Halsey enterprise. (Halsey, Linn County, Or.) 19??-1924, August 25, 1921, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAG E 2
H A L S E Y E N T E R P R IS E
11 - ,
AUG UST 25 1921
Camel Going W ithout W ater.
SECURE BEST HARVEST HELP
An ordinary camel w ill carry Its
Government by understanding park 26 miles a day for three days !
Rovers a rt Usually Efficient but They
without water, while there are some
government by that w ill go without w ater 50 miles a
An independent—N O T neutral—news­ bee tnperceded
Are Liabla te Leave Before Crept
paper. published every Thursday,
Are A ll In.
dictation.’’ What has become of day for flva days. A specially trained
by W k H . A A. A. W H E E L E R .
camel
will
carry
a
rider
a
hundred
government by party?
W m . H. W m m i .U Editor.
mile» In a day. It lifts the legs on the 1 Getting help for the harvest rush Is
Mas A A WMBSLSn Business Manager
a problem which Is best faced weeks
same side at the same time, like a
and Itocal News Editor.
Ashes Clean d a is e s .
In advance. Grain, and orchard har­
pacing horse.
A m ature camel w ill
For cleaning glaum*, which have con
vest seasons bring to many aectlons
carry a load of a thousand pounds.
SabacriMoas. »1.50 a year in advance.
talned milk there Is nothing equal The animal Is not full grown until Its
large numbers of traveling help who
Arrearages, 12 a year.
to wood ashes
start with a crop In the South and
sixteenth or seventeenth year.
Transient advertising. 25c an inch, per­
work north with the season to the
m anent, 20c
No discount lor time
Canadian border. These workers are
or »pace
usually efficient through long ex­
In " Paid-for Paragraphs, ’ ’ Sc alin e
Noadverlisirig disguised as news
perience, but they are likely to feel
. ----
the urge of the road and leave before
H A L S E Y , L in n C o , Ore A ug. 25, 1921
the farm er gets hie crop stl harvested,
obliging him to pay a much higher rate
to secure the remainder of the crop
U N E T H IC A L "K H IC B ”
before it spoils.
W herever efficient
Aug. 29, Ed Slorti, one-half mile north of Brownsville
local help can he obtained. It la to
No word »«• ever more abused
30, A. B Clement, near Sweet Home, Stock, etc,, and 140-
be preferred to the rovers.
»
HALSEY ENTERPRISE
BEN T. SUDTELL’S
Auction Dates
then the word "ethics.” The or.
g n zed doctors of the country
have prescribed some extrenielv
unethical rules which they label
‘ ethics.” One of the*« wae illus­
trated when the Osteopathic con­
vention et Cleveland charged Dr.
Russell with "violating ethical
standards” by answering questions
which he was required by the lew
of the land to answer in the no­
torious Stillman esse
The New
York Herald says
"Th e Oeteo
pethic association cannot set itself
above the law.” But it tiiee to do
so
A few years ago a health officer
in Eugene made an effor, to en­
force the lew which requires doc­
tors io report all birth» at which
they assist and all deaths of their
patients. The doctors who had
been ignoring and defying the law
threatened to ostracise him from
the profession for thus questioning
their superiority to the law of the
land.*
An I they systematically make
war on any member of their pro­
fession, who, knowing something
that would he ol lieucHi to the ail­
ing make, it known through tin
press, unless he can get the public
ity free of charge.
The latter kiud of advertising is
not branded "unethical.”
acre Farm
31, A. McCrae, near Jefferson
S’ pt 1, John Hunter, two miles east of Halssv, big sale
7, N . M Sbrode, near W altervill«, Lane county
8, Manuel Enos, mile and a half west of Brownsville, Jersey
Ccws
9, T. A. Hover, mile and a half northwest of Halsey
10, George Lusby, three miles east of Harrisburg
12. S. Reeser, two miles southwest of Halsey
14, F. Prietrolc, near Shelburn
t
13, J. C. Walton, three miles northeast of Halsey
Brownsville and Drifted Snow
flour at D H. Sturtevant’s.
Dr. E W. Barnum, dentist, at
rfoiol H»I**T every Tuesday arid
Friday.
For Rent— 60 acres good fam
land, house and two barus.
S< •
Mrs. M. E. Bassett.
Mr Byerley, at the creamery,
will furuish crates to those wlr
sell him blackberries.
Ever meet a cougar?
Perbap-
ou have, but probably it wu-
dead. Or a live one may have go)
ibug goat, or your lamb or some­
thing. It is wise to traps, and if
perehance one is caught it is ab.
The Growler,
One
Nobody loves a rag ehewsr.
A ■olutely untamable, usually.
moth hasn't a friend In the w orld!— hi» been haiued aud taught to act
Cartoons M a g a s in *
•
on the stage, and at the Rialto to­
morrow everiiug in ‘‘ I'he Man of
the Forest,” you can see this and
other wonderful things.
Fall Styles are Arriving
PERCH BAIT FOR
BIG RATTLESNAKE
The fall of 1921 class of clothing styles are now ready
Plenty of newness.
Splendid variety.
Also
Texas Fishermen Bring in Queer
Stories of Encounters With
Reptiles.
Á
’
-----
A n itin . Tex.— Stories of battles w ith
rattlesnakes and stuinp-tall mocca­
sins sre brought to Austin by nearly
every fishing party which has been on
eutlngs to the many fishing streams
In the mountains west of Austin. But
the most unusual tale la told by an
aggregation of anglers who have Just
returned from a camp on the Peder­
nales river, 86 miles west of this city.
In this party were several men who
have been up against many ra ttle ­
snakes, but this Is the first tim e that
any o f them made the discovery that
a rattlesnake fed on fish.
According to the story a throw line
halted with small perch had been put
out Into thv river. One of the party,
fishing w ith rod and reel, la te r hnd
ulled the throw line p artly In *o -e t It
A Huge Rattlesnake W as Pound on the
Book.
out of the w ay, and In doing this one
hook, still baited w ith perch, was left
hanging above the w ater. The next
morning a huge rattlesnake was found
on the exposed hook. It Is stated that
the snake was as large around as the
arm of the average man. The snake
was killed and the perch, which had
attracted It to the hook, was found
In the reptile's mouth.
The crop of snakes, especially (he
rattlesnake species, is larger this year
than In years. This Is attrib u ted to
the past mild w inter.
Moccasins
swarm the sm aller creeks and there
! are moccasins in the larg er streams.
T h e Colorado riv e r has it good sized
I quota.
W h ile many of the snakes
I seen In the streams are the harmless
I w a te r snakes, there Is an abundance
: of the rusty and poisonous species of
■ the moccasin
Can’t
Kiss W ife
In Swimming
Pool,
North Bergpn, N. J.— I f a man must
kiss his wife, lie should not kiss her In a
public
swimming
pool.
M atthew
M arquard, th irty years old, became a f­
fectionate w ith his w ife M argaret,
twenty years old. In a pool here, and
appeared In court on a disorderly con­
duct charge.
Not Handsome, but Hears W ell.
Copenhagen.— When King Christian
visited a little town In northern
Schleswig, a German woman remarked
to a companion as they were passing
the k in g : “You can't call him good-
looking. anyhow.”
T he king turned
and answered In German, “but his
hearing Is excellent.”
TI vf stwi sh am pre
'The Man oc the
Forest '
at the Rialto Friday nigl.t
the 2lth, will be a
Clean, wholesome
Drama
j
t '■
’
of outdour life. I t it th rills and «<,spent
from beginning to end. w i lt tome start-^
lin g situations Thst ere fresh to the screen
Pathos and hntuor, red-blooded thriH? and
tender love scenes succeed one another an
bleed into the whole, m aking this big spe­
cial photoplay one of the fi e t ad enture
documenta ever offered.
The American Farm B tirs g u i»
organising a co-operative plan foi
marketing dairy products
The e
c ■ operative schemes sre moves in
the tight direction »nd if they can
he conducted njih adequate busi­
ness ability and without graft th*»
will dn much to elevate the fam.
lug population Can thay f
Z A FOPt'LAR
N E GREYS
VTORY
7 * r
‘M A N S F O R E S T '
A tnM civr ta le o f to*« and a d w n tw e
w ith an all star cart ir u h id ir g
Robert Me Kim Claire Adams
Carl Gantvoorr
IM.W W »vn BHAAS
Rialto
Friday
ZANI car. pkttw s t x
fiODKJNSON
P O L IC IE S protect you against loss tn fire on your hay, gra n,
clover and other seed for auy length of tim e desired. Policies
w ritten and delivered on day of application. Rites on request.
,
The national W C. T. V. con
tent ion in Sen Ftancisco last «s i
launched a war against tobacco
If they can accomplish as much n
the next fifty years In thia oruead*
a* they did m the lest fifty fn>
prohibition
a great economii
waste in the nation will have b*e>
eliunneted.
The froridepce Joufoal saje
5 C en ts
policeman at target practice, lodged In
the neck of Andrew Serenclk, sixteen
years old, who was Just diving off a
pier for a swim.
Other swimmer»
carried Serenclk ashore and rushed
him to a hospital.
Heattle is considering ths instal
lat'on of trackless trolley cars fo
the municipal street railroad, to d
■way with the heavy expense ol
maintaining rails.
it ie hope*'
thus to solve the problem of jitney
competition which has made the
street car ayetom a losing propoei.
lion.
Ths Chicago grain gamblers ate
doing all they can to discredit th*
Oo-operstivs wheat.marketing pro­
ject hr hearing the market w ill
■II their power.
A d m itta n c e H ere
a L iue
For Sa'e— Full blooded Rho-.l*
Island pullets; also a cross between
Policeman at T ergal Praetiea Hlta Bey
R. 1. reds and brown Leghorns.
W hiting. Ind.— A bullet, fired by a
Mrs. W ill Carter
Four girls who had escaped from
the girls' school at Grand Mound,
Wash . were recaptured and taken
to the police station, where two
matrons from the reboot came for
them, last Thursday. One of the
women said to one of the g irle ;
“ You dirty little brat, you haven’t
any brains.”
It is not Strang*
1 it girls run away from a place
wnere such women have authority
If (he law provided that even
Person insane enough io commi
murder should t>e imptipenso fo-
Ilf*, without the possibility o'
psrdnn, for the protection of the
commnnitv, fewer cunning mur­
derers would feign or plead ID
sanity,
PAID-FOR PARAGRAPHS
C. P. STAFFORD,
Resident agent American Eagle Fire Insurance Company.
*****» *» *» *******» A » iS **v M N A P v H P *ito e
<»-»*-* A B * * * * * * AB*»
Public typewriting dene.
Enter­
prise office.
O w irA l 19 IP
»nappy ideas, new colors, big values that w ill certainly suit the young
men, I he men in business and professional life. W e know in there
days that price is a consideration to you. and you w ill agree with us
hat we are effering wondeilul values. W e have onr clothing priced at
^ e present market price. No suits held foi
______ old prices, but everything goes at the new low. prict
[ blain CLOTH inoco J level
jpnsxBmfc
The store with a square deal for every customer
Mrs. A . A . W H E E L E R .
IN S U R E IN T H E O L D R E L IA B L E
FA RM ER S’
F IR E
1921
R E L IE F A S S O C IA T IO N
OF B U T T E V IL L E ORE.
»49,»37 M Cash Surplus Capital on In ly 1, 1921.
R * te*
48 033..951.00 Insurance in force
P’ vst class. 25c : second class, ,10c per »100
SCO TT & S IM O N S
L E B A N O N , O REG O N
O nly ruthon’xed agents for Linn County.
*»•