Halsey enterprise. (Halsey, Linn County, Or.) 19??-1924, January 17, 1924, Page 6, Image 6

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

    jiauiík
r,.\ i L K r l l w
M « a r r y y S
u tc
c c e e e e a d g s
• m
JU
;
G L O SE
ALBANY
M ary S u cceed s
o n M a in S tr e e t
S U N D .Y - M O N D A Y - T U E S D A Y
J»n 30—J l - J J
►
F
By L A U R A M IL L X R
a »hudvlei« 1 4i h i, uauie. fur
In» swurd wa. I « iuu»t dzad'y la
tiirufic
By L A U R A M IL L E R
a 1»>. Sr U
6?. ISM,
IBS* kr f Laars
___ Miller
u .i.-
8-
IT H A IN ’T NEVER BEEN
DONE”
« RICH A RD
•w BAKTHELMESS
t
X
THE FIGHTING
:
BLADE
s * * * ♦ » * *
♦
o n M a in S t r e e t ♦
f •>
♦
♦
“A
MANY A MICKLE MAKES
A MUCKLE”
y jou ore traveling jn a Teptil«-'
Inrested region always lay ia a good
•u p p lj of ohawing tobacco and if
bitten by a poisonoua anoka chew i
the tobacco and swallow the juice
U t i l you are tick at the atomach. I
have aeen m o ra l saved from death
. . .
i*kH b' te
SALE
for Men and Boys
••••••— •••• •• ••; »
’**♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦«»»,
l
_
kf ’
59th Anniversary
&
. r , M llltr
I f Old-Lady Fortune ever provided
you with an automobile headed 'way
She started ntt en the wrong foot, toutb on the D ix ie highway, you dis­
w
10
eeemlngly. One of the worst girls In covered a clean wlilte-und-green tov n
high school, at seventeen hilariously which set you to wondering who had
promising to bring homo a nice, hand t hand In making Orlando. Fla., un-
some ^ cowboy, she became a teacher lsual.
who “rode w ith the ranobere. gossiped
Well, one of the makers, who yet In-
* * * *
BS
with the women, danced with the cow- ilsts that her p art la only a minor
»own
punchers, and didn't go to church bnt me. Is named Julia Chapman.
SM
It's
a
once while In Wyoming." Can't you he spirit she's put Into her two Jobs
Fool Thäiß Was
Imagine all the old grannies— male ¡■ether than the else of her bank uc-
and fe m a le -s h ak in g their heads?
|;ount that you find yourself Interested
Actually, Olga Edith Gnnlde was n
F o r she sells tickets In the rail
blessed with superabundant health •oad station and Insurance and louns
and energy.
T he schoolgirl "saved >n those white Orlando houses. Those
herself from disgrace" by cramming tound like unexciting occupations to
Harding and Coolidgo
four years' work Into three, and lov­ » r r y on In the home town, don't
Indorce Relief Font
ing grubby children of a mission class. -bay? Unlikely to bring success or
Came college, university end settle ’nine or even contentment?
T he late President H arding
ment work
But let Olga Edith be
Miss Chapman developed the habit
wrote a le tte r some weeks be­
her own vigorous »elf. She discovered i t doing the little things to the best
fore bis untim ely death, strong
th a t;
it her ability. As Just one result, the
ly Indorsing the efforts of the
In New York or Wyoming people aril o f her Insurance company now
Am erican committee for relief
needed something besides food and •arrles In the upper right-hand corner,
of German children, for pun
rulrnent and leisure tim e; they needed 'Julia K. Chapmun, Sec. and Treus."
chase of food anil Its distribu­
something that would make their
Orlando, a village when little Julia •
tion to the millions of starving
lives glad and Joyous and daring and Chapman, twelve years ohl, was or­
German children by the Am er­
noble. In other words, they needed phaned, us a w inter resort now nt-
ican Quakers.
that something' by many called re­ racts thousands of tourists.
Miss
Upon succeeding to the presl
ligion. 8o I come to Zanesville, Ohio, "hapman sees In her ticket office work
denry, Calvin Coolidge declared
as s director o f religious education lot a monotonous, hoteful Job, but a
that the conditions were frig h t­
(much against my friends' advice, hance to help all who enter the of-
ful In Germ any; that m illio n* of
who Insisted that I star In New York) Ic e ; an opportunity to tuke especlul
children fared the worst kind of
and here I was licensed to preach My •are of the great number of the white
slow
death — starvation — and
reasons for coming to a small plnee H ire d who come hunting sunshine to
urged the rattin g of a fund of
were these:
•a rm old bones or to cure deep-sealed
$10,000,000 in the United S ta te r
" I believe that many people work in ,Id-age diseases.
for thia re lie f
* large city, not because they love
She must have made n pleasant
H erbert Hoover, form er O re­
their Job and because o f the Job's netuory In the minds of many of the
gon boy, now secretary of com
sake, but because they love New York 10.000 who annually pass her window.
tnerce, caused official Inveatlga
and would work a t anything for the 'o r she has discovered that all over ’
tlons to be made by American
sake of staying In It. I don't believe he Lnlted States have spread stories '
agenta, all of whom reported
It Is 'How big Is the town your J >b'a i f the efficiency of her office.
,
that unless American aid came,
In i' that matters so much aa How big
The w ar crystallized this reputa- .
there would be wholesale death
have you made your Job In the town Ion. Uncle Sam, through the railroad ,
from starvation.
you nre In?’ that r*»nlly counts.
idmlnlstrntlon. beckoned a lean finger
M ajo r General H enry T Allen,
"The second reason for wqyklng In it Julia Chapman and said, " I need
who commanded the American
s small town (especially If one * work rou."
A ticket sellers' school foi
troops on the Rhine during occu
Is rather new) Is that Old Tradition roung women was established nt At
pal tonal days. It directing the
hasn't been placed upon a throne and ants. Miss Chapman trained the girl»
nation wide campaign to raise
taught to wave a little stick to the o help win the w ar by selling rail
tho funds necessary. "W e never
tune of, 'It hasn't never been done •oad tickets— not Just any way, hut
fought children," said ho. “ And
like that before.’ Because I was the fulla Chapman's way.
we will help them now."
first director of religious education In
In Oregon, nobert H. Strong,
Whatever success and recognition
Zanesville there were no traditions as lave come, she feels, are bused on the
of the Portland firm of Strong
to how I should look, act or do roy act that “I have made good In the
* MacNaughton. who directed
work. So I wns able to do things very own I've lived In alnrw I was nine
the Hoover food campaign here
much more easily and with less fric ­ rears old. A young woman In a Flor-
In 1921, |a state chairman. The
tion than If I had been compelled to da town has great advantages she
amount to he raised In Oregon
vanquish old Brother Tradition.
Is $100,000 and he expects It w ill
•oulri n it And In a strange city. Here
Thirdly, to say In the parlance of the can grow and expand as the town
be given promptly.
the ministerial profession, a young Iocs."
perron becomes poised, and well bnl
«need more quickly In a small place
TOBACCO FOR SNAKE BITES th in In a large because of her larger ORIGIN OF “JESUITS’ POWDER’’
''pportunltles for uotice and advance­
Quinine, One ef the Most Valuable
Virginian Weed Also Said te De Sure' ment for efficient, effective w ork.”
Remodlea, Discovered In
Oeath for Poisonous Reptile^
16M In Peru.
Even Rattlers.
< . IM S , by L a u r a Mllltr
•
&
ucawi
th f’ * a-T’ “ J’ E ' U
Marahtll,
iarRhaii. m
m Adventure i Magazine.
f - — .•—
Snuff would be good also; aud i /
you do not care to eat it, mate a
poultice with water and place
on
the pit of the stomach.
The tobacco ia the heat all-over
the-country antidote (hat can be
used for first aid in such cates. On*
»ost to try on a snake to tee i f
It 1» poisououa is to hold its head
with a forked stick aud spit tobaooo
lu
ic e into
into its
i f . mouth.
......... I,
t I . f the snake
. i
juice
1« of a poisonous species it w ill die
shortly in great convulsions; i f not
o f * poisonous s|wcie< the tobacco
» ill Dot affect it very much. I ’ve
loafed this out on rattlers, copper­
heads and water moccasins; abm on
•ru * ’/ ™ ” ' r °*cl' wh,f* and °lhers.
I he first three died in a few
min-
utes, while the others wen not
bothered, except to s.colerate t f c i r
crawlmg gait when released.
WOMAN’S ADVENTURES
IN CONTENTMENT
fine o f the moet valuable retne-
d i« jret discovered is quinine. Th<
Ir u g
"T a r heel horn, tar heel bred.
When I ’m dead. It » a tar heel dead "
So do the glils nt North Carolina
slug with gusto So do they live. work,
marry, die. proud of the 08 per cent
nutlve-hornncss
of their
Thev
iw
riv r nornness nt
th e ir state.
a tm *
T h .v
“ b'K *‘,fy 18
P'«<*
has been known
since 1655
der.
»hen i t waa called “ Jesuits’ Pow
The bark has been used in
England since 1600, Charles I I
being considerably relieved by it
during a bout orf fever.
Two French aetronomers encoun­
those "vho ain’t went out much, not
thngo
fu r l"
tered the bark when traveling in
ho reports Fronde Kennedy, who Peru, and sent i t home to Linnaeus,
im j known the €’■ roll new from the the renowned botanist, who named
dny she was horn, "a long time ago,"
it Cinchona in honor o f the wife of
ns she says, to the present "office of
the dean of women of T rin ity col­ the 8paniah viceroy o f Peru, who,
lege
H er letter carries Its own »hen ill w ith fever, derived great !
c hn rn i:
benefit from it, the drug being id -
" I do not know when I began to ministered by a native who knew its
find ray chief delight In the printed
medicinal value.
i Pnge I ran rrmemner
remember lying flat on
The attention of the Indian au-
I
* ” 1’
fh,n ™ l'l* d in my
thoritiea being drawn to Cinchona,
n«mla, poring over I^m p rlere's On»»
»«•I D h llo n .r , and Swiss Fam ily
it waa shipped there recklessly, and
Rohln.oi, Im partially before I waa ten
there were fears that the supply
I regard my heritage from roy father
os a priceless gift, hut tt Included so would ba exhausted; definite steps,
until
«mall amounts of dollars and cent« however, were not taken
that the education t was able to se- 1860-60.
cure was pitifully different from what
1 he quinine-bearing country was
he had kindled In me a desire for
1
divided
up amongst several search­
wns fortunate In my course at col­
lege to fall under the Influence o f at ers, and different species of the drug
east one real scholar, who kept alive
»ere shipped to I.ew, but with great )
lit me the flame of Intellectual cnrl
difficulty owing to the obstruction
«•M y
At the age of eighteen I hsd
of the Peruvian government.
my diploma and was reedy to begin
G O O D NEW S
|U R BIG STOCK of m e n ’s a n d b o y s 'c lo th in g a n d fu r n is h in g s (ex ­
c e p t c o n tr a c t g o o d s ) is now o n sale. T h is is o u r r e g u la r q u a lity
a n d u p - lo - ttie -m in u to s ty le c lo th in g a t p ric e s a b s o lu te ly s la u g h te re d .
1 h e la r g e s t m e n ’s s a le t h a t A lb a n y h a s h a d fo r 15 y e a rs .
&
I h is s a le will c lo se S a tu rd a y , .J a n u a ry 19th, a t 9 P. M.
H e a r e lis tin g b elow o n ly a few ite m s, so th a t y o u m ig h t s e e th e
e x tr a o r d in a r y v a lu e s we a r e o fferin g .
’
M E N ’S S U IT S
M E N ’S O V ER C O A TS
1 79 men sand young men’s
suits (some with extra trou­
sers) $ 2 5 Value, «1« price SI 6.59
A limited number $ 3 0 to
$35 suits, sale price $22.59
Kuppenheimer, Frat, M i­
chaels-Stern, $ 3 7 .5 0 to
$ 4 5 values
$28.59
O ne lot suits, half price
M en’s and young m en’s
overcoats, good styles and
colors, mostly Oregon City
fabrics. $25 values pg ’X $18.59
O ae lot of overcoats, in­
cluding Frat and Knitex,
$ 3 7 .5 0 values, Mte priec $27.59
O ne lot of overcoats, in-
cluklng Kuppenheimer. val­
ues to $4 5 . sale price $34.59
O n e lot of ovvrcoats. half
price
$13.59 to $22.59
$12.59 to $19.59
E v e ry s u it in o u r la rg e s to c k is
fo r s a le a t a n n iv e r s a r y s a le p ric e s
SHOES
O T H E R S P E C IA L S
A . A . C utter pacs, I 2-in.
$14.59
A . A . C utter pacs, 1 6-in.
$16.59
i Dress Oxfords, all new
styles $3.89, $4.59, $6.59
Brown W ax veal Blucher,
all sizes
$1. 89
Rubbers
less 10 per cent
R ubber boots “ 20 per cent
B ig
r e d u c tio n < hi o n r c o m p le te
s to c k o f s h o e s .
Ladies’ silk hose, brown or
black, a limited number ,$ I
value, sale price
69c
Ladies’ Radmoor silk hose,
black, brown or white,
some c l o c k e d numbers
$1 3 5 t o $ L 5 0 values, sale price 89c
360 pair heavy woo! mixed
sox, brown & gray heathers 29c
Cut silk ties, three lots, sale
prices
29c, 49c, 59c
dpcrtkmt sweater coats $3.59
Cotton sweater coats, gray 99c
B O Y S’ S U IT S
6 to 1 3 y e a rs , .¥9 v a lu e s ...........«3.59
5 to IB y e a rs , 12.,50 v a lu e s ... 6.19
ALBANY
i_i Io - y e a r s . $15 v a l u e ........... $8 $9
‘ io 18 y e n rs. 51«.5O v a lu e . 10 39
S ^ F c LOTH ingcoj
OREGON
Sale ends Saturday, Jan. 19, at 9 P. M.
A n jle r Fish “F lag ,', victim ,
leaching
It was necessary that I at
N itu
Ea‘ L ' " rd» a" d * " ‘ «-
lore «trange forms are exhibited t,t •
Lion o f Lucern».
leaei relieve m.v mother of the ex-
Concrete Railw ay v-a.
N n tlv", of .th . 8udan whn
i
Lizard Skin Shoes.
fl>* angler flshea than hy any „p E ,
The Lion of Lneerne te a fanio i,
pense of my o«n support, and I did
A railway ln India ree, -lb ,
' ak
° f Python « * ’ " t e r t
Í
*
-
"
*
•
*
Ixh
fam
ily.
Living
at
the
p„tton,
,,r
f .vve of »culptnre a t Lucerne, S w lttn
tests of a new type of ,on,.-ete rail
women
of
V
t n° W f* ’Pu,nr "mong
K
berries.
■ nd henn out of tte> aand.tone reck
,
" nd
»heir prev |,v
and
way tie, c o n tra c te d of two ,-oncrete I month, fifteen of which I paid out for
co-
"« tilth and fashion, are eg-
ibi B >t ni,vd r)<iH
O r í i“ “ 1’ D<
In the aide of the cl»T
it represe, t, »tea th. . nel„
k e ' \ CO!,t T
" t’ t
nnt- u
h m-ks Jolneil by a tie bar. rails twins * i»o«rcl.
erful avt Immlng muscles, and as a , . In h ? “ ,1t''n ,IIIa r*- ,n «''»«■ «poti
rnloeaal lion. frr«i»flxed with i
"Probably to some people I seen, a
t t n -ike a pair of lizard shoe»— w ith
■ ached to specially treated wood
flB” ’ <’° " < n ln ,ll<‘
- ^ " ^ .c e the size of the hod, no., »'>■1-1 Is ral's
■P*«r and dying. bnr still endeavor
»ood example of . women who has
plugs set In the cuucrete.
U ^ r ’ 7 ,rR " ,l,r e’ "
~
Uig to protect w ith I t . paw the Hour
-Hi has become considerably reduced
mv
p r
snccee-led In life
1 have „»t. really
e-am
‘ir
,
”f
*
‘
,
’s
offen
n««««"ry
to
I » " «»ur-de-lig. T h l. monument war 7f ’. i " ' L"’ ’.
2->‘" mlle trip across
»« the slae tho «. ? ¿
m comparison with n r own stand
, r ,o
ik |W
■ the h,«|y, i, unilgUi||y ,
amone
o
(° I:’',slün Congo, aud order to eeV?
' »« gne.1 hy Thorw a k'aen and . . .
■ cis end dreamy achieved anything
" e ll.
“
, T ° wh;c6 " ni mntch up
■ « other fhlnijw discovered that
dedicated In 1S2I
« n i» ,a » « rl, ttgiv The ra y . of the ha,
mo.r ’ * ’ ’
» " • ' I » » » id he
“ e .7 J , ’" ' " ,On
'»"'»'le, m the la .
•cldler«
of
the
III
fated
Swiss
u
p
most unreasonable and n n g r.tefu l not
' ded « Ith flegllke flap o f skin 1«
at Pro
the 1
nearly fl,», |„ nnmher m ho « e re »Ini
to acknowledge my blessings, and I
A M U M 10. 1TW.
, h.
’Tom the
r" p d r ^ ’ n p p 'n rln -
J1’ ’ »
I am tuned to rural life
eor sale
Pnlac» of
Tutlerlee from the
•ven or : n" e w th ,l,e aUvanr
I
ke to hear of setting hens and
iro of
l
s r " ' m"
- r 1 * n r r in .tire aett,emente.
Ilo a l w inipp 'h n p u
lack
of
ih«
Full-bred
y « '. v planted gerdens. and to watch
w ith Bootfcingt f l i i t i -
farmers slmsnscs and see how well
G
U
E
R
N
S
E
Y BULL CALF
f
*”
s e p tic
1 i mllHo 2 * W* , , * r 1 " k* M
ti
J *P ***« « L tw re ik e tv .
M
m
w
ho
G
-t
S
tlfu
o
t
s rammery opening and sit down with
Red m d Cayenne Pepper
T h . I a pa n . «e partía nent 1« , • I
wegoed
R I« th r wwn ,rb$.
P h o n ^ L M ,T ? X U R '
:
.led a fter that of G rw , P r t. ||n .....
n«d iroppcr Is the po«d.re,'l
I« nnr
my M on
en I
hn.lneas t h . way we waa, fheM
m
: . ■ h bo l jt the hate they are trying
rlp f
'»« aplrlt 1« rn 'lre ly ffifl . r« , f
|n t.
to i imd. Iioth flesh and seeds Of any vn
Instead of attendlrg to thalr owa
S i
r r” ' 2 ,n- ,hp
" h'” >
P, n d e h a ,., m p .r li.m nt »-« p i . , ,
who
i
> al’ I'miah | love New York and go •n t oceaaloea «here tran o f geeoM get the s ta t u «
«hi7h 7 2
b* ,rM h
h«»
R u b s o n ^ m o n th ly
* whenever t can for e little «hile. I
«re permitted to d l.p , r , hem
peptwr
,r
’“- I
expect to live In s meal section prof
* lv e «
The leader of . „ r„ -
ruling o f "he t ' ^ M ^ f * f Í M ,Z L * !1'!
Origin ef Medeaty.
* a b lv m ,
Rb(, )lt
not
even
have
a
seat
in
th
e
ch
woher
twenty
th e ? " a,.” " ’
'Vh«n
-«JtecHon „ f
d te r iU S Ä
tkouMhd people. I hope through a
thev
dtaeorered their acgrrltv
•
■f
♦ tre e a old af»<"
Laondrv sent Tuesday»
7 " renper a ,
,^ ,v
_
copnty J u d c o ro n ven tio n -n- -tnfhe«, t k , B(W#
'gencj Hub Cteaoiag XVdrks
" I «G -
‘
J xrer» ,lc u m .*n” 11 írn l:,d
doraed the tim b er ae\crane« ta x bill •shamed. ”
I
of ,h,r,J «to"»"1 •
"ÍS U ÍT /
G . !
, a
SJ"" ' ’ " "
I'n<1
:,
.
u
J V I ^ n th o la t u
" ’ .HK W»‘, ,P*" *1”‘
2"«
; R IN G O Drug Store:
■
TT
»Modern
B a rb e rsh o p
A
ABES
P L A C E ,'