVE GIVEN EX CELLENT SATISFACTION. ASK THE MAN WHO OWNS ONE Here are a few of the satisfied owners of Ser vice Trucks : George Clay, Crane. Lee Roby, Crane, 2 Serv ice Trucks F. II. Hittleson, Riverside. John Palmer, Vale. John McNulty, Vale. Carl Fegtly, Vale. Frank Palmer, Vale. These men are all experienced in trucking anil know why they bought a SERVICE TRUCK If you are interested let us know. Let Us Show You The "Service" Truck Looking back over our early days, those of us who spent them on the farm find few things standing out more vividly in our minds than ti cer tain form of iniquity practiced against m inir rf n onnnainf QnnoQ Thflf in. iquity seemed trivial then-to the,Home Economics ete and each and Gooding College will offer Country Life Rally Beginning October 21. . The fall term at Gooding College will begin September 9, and the prac tical features that will be offered in clude a night school for adults, a chair in rural sociology and econom ics, secretarial course for high school graduates and a Country Life rally similar to that which has just been held " at the Washington State College for rural pastors of Oregon, Idaho,' Washington and Montana. President Charles Wesley Tenney has just received a telegram from Educational Secretary Ralph A. Fel- ton stating that the Rural Depart ment of the Board of Home Missions and Church Extension of the Metho dist Church will commence the rural school October 21 and will continue it for two or three weeks. The stud ies offered include, Rural Education, Rural Sociology, Rural Church Meth ods, Public Speaking, Agriculture, parents but it put deep in every lad's heart a sting and dent that has driven thousands of lads to the city and lost to agriculture untold num bers who mighl have prospered in tilling the land, and with a resulting everyone of which will be in the hands of an expert. The school will dc open to ministers of all denominations and to all others who wish to specialize in work along the lines vt rural lead ership. It will be the only school of : u.. ti.. the kind that will be held, between iLa r i-iis k .Denver and the Coast, so a large en- however, let's leave it to the discern ing poet who summed up the situation thusly: ".Why did you leave the farm, my lad T Why did you bolt and leave your dad ? Why did you beat it off to town And turn your poor old father down? Thinkers of platform, pulpit, press Are. wallowing in deep distress; They seek to know the hidden cause Why farmer boys desert their pa's. Some say they long to get a taste Of faster life and social waste, And some will say the silly chumps Mistake the suit cards for their trumps In waging fresh and germless air Against the smoky thoroughfare, . We're all agreed the farm's the place, So free your mind and state your course "Well, Stranger, since you've been so frank, "11 roll aside my hazy bank, ; he misty cloud of theories, And tell you where the trouble lies: : left my dad, his farm, his plow, Jacause my calf became his cow; left my dad t'was wrong, of caurse Because my colt became his horse; left my dad to sow and reap because my lamb became his sheep; dropped my hoe and stuck my fork because my pig became his pork; The garden truck that made grow Vas his to sell but mine to hoe; ,'s not the smoke in the atmosphere .Jor the taste for, life that brought me here; F lease tell .the platform, pulpit, press No fear of toil or love of dress Is driving off the farmer lads, But just the methods of their dads:" It is not, however, the "platform, pulpit, press" that is doing the most toward correcting and righting this one-time wrong. It is that tireless worker, the county agent, who, with' his medium of pig clubs, potato clubs, corn clubs, calf clubs, and the like, is giving the farmer boy his chance. And while righting this wrong he is de veloping the lads of the country into good business farmers. And fortun ately the county agent is not the only one to see the light. We all remember what the bankers of Worcester Coun ty did for the pig-club boys. We are seeing what the bankers of Harford are doing this year to aid County Agent Derrick in his work not a bank in Harford County la holding back on filling out the premium lista or lending the club boys the money, on their unsecured noteB, to purchase better stock or finance their corn crops. Worcester will soon be the premier pure-bred hog county in Maryland. Harford County will push her, but Harford will have glories in another line, for her established re putation for good corn is being made secure for the future through the beys now planting the best seed obtainable and through their opportunity to lit rollment is expected. New cannery at Albany is shipping fine fruit. Pendleton Entire wool clip moved off, some selling for 58 cents. t T t TO OUR READERS It is with great satisfaction that th Malheur Enterprise is able to announce that it has just obtained exclusive rights in Ma'- henr County for the Publishers Autocaster Service illustrated features. This Means 4 not only that we have installed in our plant the most modern of stereotyping equipments the AUTOCASTER but also that the livest and brightest of photo- graphs and cartoons will now be regular features of the Malheur Enterprise. This Means that your home newspaper is now able to make its own cuts up-to- the-minute news pictures, fash- ion pictures, comics and advertis- ing illustrations. All This S is made possible through the un- ' limited facilities of the greatest newspaper service of its kind in the world, with bureaus in New York, Washington, San Francis- o, and all world news centers. This Is ! one more evidence of the inflex- 4 ible policy of the Malheur Enter- prise to keep abreast of the times 5u with service equal to the best metropolitan newspapers. Sleep in Comfort Received this week a big shipment of new mattresses and springs. One of these sets will solve your rest problem. Made of finest materials, light in weight but heavy in soft rest ful qualities. Priced from $7.00 up TH0S.B. N0RDALE Vale . Oregon Are you back on the Job? A year ago you were tired of camp life nnu sick of trench life. The world you would have swapped for the old Job back. Now are you treating it right? Are you punching the Clock from thn Shoulder or it it just a listless jab at the Job? One that makes the bell sound liko a Saving Gong at ringside. They say the Pen is mightier than the Sword. It takes Grinding to make the Sword right, but much harrier Grinding to make the Pen write dol lar marks. The front line in the Cattle of Bus iness is the Dotted line. . The object of the Barbed Wire is, to Rtop. The object of the Live Wire is, not to stop. Take your choice, Buddy, be a Barbed Wire and wait for Success or a Live One and go out and capture it. If you are on Duty put your Heart in the thing and your Hat in thu ring. There is no Corporal of the Guard any more. It's an all day shift without relief and Every man shifts for himseif. He who sleeps on the Job should forfeit his Com mission and he does. - In the army you took orders with out asking questions; now you cannot take them without having questions asked. Are you prepared to give con vincing Countersigns? To have to answer, suggests an ar my on the Defense; wherever the Query strikes from be prepared to retaliate with Effect. Avoid the De fensive but if it seeks you Counter with Answers that will find you Dom inating the Dotted Line when the Armistice is signed. Bunk Fatigue is 90 percent Bunk. You know what they thought of the fellow who Laid down Over There. Well the job over here is just as im portant and a lot more permanent. Make the world safe for Old age. If you Stall or Loaf today you are S. O. L. tomorrow. j Silence is Golden and there are a , lot of Silent Stars in every Service Flag. If yours is still Blue be thank- ' Remember your Job before you ' ful and make it True Blue. came Back and back up the Job you have now. Christy Walsh. Our Market is Your Market YOU ARE THE ONE WE WANT TO PLEASE OUR SPECIALTY IS MEATS AND GROCER IES BUT WE CAN FURNISH ANYTHING NEEDED FOR GOOD EATS. SEASONABLE FRUITS AND MELONS ICE COLD AT ANY TIME. . Ice Cream Milk and Cream Eggs and Butter THE VALE MEAT CO. A. H. CHESTER, Mgr. THE PIONEKR MARKET; NINE BUSINESS Vale, Or-egon YEARS IN USE WANT ADS in the KM f r sands of people f;.r ma few hours g " r mfcMim 1 H OUR AMBITION is to conduct a reputable Grocery business by serving our customers with Best Quality Goods 5 and prompt, courteous service. We invite a per- S cnnnl l'nonnMifin rf mil ctflVO t Vinf Villi mflV SPP the splendid values we offer. Give us a Trial Staple and Fancy Groceries Diven and Company Formerly-"M. F. Co." Vale, Oregen The Vale Hot Springs Sanitarium Rooms, Board, Bath and Massage: Dr. Thos. W. Thureton, Supt., Vale, Ore. i i-wsaMivr ji ji necause tneir reiresnuiK navui i.-a 1 1 VALE MACHINE-& WELDING WORKS IAKRV K. RPIETII Vale, Oregon Saxon Garage, Ontario, Ore. ? Si ARLINGTON CAFE Luddinftos ft Prindle, Props. We have just taken charge of the Arlington Cafe and are here to serve the best meals in town at the most popular prices. HOME COOK ING is our sj)ecialty. Try Our Service Then See Ua for Regular Rates 18 cent a package Csxna arm old mvmrywhmrm in mcimntiftcmUy mmmlmd ptchmgmt of 20 mifr9ft or tmn pcksm 1300 eigmrmttm) in a 0lmmminm.parmr or-d cmrlon. Wm Btrtmgly mmmnd thtm csrton for Ihm hontm m 0k tippJy irJijijrourrJ. 14 Aj.Vin' 1 They Win You On Quality! Your enjoyment of Camels will be very great because their refreshing flavor and fragrance and mellowness is so enticingly different. You never tasted such a cigarette ! Bite h elimi nated and there is a cheerful absence of any unpleasant cigaretty after-taste or any un pleasant cigaretty odor I Camels are made of an expert blend of choice Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos and are smooth and mild, but have that desirable full body and certainly hand out satisfaction in generous measure. You will prefer this Camel blend to either kind of tobacco smoked straight I Give Camels the stiffest tryout, then compare thein with any cigarette in the world at any price for quality, flavor, satisfaction. No matter how liberally you smoke Camels they rill not tire your taste 1 R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO. Winston-Salem, N. C. - - in m m ii V