Halsey enterprise. (Halsey, Linn County, Or.) 19??-1924, February 23, 1922, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAG B 4
H A L S E Y E N T E R P R IS E
WHERE YOUR TAXES GO
(by Edward G . L o w ry )
FEB. U , 19Z2
Now is the tim e to look for Spring C lcdtiag and Shoes, and don't forget that ,
we te ll good, standard merchandise at the lowest possible price
CORRECT NUMBER OF
EGGS FOR HATCHING
Poor Turkey Hatches Often Due
to Crowded Hens.
M A G N IT U D E OF BILLIONS
k
T.
High School Notes
H A L S E Y railroad time
Booth
North
the
IB, 12:01 p. m.
' class play thia week and will be- No. 24,
5.50 p. m
i gin practicing immediately;-
The junior class received
No, 23, I I » a. m.
17, 5.3'? p. m.
MEN’S CLOTHING
H e a ry Kerrey Paata
$2.98,3.25,3.45 and 3.85 «
S
i «¡35 sl!iDAY MA,L "Du" ,
...................... $3.95 and 4.45 £ , Rialto " ball • Wcdueaday
►>«••• morning
•> *• Halaey
Th* ■“ poetoffice
’"'t is open o Sundays
l
h „.,
tT QT 14")
W ool Dress P a n t« ............. » 1 7
'io -A
O O e -A
a
I bar« been throwing the Incredible
Egurea a t your head
Neither you nor Fcw l W ill Cover Frem 15 ta to Eggs, M e a ’a S u its ..
anybody alee hae the fain teat conrep
and Bematlm«« Mora, Much Da.
tlou at what one billion dollar« really
pending an H er Sue— Incuba­
la. We apeak fa m ilia rly of billions aa
tor« Are Successful.
a commonplace, bat moat of ua lire
o ar Urea la term« of hundred«.
'Prepared by tha United Stats« D epart-
I h are shown you that every on«
merit of A prlcatture l
Men's Brown Dvccs Shoes, round toes,
e f a t. man, woman and child. In thia
Turkey bens and thicken bens ordi- English lasts. Goodyear W e l t s . . . . . . . .
country, paid laat year <53.77 e e c b ' narlly are used lo Incubate turkey
Misses Brown C all Dress Shoes. English lasts. Good­
l< word the support of the government, <^ga. «Khough incubators are ua»d i e « Welts
C f couree, every person doe« not
pay where turkey» are raised'on a large
exactly V M .n .
A great many
pay «cate.
During tha early pert of the
M ilita ry H e e ls ........
morn and some pay lees; but those i ¡tying season It often happens that
tbs szx
who pay the moat try to take It
out (here are on band a number of eggs C h ild re n s Shoes »ma II sizes. 2)4 to <i. range in price -
r»f those who pay the least by tncreae- -hat should be set before the turkey
We also carry a nice line of S T A P L E P I E C E G O O D S
Ing the prtcee of what they have to )*.„» are through laying their Brat llt-
C all and see ua when io Albany
aell. or of services rendered or woi k ier, and become "broody.’* In such case,
performed, to that It averages out at and also when It Is desired to have
<53 77.
Some pay more than their the turkey hens lay a second or third
share, other« pay leas. Thia la calli-d litter, some of the egg* have to he A L B A N Y
37 STOKES
an Incident ef taxation. The whole lO'-uheted under chicken bans or !n an
point ta that we all pay; that we pay Incubator
now more than wa ever paid before;
About a week before the poultry are
end there la no preaent prospect of our to batch a sufficient number of tur­
Operate to Stop the Pain
paying lees for some years.
key hen« should be allowed to alt to
in an Arm Already Gone
In thia way we have all paid our >ake all the poults hatched.
They
th e re In the World war. The net coat
an he given a few eggs from the Incu
Relem. D re.—An operation of
o f that enterprtae to date has been betor or from under the chicken hens.
sympethetomy believed to be the
<24.100,000.000, or. including our loan«
Brat In the United Slate«, was
to foreign governments, which hsre
performed here on M arius 8a
not been repaid. <33 455.O00.O0O These
huo. Surgeon» removed
part
are official treasury figures
Do not
of the cuff of the brachial a r­
let your eyes run over them lightly.
tery from the stump o f one of
T hirty-th ree billion four bumged and
bis arms. amputated some time
flfty-Ave million do",are la an almost
ago. to alleviate pain apparently
Incomprehensible su.-n.
The coat of
In the removed arm . T he a r­
running the national government la
teria l cuff, they explained, con­
now around <5,000,t>X),000 a year. Th-
tains a sympathetic nervous
axi-erts say that for the next two or
plexus In which the i-alnful sen­
three years the cost of the governmen<
sation had Its source.
w ill not descend below about <4.OU0
000.000 a year.
I want you clearly to understand the
Immensity, the magnitude, the over­
whelming size o f such sums.
We
chatter abot<t hllllons nowadays w ith­
out In the West knowing what Is a
Turkey Hana Ara Close Oittera.
billion.
Let me try lo bring It home
J
n r
a a
The program was-
*• ^ - g -
A m eric»/’ aehool.
• ;rom 9:15 to 9:4-5 a. tn. and 12:20
Ju> 12:36 -od 4:46 to 5.00 p. m.
$17, 18.i>0, 22.50 and 2d.OO 2. Welcome Recitation. B o » -'___________________________ _____
or); Iaom.
Boy»*»mi»........................-$4.85, 5.90 and 6.50 8. Washington Boys' exercises, PAID-FOR PARAGRAPHS
primary boys.
4.
Making the Flag,” primary
SHOES
Admittance Here 5 Cents
girls.
a Line
5. The M inuet,Retta Armstrong
$3.98, 4.45 and 4.95 6. ‘'Tea P arly,” primary grades. Custom hatching. E Russ.
fifth and aixlb grade«
$4.95 to 6 85 7 8 Song,
Reading, “ Washington, ” Ag­
“Sentimental Tommy” Coming
ue» Haya.
.5b“': $3.65, 3.95, 4.65 and
5.25
A
1 ACi
Kxercisee, fifth and sixth
tO
l.s /J
C. J. B R E IE R CO-
to you. I t Is now, roughly speaking -ind allowed to hatch the poults thero-
1020 year« «Inca the birth of C h ris t -elves, or at night a newly hatched
We do not know precisely and accu­ poult can he slipped under each tu r­
rately at what hour and on what duy key lien that la to he given a brdhd o f
Christ was born. Hut under the Ore- , poults, and by morning they w ill take
gorlan calendar, according to which them, poultry specialists In the United
we now reckon time, we have a | stales Departm ent o f A griculture say.
record of the days since January first
Turkey hens are cteea sitters, and
of the year one. Anno Domini. From I if managed properly they are the
7****r r>ne to Jan- ( mi rest means of hatching turkey eggs
Unry 1, 1021, there elapsed shout 701,. lliat can be used.
Incubators are
207 days, or, to reduce It further, quite as succeasfi* w ith turkey egg«,
1<I.H30,40A hours, which being reduced however, aa with chicken eggs Poor
again, means 1,000/124,430 minute«.
hntche. are a very frequent cauae of
I vs 111 ask you to remember that the , om plalnt among turkey raisers, and
whole history o f the modern world thia Is quite often due to crowding
from the first second of the year one I more eggs under the hens than they
to the last second of the year 1020 -«n properly cover. One egg too many
ha« been compressed Into 1,008.824,480' means that every egg In the neat prob-
minutes
ibly
|,econi« chilled at some tim e
Now let us suppose that wflh the luring the four weeks of Incubation,
permission of the Homan authorities ■ Turkey hens cover from IS to 18
the United Rentes had established a 1 ■'MP- and •" »"me cases more, depend-
Spring
HATS
FOR MEN
ARE HERE
Men who understand
the distinction between
authentic style and tem ­
dlehurslng officer at Jeru«alem on the ‘ ln< nn
the hen
Chicken
flrel day of the year one with Instruc- '
nf ’ he «»liars I-purpose breeds porary fails buy our hats
lions to pay out <8 a minute day und -over from eight to ten turkey egg»
because they
The turkey-egg capacity of an lu- not only
night Rundaya and hnlldnya Included,
right down through the centurlei to ubator la approximately three-fourths
look so well but because
of the clilcken-egg capacity.
New Tear's day, 1021.
Ruppose he had been given <3,888
they look well so long.
OHS.708 to atari him on his lone spell YIELD TO PROFITABLE COWS
of spending
T hat is one estimate of
a See the new shapes
the turn that It com to run th l. gov- B v try Oslrymsn Should Weigh le c h
Prices
eminent In 1020
On the morning of
M ilking and Hava Sample Test­
January J. 1021. this mythical disburs­
ing officer, giving money away at the
rate of <3 « minute a ould have spent
only <8.040,122,400 und would still
he one of the rl-hes* men In the
world, for he would have left on
hand <838.883,308 of the original sum
Taylng out at the rale of <5 a minute
for more than 10OO years he would
not have kept pace w ith the cost of
upkeep of thle government for the one
«Ingle year 1920.
gw'xmw sw yuwa
looked out upon a camera when thia
photo was made One afternoon M ia.
W righ t suddenly lapsed Into unconsci­
ousness. "Istey" saw her.
Tlic cat
bounded to the side of his mistress
and began to lick her temple for dear
life. And when the eyelids that h id
closed flickered again and came open,
there wae a "meow" of delight. M is.
W right is quite slong In years and
she believes the licking of her temple
assisted In reviving the circulation of
blood to her head.
ed fe r Butterfat.
'•Every owner of dairy cows should
know If his cow« ^ re giving enough
m ilk or butterfat to make a proflt over
the coat of feed.” says A C Baer, pro­
fessor of dairying at Oklahoma A. and
M. college “A scale to weigh the m ilk
In the ham can he bought for <4
It
takes only a few minute« a day extra
time to weigh the m ilk from each cow
and w rite the weight on a m ilk sh-et
Ruppose tins imsglnsry government tacked up In the barn. Once a month
spender hsd been authorized to pay a sample of m ilk can be tested. Any
out at the rate of <23 a minute through creamery. Ice cream factory or cream
the centuries
He would not hsve station w ill usually be glad to do thia
finished on January I, 1081, paying testing.
Every schoolhouse can he
for our ahare of the cost of the World equipped with a tester at very little
war by tome <784.0.18.980
He would expense, and the boya at achool can do
have that much lef- ov«r a fte r paying » * • testing
out <23 22(1.083,040 He would have he n
“A profitable cow should produce 8.-
psvlng out nearly 40 cents every se< 000 pounds of m ilk or 200 pqpnds of
onrt the dock tlcke-l for more than 10 butterfat In 30ft daya
Are your cowa
centuries without being able to dla- #I1 profl»«bl«T Why not find out? Is
charge our ehare of the World war milking dairy cows a business propo
cost.
, sltlon with you? I f so. why not sp-
Do you ever bother your head shout l’ ,Jr bn* ,n M ’ methods?"
the«« bushels and bushel« of dollsrs
-------------------------------
that you rontrthute to ih r support of GLUTEN FEED FOR FALL PIGS
the government?
Ton earned them
________
■ -—
Tou know »hether -hey name - a t i l i or Cern le Net aa Satisfactory tor Swina
•o f.
Do you kuo v where they gn
aa It le tor Sheep and Dairy
aft«y tbev 'eave tog how they ure
’ Cailla.
•pent, whether wleely or foolishly?
If'« all your money contributed foi the
tt h at been found that corn gluten
proper and economic conduct of your meal Is no! extremely satisfactory aa
business
There Is no such tblnx aa a feed for fattenin g fa ll pigs
If la
governniiml money.
The government not nearly so good a feed for hogs as
never earned a cent
for ra ttle and «Keep. It brings hatter
Tou own the g-ivem oent and you to«uHa with dairy cattle than w ith
etip|*ort It. and It Is merely admlnle- beef steers. It seems that Jbe most
tered by men of your «election
I satl«tot-tory returns are made from
have always been puzzl tl about why corn gluten feed for hogs when It Is
you do not lake an active and enger fed In a self-feeder alone with corn
Intere«
In whal her timo» of you- « • If fed In another feeder and tan k ­
age in a third feeder
The reaults are
money i bal yon pay In t«xca
Improved I f thia feed la fed ta Conner
Rut let*« go on and get down
Hon w ith good pasture.
Da Yau Do I t f
Certain human »xpre«stons, each as
the haring of the laefh In rag« and th«
krlattlng of tha hair under the Infln
euce of «xtrew**- rear have been put
forw ard by artentlets as proofs of
Mrs. M argaret Garey W right of Los
I Angeles and Persian Cat “Istey," to
which she believes she owes her life,
I The weird workings o f the feline
i brain which prompted "Istey" to do
I Just the right thing when his mis­
tress fell In a fain t are more than
Mrs. W right and cat fanciers are aide
i to fathom, but perhaps there wna a
! hint of it in the silts o f yellow eyes that
i
ALBANY, ORRGGN
r ief orphans,- -A lbany Herald.
RIALTO
FRIDAY
Anoten xto teu
ssjessmt «
SIR IA M B S AA A A R R .IR 3
Sentimental Tommy*
*nta O A
A R R .E
E T T I1
I I H I U J 0 H F
»r-t«
E R
8
M A B E L T A L 1 A F B B -R .O
aad M A Y A A c A V O V
»
V
< Z f/V zu /tio tm Z * A r tu r p
Set amid charm ing rccuur in the old Scotch village
of Thrums. Mad© ol th© things that make life worth
i while.
Th« Thumh.
Ju«t as th» chin gtvea qualltlea to
th» toce, ao th« thumh marha th« pee
■onallty of the haiid. and la «n uner
ring Index of a man a natural strvnxth
a
a ik¥Mia.
I
FIRST WOMAN ASSESSOR
W h it« Rock, S. D — A farm er
here has offered to rent his farm
of IflO acres on the sole condi­
tion that the tenant shall turn
over to him one turkey for each
acre. Turkeys sdlfl by the land
owner during thu closing wc-ks
of 1921 brought him from <8 to
<10 each
H e believes that by
this method he would be getting
the “long end" o f the bargain
when his tenant at the end of
1922 paid his rent with 100 tur
keys.
Linn county people bare taken
ov r the support of 3 0 n e a r-e a s t
Good 2-Reel Comedy
Sir James M. Barrie’s “ Sensa­
tional Tommy,” which has proven
oue ol the outstanding pictures of
the year, will be shown at the Ki>
alo theater Friday.
This is a de­
lightful picture that pleases young
and old alike and was made by
John 8. Robertson, director of
John Barrymore in “ Dr. J kyll
and M r. H yd e.” Gareth Hughes,
M iy Mi-Avoy, Mabel Taliaferro
and George Fawcett are in ibec^st.
10. Song, “ There are Many
Flag!*,” seeventh and eighth grade--
11. Reading, Georgina Clark
12. Reading, “ At Valley Forge,”
Edna Re-lfoid.
13. Song,“ Mount Vernon Bella,’’
-eventh and eigl.th grades.
14 Reading, "Was it a Secret? '
Ruth Sturtevant
15. Exercise, fifth and sixth
grade boya.
16. Reading, W ilbur E veritt
For Sale— W hite Wyandotte
17. Reading, Cecil R>*dford.
cockerels, $2 each. M aryS Evans.
18 Song, “ W ill Slant! by th
Route 1.
Flag,” seventh and eighth grade-.
For
Sale—
Oliver
Irpewritor
No.
19. Piano solo, Grace Kirk
20 Incidents in W ahington's 9. Two-color ribbon, back spacer,
ibulator. $25.
0 . P. Stafford,
L if e , A l t a H a y e s ,
Halsey, Ore.
21. Reading. Grace Robinson.
22. Vocal solo, Alberta Kooutz.
Leave your otders for land-
23., Piano solo, Louise Roboett
■laster at the lumber yard.
24. Reading, Janet Boggs.
25. Girls’ quartet, high school
girl»
Dr. E. W. Barnum, dentist, at
26. Reading, M«arle Straley.
lolel Halsey every Tuesday and
27. Clarinet solo, Ercel Sneed.
•riday.
28 H gh sch >ol paptr, Ger 1-
dme C<> k and Wibnvtta For ter.
Dwarf Essex rape seeded in late
29. Read ng,.H iz-l Quimby.
30. Piano olo, Clarice Gourley. April, May or June on rich land
31. Song— “ Star Spangled Ba--, nakes excellent sheep or hog pis-
ure for lale spring and summer.
i.er,’ ’ school.
The high and grade schools weie One acre usually carries 10 to 15
Plan now for a place for
visited Tuesday afternoon bv two inimals
near-east worker*. The high sjho d ib is crop. —O. A. C.
p'edged to support one orphan er
Since there are so few certified
a year.
The grade school is con
eed potatoes this year the Oregon
si tering the proposition.
xperiment station is receiving
The G irls’ Glee club recital,
which will be held M trch 11 ai -aruples of potatoes which are be-
the Rialto hall, has all (he pros- ug inspected for seed pur puses,
pec » of b<- ng a success, as (he /armere who want to know how
girls are s| ending all their sp.i e :<>od their stock is may find out
time, as w. II as regular practice-, • Highly by sending in 35 to 50
working < n the selections.
Thi- typical potatoes for examination.
will be the firs appearauce of thei I'bere are indications of a strong
letuaud for certified fields this year.
glee club in public.
Asks One Turkey
an Acre for Farm
$ 2 .4 5 to
$ 7 .0 0
The More with a square
deal for every customer.
grade girl«.
Since Mr». Roxa S. Kirby, the tlrsr
woman to be elected an assessor, as­
sumed office aa county assessor of
Campbell county, Wyo. (which la ex­
actly the size o f the state o f Connect­
icut) the "hard-bulled" property own­
er who was wont to drop In and
"cusa out" the assessor for “overval­
uing" his property has become aa rare
thcce as the dodo l n fact, he "ain't."
Mrs. Kirby, who served as deputy
assessor before she was elected to the
head of the office (having an over,
whelming m ajority over the man who
ran against her) know« the assess
ment business ‘fropj Hie ground up to
the money In the hank.” and argu
ment with her over the valuation of
property Is highly unprofitable
ffhe was horn In Union county. 1«,
was graduated from the Iowa 8 'a te
Teachers' college; taught L atin and
English In Iowa high schools: married
J. H Kirby, a Jeweler and watchmnk
er. In IP18. and In 1919 migrated w ith
him to Wyoming, where he took up
the homestead claim oo which they
«till reside.
" I still like to cook and to do fancy
w ork." ways M rs Assessor Kirby.
W h ir» Squareness Count«,
A conntry Is not made great by th«
number of square mile« It contains
hut by the number of squar* people It
fp s u to » .— D » , tou $<<<»
Power in Confidence.
Confidence
Imports
s
wondrous
Inspiration to Its possessor. It bears
him on In security either to meet no
danger or to And m atter of glorloua
tria l.— Milton.
A FEW
Words to
Our
Patrons
Do you take advantage of the b arg ain
sales when you see them advertised?
You save money if you do.
The Enterprise has a bargain sale ev­
ery day. For $1.50 in advance it offers
52numbers, each containing all the |«oo(
uews it can gather in a week and a lot of
other news aud miscellaneous reading,
and it also gives the reader four or five
g6od stories in the year, any one one of
which would cost, in a bookstore, the
price of a year’s subscription.
Subscriber» paying in adyance are the
rasinstvy of a small town paper. W ith ­
out subscribers no advertising could ba
had, and advertising is what brings in
returns to pay expenses.
Subscription money pays for white pa­
per and presswork. W hen subscribers
do not pay in advance the publisher has
4° Pay these items fifty-tw o weeks be­
fore he gets returns. W ith several b un­
dled Subscribers in arrears this amounts
to a heavy burden to a man of small
means, whereas in paying in advance
each subscriber has to produce o nly
$1.50.
H elp the publisher to carry his’ load
snd he can give you belter service.
In Halsey a majority of the people pay
for their paper in advance, but a few of
them in town and many outside are in
arrears
Moat of these, if they realized
what an improvement could he nude in
the paper w ith a little money, would
probably pay promptly. That is the
way to make a good newspaper in a
small town. A ll must cooperate.
Send ua your local news An editor
alone cannot make a good country news­
paper