Saturday, .August 21, 1020 MALHEUR ENTERPRISE, VALE. OREGON fill LI ' Thm A. - A UiV C0 let Economy IW C In an Alaska, ice melts more slowly; maintains a more even refrigerating temperature; preserves food purity; pays its cost in what it eaves. C It lasts a lifetime; best known; most widely en dorsed; 1,000,000 in use. 'ft Come TODAY. W ARTISTIC DESIGNS and patterns in the latest Household Furnishings. Large Stock to Select From. When you want anything for the Home, see T. T. Nelsen Furniture and Undertaking VALE, OREGON When in need of anything in the fruiting line, phone the Malheur Enterprise. SLOW DEATH Aches, pains, nervousness, diffi culty in urinating, often mean serious disorders. The world' standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric add troubles COLD MEDAL fjamfflJausmegg i;; 5 andiojearsago ji flF GENRAL interest anacUUr tho fanaora I tnt.r.ln Nawa !! tram the IhinHlTit In oar aflort e mailt tut nmwpim norm - i i-- r. i. i. M.kii.h ft tho real rows of oar own local larmara I no all of ttw happilna of any eonuaoonca on ha arma In Malhoar Coantr. J " know wh.t rom nr. alantin. how tha crop, one c.tll. or, dolnf ana Ja.t what UJlnr know whet r ara plantin. how the crop on. m of roorwlf aaS roar iwlfhbora. Wo will bo rlad to psbllali It, UfiEGOH NEWS NOTES ENTERPRISE of fir ini Tea Taara At. The olhor farmara and roar aiatant frUndu and ntifhbara will ka jlad to ra4 oi i fe toklnc place rlfht bar. at homo, o don't haillata to writo or Waphono a tha f -W" -M- (from the Malheur CALIFORNIA'S CHAMPION THREE-YEAR-OLD COW mrfv . .iv tr.l ' t !t tit i. s - 1 tt! s-Jl -".Vjv- Enterprise, August 21, 1915) The Vole school will open Septem ber 7th this year, six now teachers appearing in this year's Roster, a teacher of Domestic Science being added to the High School corps. Cashier J. P. Dunaway of the United State3 Notional Bank of this city, was taken to the Holy Rosary Hospital last week ' and operated upon for an acute attack of appen dicitis. Late reports state that he is recovciing rapidly and will soon be at home. C. C. Mueller and family returned home last week from a visit to the j Exposition at San Francisco, making the trip both ways in their own car. The market for alfalfa hay ap pears to be opening up Btrong, largo amount of the new crop having been sold this week at prices some what above the quotations of aye"r ago. Among those who sold is the Eastern Oregon Land Company with about 2,000 ton3, for which was re ceived about $5.60 per ton. rv T H 1 f ajr..wvtl. A LADY AAGGIE ECHO HENGERVELD 323463 t"', LC ' Z cow, Lady Aaggie Echo Hengerveld 'for in 1917 its Ormsby Segis Marie , Unay'. . w . v . 323463, attains a place in the dairy 223321 held the senior three-year-old! " " ' nau 01 rame oy oreamng ina recoiu (recora wuu xtvf.u- iua. ui unwi Principal Events of tha Wick Briefly Sketched for Infor mation of Our Readers. urday. Judge Dalton Biggs and boys came over from Ontario the first ef the for milk and butter production in the 'from 27,025.7 lbs. of milk senior three-year-old class. She La(jy Aaggie Echo Hengerveld produced under semi-official test in ;unites the blood of great transmit-1 365 consecutive days, 28,008 lbs. of;ting animals, being by- a grandson of I u rrar,jaii-wnn haTwn milk containing 1,200.07 lbs. of but-.Aaggio Cornucopia Pauline Count'. , . t. p x s rnmnBnv in ter. This new butter record eclipses the former figures reeorded for Jew el Pontiac Segis 22261, whose re markable achievement was 1,171.1 lbs. 29642 and from a daughter of Sirith(J western part of the county dur. Johanna Canary DeKol 41034, the jng thfJ vacation pcriod returned sire of Spring Brook Bess Burke 2d home the first of the wepkt and wi)1 131387. the only cow in the world I - of butter. The previous milk record with three seven-day records above f retuming to his studies at the who icm b- ,jo ids. in conecuon wnn nuee jemijr iuiversitv of Oreiron in Eugene. gie rayne luiiuuua .ov,vui, irecoras aoove t,uuu ids. oi urnier, Lady Aaggio Jcno wcngerveia is Bred , such hiKh producing Leslie L. Hope and wife, Ralph Weaver and wife, and Gtioige Hope C-...V' '- .n.'l often ward olf ' w-i :iu the national .' r ,r.oro than 200 . ., .r. threa sizos. . . M.tM oToty ao . : auitation owned by the Toyon Farm Associa- ,. ' it natural to expect a Vh,v-i Mn,iw from iwn wlc vion, inc., can r raiiuiouu, uuuuiu jcreditable peifocmance from her. To and was bred Dy Mr. AlDert Bmixn . her break a world's reCord un of Sumas, Washington. Her sire is;d,r the conditions existing shows her Paul Aaggie Oakhurst 55387 and her tQ be a remarkably persistent per dam is Lady Echo Hengerveld De ;formelv for Lady Aaggie was pur Kol 2d 159461. Ich.vsed several months after fresh- She freshened at the age of three enng the A E Smiln Company years, seven months and thirteen of Sumag, Washington, and uncmes days, and her best seven-day official J tionably the long journey and the production, made in the early rai t iconlplete change 0f dimate and en of her lactation period, is 684 lbs. j vironment had some effect on her of milk containing ids. oi iat. i. , , , m.oduct:on. it jS; fair to pre- vacation in tha mountains. sume that any cow tlt can break a world's record under such con- FOR SALE Letter heads, note heads, statements, shipping tags, envelopes, wedding invitations and amDouncL-menta, menu cards, bills of fare, tinvj cards, hand bills, posters, atnd everything else in printed sta tionary. Wc print anything but greonbacka. Phone tho Malheur EnUrprise, Vale, Oregon. PFAM nil (IfEIiOSBNE) CO0HST0VTS 4TANDAR0 Of!. COMPAXY ICALlrORMIAl California is showing marked pro gress in making creditable and out rfanrlinir nrnrliiptinn records with purebred Holstein-Friesian cows, andjdilions is a promising prospeet for record making by Toyon Farm As-j still greater honors. FARM BUREAU AGENT HAS VERYBUSY MONTH Monthly Report of the County Farm Agent For Period Ending July 31 Shows Work Accomplished Organize Malheur City and Ironside Farm Bureaus The period covered by this report is shorter than usual but was an unusually busy one. The month was featured by many conferences with been longer. specialists and by the number of ex-j unusual amount of time, however, cursions, etc. conauciea. ureuitst on account oi me uuiicuuy progress was made along t io line of I FARM KEWS BRIEFS Fire Delays Publication Because of a fire, which occurred in the Argus shop just as the News was ready to go on the press,, a delay of nearjy a week occurred in getting the paper into the mails. It wa3 necessary to mail it out with out being trimmed and stapled, but as the copy, etc., was not destroyed in the fire, the delay might have The paper required an (From the Malheur- Enterprise, August 20, 1910) H. C. Wilmot, manager of the Rainbow Mine in Mormon Basin near Vale, states that the work at the mine is progressing very satisfact orily, and that the mine is producing between . $10,000 and $15,000 per month. Richard ' DeArmond, an old time resident of Malheur County, shipped thirty carloads, of cattle to Portland this week from Barren Valley. He has been in the cattle, business for over thirty years and states that the tie this year is the fattest and best he ha3 ever known. C. C. Mueller is working in the First National Bank during the ab sence of Cashier Jifmes Munroe, Miss Ella Murphy, Blance and Rena DeArmond of Beulah, will r turn to Boise this fall, to resume their studies at St. Theresa's Academy. John Boswell. the postmaster, re turned Wednesday from Eagle Creek where he has been the past ten days for an, outing. Fraflk Mcrfitt went to Ontavio Wednesday on business. preparatory work for later activi ties, but the crop and soil improve- Alfalfa Weevil Having determined that approxi- ment, marketing, horticultural ana mateiy one-mil o: tne bnipauie n-y home improvement projects all did of the ccwr.'.y vas not infested with cood work. ' th" . i -lia weevil, a report was made " I Aside from a small increase i:: tu the marketing committee and it !memberi!hip from voluntary r ; p.i- I decided that the State Board of Hor- I .. ., i . il.. I 1 1,1 u nJ.,;nnJ t Uio 'Cations, tno oniy progr.. m xnc iiuuii.uic bhuuiu uu uv,oi-u t-n 'county organization work was in thefact and that a system of inspection Malheur and Ironside communities. ; should be asked for instead of the Here the organization committee re-! proposed county quarantine. At the 'ported good interest and a consider- request of the committee, the writer When In Ontario, Stop at the MOORE HOTEL !asked for organization meetings to Ijourneyed o Salem to interview the , IT. C. Smith. ProD. "Main Line Headquarters for jeme number of members taken, and '.accompanied the delegation which tne ureal custom uicguu Interior" Hqt nf Service Always Welcome ;be held early in August, mo mat ter of affiliation in a state organiz ation was discussed by the executive committee. Durinir the month a number of C0MET0DSF0K POINTING That jells Goods Board in this matter. Poultry Meeting A meeting of the poultrymen of Payette and Washington counties in secialists from tho State and Fed- jdujj0 wag attended in company with eral departments visited the county '25 0r moro Malheur' county poultry- and met with the agent and with men. The day was devoted to visit- various eomtiittee and individuals jng w plants of successful poultry- of the farm bureau. Mr. r. u ai- men and listening to discussion of ard, leader of county agents in East- ;methods of feeding, care and breed- era Oregon, appeared before the ex- jng 0f chickens, ecutive committee to discuss organ- ization matters and the work of the wool growers associations. He spent several days in conference with the writer on matters concerning the work. Messrs. Piper and Jewett of the U. S. Biological survey, in charge !of predatory animal control work, ap peared before the executive commit tee Jo discuss a plan for the control -,,.,..a Viu mpnm nf KVKtemiltiC I : T I. .. : waa on. poisoning. Aiicir ww iv n u dorsed and the bureau will oooperate in all ways possible. Professors Car penter. Nelson and Gunn, extension Determine Route A trip was made over the terri tory on both sides of the river be tween Ontario and Big Btnd in com pany with demonstration project leader Cluttridge, Crop improvement project loader Fry. arid president Hickox of the Faim Bureau, to de termine the route to be taktn by the farm bureau and places to be visited on the trip. Good demonstrations of soil improvement by darinage and crop rotation were found and fields of growing crops which are of prov THE MARKETS ' Portland. Wheat Hard white, soft white, white club, f?.30; hard winter, northern spring, red J'alla Walla, $2.26. Oats No. 3 white feed, $47 tan. Com Whole, $72 "3; cracked, $76 70. HayWillamette valley timothy. $1728 per 'ton: alfalfa, !j25. Butter Fat -60&62C. Eggs Ranch, 60c per dozen. Poultry Ileus, 1826c per pound Cattle Best steers, $910; good ta choice, $8.60 9; medium to good ,$7 8.50. Hog8.prime mixed, $17.7618; me dium mixeil, $17(317.75. Khppt) EaBt of mountain lambs, '.9.50010; valley lumbs, $99.50. Seattle. Wheat Hard white, soft white, wlille club, northern spring, bard win ter. $2.30; red winter, $2.32; red Walla Walla, $2. !0. . Hay ;Cur.le n Washington tiuiolhy No. 1, $J0 per ion; alfalfa, $32. Butter Kat-r80S82e. Eggs Ranch, WtlUc. Poul'ry Hens, 35i038c. Cattle lies steers, $10310.50; we dlum to chclce $8.50!? 3.60. Hogs Prime. $18.25018.75; medium io cLoxo, $1G.752 17.75. Printing Brings Clients specialists, from the college, were in !eu value in diversified farming. The conference for the purpose of plan- 'time required to move from point to ning future work in the county. Ipoint was taken, and other details Mr. Carpenter is interested in crop :f0r tho trip worked out, Improvement work; Mr. Nelson is livestock specialist; Mr. Gunn hand- dies the Farm Management and re cord work. Not every butlncM hi show window. If you went towln more clients, use more printing and um 'aoreement were prepared by the com the kind of printing that faithfully 'nutee in charge, with legal assist- I'roject Work In cooperation with the projeet committees concerned, progress wa The plan of forming a power j made on several mattor along the users association made progress dur- line of work adopted by the bureau. ing the month. Revised articles of STEPHEN T. MATHER Ten acres of sunflowers at the East ern Oregon Biale hospital were bar- represent your busincte policy. ience gmj tha matter is now before ! vested the past week for silage and You sve money tna mie money jj,e respective power users for adop for your patron. Do th timi for tion youreir ty umi an kiwiwk high grade paper HtmmermlU Bond nd good printing, both of which we can give you. If you wnt printing terrlc and economy pyu!BT two 150 ton silos .r filled with the yield. It was at first intended that the sunflowers shculd supplement corn as a silage cr p but aucU a tremendous yield was obtained that lUe alios were Springfield flour mill i receiving ! ; .. ... ..... ... TfarpYovemenuj. ' touWd $ii8075 612. J Albany to have tile factory. Wood products factory to rebuild. C a. . A -1. . 'A . 7 A I 1 1 Foreign Import received at Port lam during the month at Juoa amoaaV ed to $980,889. Paving work ha bogus on th aerfen mile section of th Pacific highway north of Jefferson. Benton county now hu 48 threshing outfits. From present Indication th crop will be th belt in year. Increased rate are allowed th New berg Telephone eompany by an erder of the publle service commission. Forest fires reported by th air plane patrol of th forest, service to taled 3$ during tho latter half Of July. At a meeting of the state highway commission in Portland, August S, bids will be opened on $1,600,000 (tat highway bond. J. C. Nlon, an Oregon pioneer, died at his horn in Ntwberg at th ag of With hi parent he located la the Chehalem valley In 1845. Th first unit of the LangeU Tlly Irrigation district In Klamath county has mad application to th atat to approve a bond Issue of $197,000. Oregon ha a population In 1820 of 783,286, according o nu figure, whleh Is a fain of 110,620 or 11.4 per cent ovar the 1010 figure of 7J,76. Fred Peterion, 76, a native of Den ark, wa burned to death when hi cabin on the Mohawk river, 16 miles northeast of Eugene, wa destroyed by fire. W. I. Butter of Allegany ha been held to th grand Jury in Coo county on the charge of wiling rook for chlttlm bark to improve th weight ef the bark. Monday, September 6, Later dy, ho been plected by Hoi Stiver as the date for formal aelebratlcn of th opening of the completely pared Co lumbia River highway. Wheat harvest 1 under way In Mor row county and the grain la of first- class quality. Th yield is a lair av erage although many field wer In jured by the hot weather. Oregon 1 suffering from a ehortage of librarian, according to Mia wr nella Marvin, state librarian, wl ban a list of eight important poita In the state that should be filled. Notwithstanding the gasoline short age, the number of automobile visit ing Crater lake to tar this summer ha exceeded the number tbat visited the resort during the entire season f 1019. Approximately 06,800 motor vehlele are registered In Oregon, according to a statement made at the office ef the RfiereUry of state. This Is one car for about every eight persona in Oregon The Fruit Orowerr league or Jflea- ford ha opened an employment bur eau with the object of cooperating with other fruit grower In th allo cation f picker throughout th val ley. The public eervlc cemmlseien a Issued orders granting service rate in crease to the Deschutes Telephone company of Claekama county and C, A. Bradford telephone line In Grant county. During the fiscal year ending Jan 30, 888 dentist wer licensed t prac tice in Oregon. Of these, 184 were non-roeldent. The Ueense ef 81 den tist were revoke! beeau ef nea pay- went of fees. July was an exceptionally dryint In Astoria and the lower Columbia river district, according to the record m the local weather observer cfHc. Tbe precipitation for the month wa of an inch. The special committee of tate legis lator appointed to investigate th state game and fish commission will meet in Portland August 18 t hear onyou who has a complaint to make against the eomwlsslen. While testing out a forest erviee radio outfit at Eugene, human voices were picked up by the instruments. If was learned tbat the voices came trom Portland tbreugb a wireless tele phone apparatus In that aity. Fire destroyed the Strang KilngU eompany' mill, four mile from tb tity limits of Portland on tbs Llnntoo road, and burned four dwellings, fonr bunkhouses and a boarding bousa. with a total loss of about $60,000. The Kit math Falls eouneil bas de cided not to remc-e dice aad card ganir from pool room and otber pub lic place but will amend existing or dinance by providing for revocation ef license In case gambling 1 allowed. A'l organization commander of the National guard of Oregon bar bn authorised by Adjutant-Qnerl Whit to suspend drills during th harvest .season so tbat guardsmen may help .Mitt the Oregon fruit and grain erep. Attractions of boat races, automo bile race, a carnival and tb biggest agricultural, horticultural and indus trial exhibit of many year will fea ture this year' Wasco county fair to be held at The Dalle October 4, I, 6 and 7. Tbe mutilated body of Carl McCoy, 19, of Cottage Orove, wa found en th Swuthern Pacific railroad track near the station In Sutherlln. II ap parently had met death accidentally by being run over in getting eft of a night train. Fir protection -at Roscburg and Medford la declared Inadequate by O W. Btoke. an Investigator for thi itat fire marshal's department la Hoseburg Btoke found only tJ by dranta. There should be twice tbat number, be sa." MAC SAYS: Are Your Feet Tired? BliKER'S foothelm wtja BRING COMFORT TO ACHIIHJ, FEET. PRICE 25c THE CAN. v REX ALL FOOT POWDER,..-...., REXALL LETS FOOT BATH ... Mo. A. Vale, A. D. 8. FOOT SOAP. CAJSK.....M fcINC 8TEARATE FOR CHAF9D FEET : WE ARE TIEADQUARTERS FOB, EVERYTHING IN DRUG8 ANt MAC PAYS THE POSTAGE E. McGILLIVRA Y Or3a I The First National Barik of Vale. Ortfta aAwaJWwpi'-:; GAPITAL AND SURPLUS . BMtt.aj : VB AIM TO HANDLE YOUR BUSINESS FOR TOB THAT TOU MAY RECEIVE THE GREATEST A at OUST OF SERVICE AND SECURITY. WE SOLICIT YOUR D 'PC '.'TS Iflt A Cr!H K tJC M BAYING ACCOUNT. ALBERT v. JIFKI), Cs'or. . IXHIjta 1 4-aa -.'It-,Mtw Reliable Dealings AND COMPLETE STOCK RELIABLE GOODS AT FAIREST PRICES HAS MADE US THE SQUARE DEAL GROCERY. COUNTRY TRADK miKTmr DIVEN & COMPANY Dependable Groceries. PHONE 4 VALE, OREGON Stephen T. Mather, who is director etf national park aervlc. Title & Abstract '.Ul. - va!. WW I Complete Kpuipment to give Prompt and Careful Service wmm$ i ' ' We Will Talife AuythUiK An;. Plat -Express Bag Rape Fruight All Kinds of Light and 11 envy UaulLfttf Vale Transfer & Storage .' W. F. Dinyman & C- L. Walter, Prop PHONES: OBiee ll, aeoe a eaVaaJalr Subscr'S-e to thEntfrtrlf7 Ulllllllllll'"'1'1" '. t,1r HIM COLD DRINKS! (Coolest Drink Emporium in Town) CANDY, CIGA2S, TOBACCO, B00O3 AND MAGAZINES OF ALL KINE3. NEWSPAPERS. "It Its Read We Have It" VALE NEWS STAND Formerly P. O. NEWS, A. S. Hunt, Prep. Vale, OstSZ .MM. tf ilMi.lll.MI)