HALSEY R N TEK PR ISB PAGE « HAUUY ENTERPRISE A P R II. 17. I M clover, pea*, vetch I«*ISW >U— » WOT »*« « x w l M W » l> * r p e s i t e l e . « v e r y T fca rsfiay H f W». a. » K M t r H and permanent pasture in western Oregon. ► » ♦ » ♦ ♦ » ♦ ♦ » •» » » •» » » ♦ » » ♦ ♦ ♦ fi ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ t M ary Succeed* on M ain Street Don’t take it HALSEY STATE BANK By LAURA MILLER I f your cream doe* not bring the top price learn why. M ary Succeeds on M ain Street Halsey, Oregon By LAURA MILLER *♦ ♦♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦■ ¡ for granted that you are being dis­ ■aka- rip ‘o. . | l *3 a rear la sdvsao* e. 1*». kr Loara Miller A dvertising, 2-lc an inch ; no diaconn criminated against, but see If ; o u (or tiiue or (p ace ; no charge for com thing in your handling of yeur pro­ M A H O M E T AN D TH E poaitioo or r lauges. w M O U N T A IN IN duct, unsuspected by you, is not cut- ’ la - P a le t o t Paragraphs." Is a I laa « ie M O N TA N A * • s d v c it is n g dlsguliad aa n a v e ling down your receipt*. The w riter of this once made but- j Out between Plentywood and Pan­ handle was born the first vocational Office hour*. 9 to 13 and 3 to 6 except ter fa r off in the woods, on a home- ' Monday* and Friday forenooo*. Congress for girls. From Plentywood. stead, where the shipping of cream SOo miles aa the crew flies, to Mon­ | would have been too expensiw* He tana State college, at Bozeman,~glrls DAIRYING make their way November after No­ used a cream sparator and twice a vember, to satisfy tbe longtng ques­ Dairying is one of several apecial week he churned and packed his bu- tion : "W hat shall I do?" Others tie* foe which western Oregon’* soil I ter nine miles, over mountains, to the along the South Dakota line corue and climate are especially adapted I oute of a mail stage which took it 300 miles. Sometimes rail end auto bus connections are so poor that It There are dairymen in thia section I ¿3 miles farther to town. A hotel re takes three days each way for tbe who have been unqualifiedly success I reived it and paid the top price, trip. but they make it, these Montana fid, and there are others who have fh cre came a time when he received high school girls, for what they find la the congress. as unqualifiedly failed to make it pay. several cents a pound below the top. It may be Just accident, but 1 don’t It requires much more brain power sj. ma(je a horseback trip of 32 miles happen to know of a single Montana and brain exertion to make a success | -0 iearn the cause. " I t tasted of the g lil drifting around tbe big cities bunting Just any sort of a Job. The fu l dairyman than it does to make a boxes,” he was told. He stopped in ■rat United States congresswoman, successful hodcarrier and yet the hod- 'own and had a tinsmith make six yws. The assistant director of a great carriers’ wages today are several ;in boxes of different sizes, suitable bureau in the United States Depart­ ment of Labor, yes. But drifters, no. times as large r.s those of any dairy .■> varying sized churnings, to fit in­ Thu personal story of Unu II. Her­ rick may throw light on the willing­ employe or the average return rra tide the wooden shipping boxes, and ness of Montana girls to muke good lixed by dairy owners. e alwaya got the top price after la their own state. Widowed, left The report of the dairy committe hat. It paid him. to spend three days with a family and without money In of the January O. A. C. agricultural -nd make th e round tr ip ol 64 Naw York, she decided first to leave Naw York. "Oh,” she says, ”1 loved conference lays: "The minimum dairy n ils * to ie a rn w h a t was the m a t. New York—I do y e t! But my Idea was and Is that a woman cun find a herd should be 10 cows, and for more er. greater field of usefulness, more re­ economical production the number I f Jake Hamon promised a million turn In money, more friends and a could safely be increased to more lollara for the last republican c«m- saner sort of happiness In a small community.” than 26.” ’ aign and then only pungled up h alf Teaching, studying and "waiting my Y s t one man with half a dozen hat amount that fact might account chance," she has come to be dean of lialsey, and making and selling but- or one-third of the $1,600,000 de­ women's work and social dean of the ter from them, says that they pay. ficit which the brethren of the order Montana Woman’s college. The vo- rational congress came because Mrs. Another, with a large herd on a i the sacred elephant were scurrying . Herrick recognized the Inspiration large fi.rm , doclarey- ’’There’s no iround to raise a year or two later from knowledge of what other women are doing, that gets automatically money in it” pooled In big elites, und fe l* the shut- LsFollette has issued an ultimatum offness of Montana girls from this Given the natural advantages I t was found in weatern Oregon, very much 1 1° tbe republican convention. Like knowledge and Inspiration. the old affair of bringing the moun­ depends on the man. He must be that which Austria sent to Scrvia a tain to Mahomet. Buck fall distin­ able to learn, he must exert h im self! raw years ago, it is carefully drawn guished business and professional to learn, and he must make use o f | t > insure its rejection and the alter- wonieu take tlielr accumulated experi­ ence to the Montana girls. The Im­ tho knowledge acquired. The kind of native is war. Envision the remaind- pression one currlos away, according mw and the process of manufacture | er of the parallel to one of these visitors, Is that all thtf value of the congress pales beside the which gave our great grandfather value of the by-products now estab­ good return for his labor would land S. H. Coin r.nd A. K. McFarland lished—standards of, dress, of con­ the dairyman oi today in the poor- seek the democratic nomination to duct. of community recreation, and of democracy—shared by the girls them­ bo“**- succeed themselves at Salem. They selves from year to year. Following are a few paragraphs! and the sen a to- from this county, For herself—"No, I don’t go back te from, the summary of the report of Sam Garland of Lebanon, did good New York every year now, like I used to. I'm mor$ apt to go over to the the dairy committee referred t o ! work and much of It in the last legis- west const when I have a vacation. 4 sbove: lla tu ro look out across this country—any­ where this side of St. Paul—with a leguminous hay (composed wholly | h be true economy for feeling of knowing every one I meet; cp In part of peag, vetch, clover, etc.) I t ~ • ia . .* , wi .k i i.- . ■ i a i l l k t o t county to leave ita jail dcore of having the right to be a working only «hould )»e raised and fed to itairy I , . fl. . . ' ■ J 7 I unlocked, so prisoner« would not woman; of being ut home; of proprie­ OWi I r torship. That’s the feeling the West The quality must be improved b y l 1" “ * ' ,b in « ' UP through gives us." ® . 1111. b * L a u ra M illa r THE U NIVERSITY OF THE YARDS C A P IT A L AND SURPLUS $ 3 5 ,0 0 0 Commercial and Savings accounts Solicited “Main Street can't train girls to earn a living,” Is a plaint that run* through thousand* of letters. In on* wording or another, from girls who •eek careers. True, It Is that courses Io biology, In art, In medicine, are not to be found at any crossroad*. But suppose a fury of desire to paint peo­ ple— or to cot them up and remold them nearer to good health’* desire— doesn't drive Mary off Main Street? Shall she forsake fumlly and friends and all the comfortable, homely things one grows up with, for a casual ca­ reer? I f one’s Just the overage girl, may not the little borne town Job, where a conscientious worker learns something of everything, help out if the great test comes? Let me tell yon the story of Mary Marshall of Marshalltown, Ind. It was early In 1910. War brides were hurrying to meet transimrts from I'rance. Fathers in khaki were losing their look born of horrors as they gazed upon miraculous little sons that recalled their own before-the-war selves. Mary Marshall, nee Hopkins, had Just come to Washington for a Job that would support herself und John, Jr. She and John, Sr., had run the railroad and village telegraph ollie* until 1918. Then she had abrtfptly be­ come Mrs. Marshall and sole operator. She was a competent worker, evident­ ly. And she knew she was releasing For you w ho are p la n n in g an to choose from , all surpesalngty not merely a man, but her man for E a s te rn trip . Southern Pacific Interesting. men have a message. war service. When John, Jr., arrived A n d on e v e r y t r a in y o u find she gave up work and lived with Fa­ Cal I at anySou them Pacific ticket Southern Pacific Service. Pas­ office and learn how you may go ther and Mother Marshall. sengers are counted as honored through California, w ith liberal The day Mary came to me— I was guests. stopovers at interesting points, running Uncle Sam’s employment of­ at little or no additional cost. A ll o f o u r tra n s -c o n tin e n ta l fice in Washington Just then—I tried G o to California over the In­ trains carry diners w hich o ffer a to send her back to Marshalltown. comparable Shasta Route. remarkable fine service at prlcvg She had a home. She had a baby to take T h e n go East over the Southern which a r e lo w co m p ared to cure of. And she was— so I told her Pacific. You have three routes those o f like serv|ce elsewhere. —practically untrained. Hadn’t she come straight from the corner of Main I f y o u are r la n n in . ■ tr ip Last n o w o r in th e Street and Railroad Avenue? fu tu re , call at a n y S o u th e rn P a c ific tic k e t o ffic e e n J le t ua te ll y o u h o w to s e t add ed Mary Marshall wouldn't go back to pleasure a n j c o m fo r t w ith o u t added cost. Marshalltown. After a generous por­ tion of stupidity on my part and of shyness on hers, the story’ earns out. John, Sr., was in a Washington hos­ pital, shell-shocked. His chances for sanity lay In seeing Mary and Joha, Jr., every day. A Job was found for Mary as correspondence clerk In the telegraph division of the United States Railroad administration. It was no charity Job, either. "There Isn’t any­ thing she didn't learn something about STATUE OF CARRARA MARBLE obtained on steam railroads under elec- In that little dump of an office tn the 1 trie traction, and at what expenditure railroad yards." her chief said later. Shaft of Adam and Eva. Mad* of Fa­ of power. The experimental run* were “She's all to the good." mous Stone, tu Grace the Estate of progreeelve. The speed soon passed For obvious reasons, Mary Marshall Wealthy American. the 100-mlles-an hour mark, and then and Marshalltown aren’t her real rose, successively, to 110, 120 and final­ name and address. But the story Is With the completion of a herdlc ly to 130 miles per hour. The limiting real to the cote. statue of Adfitu and Eve. hewn by an condition* were found to be not In tbe eminent sculptor to grace the estate of car but la the track, wlilch proved to a wealthy American, what la said to be unable to stand up under tbe severe be the largest block of Carrara marble stresses Imposed upon It; and thia In * brick wall when they want to ever brought Into this country found spite of the fact that It wa* specially Helen Armstrong was home from l ake a walk. expression In one of the oldest, and prepared Jor thaee trial*. Eugene over the week end. We are thus brought to the con­ perhaps the most Influential of the By LAURA MILLER a r t* clusion that schedule speeds of W0 Since Roman emperors opened the miles an honr can be attained only © . 1 > H . by L a u ra M illa r quarries more than two thousand where the topography Is favorable to years ago, merchant princes of the fairly level and straight lines. Even BEAUTY IMPORTED Middle Ages, monarchs and the mod­ under these conditions It would be necessary to design a special roadbed ern world have fashioned their archl Malo Street Is stupid. Main Street tectural dreams In "Carrara.’’ Only In an,! track of costly construction, In­ Is blind. Main Street drives out youth We bavo a »try fin , stock of You g.iin the advantage of Tuscany, Italy, is It now to be found In volving many tunnels, long and costly and Joy and vision. So says In sub­ our ability to buy in large great quantities. More than one mil­ embankments, the elevation or depres­ stance the creator of a now famous quantities. lion tons yearly ar* being produced in sion of the track* through all town* book. So say the girls who try to es­ and cities, and the complete elimina­ the Apuan Alps, where there Is The bees may swarm any cape from humdrum lives by escaping mountain of glistening stone five thou­ tion of grade crossings. Also, the road dav now. Better have hires to the city, each from her particular sand feet high. And, despite the fact would hove to be equipped with some at hand, ready’ lor'use. gray corner of her especially hateful that centuries of building and art have form of automatic train control, sim­ Main Street sort of town. drawn upon these snow-white deposits ple. rugged and absolutely reliable. Down In Kentucky there are some Rut when. If ever, such a road were for their uncarved beauty, the supply folk who reverse this process. Hum­ built, It* cost both for construction and Is little more than touched. drum gray lives there? Yes. Indeed! Michelangelo, whose sculpture* are maintenance would be so great that Its Escape both wise and necessary If the A m i ÿ , U r i STORE among the glories of the renaissance, use would be restricted to those who*» Kentucky mountain folk are to grow worked In Carrara marble. Cellenl purse wiis deep nr who, by reason of Into Americans with their fair chance used It, and, since before the birth of emergency, were willing to pay a high at life, liberty and pursuit of happl Christianity, the quarries have been price for an extra forty to fifty mile* ness? Absolutely. Urge ’em nil to hl* loom— and they knew that he move to Louisville, St. Louis or Chi­ shipping the matchless stone to all an hour of speed —Scientific Ameri­ called these threads the chain or the cago? By no mean»! Let’s bring In­ part* of the earth. It it to be seen In can. warp of the web. They knew, too, stead, the best that Any Place has the ruins of the Roman forum, at the that the width of the web was deter­ discovered to these mountains and still well preserved Arch of Constan­ HALSEY mined by the number of threads fas­ mountain people! So say the Inter­ tine. and beneath the great dome of St. Peter’s cathedrat In Rome tened to tho warp beam—so many ested folks down there In Kentucky By MARGARET BOYD In most places where marble de­ threads for cloth a foot wide; twice This story Is of a gracious woman posits occur, It has become split up In ss many for cloth two feet w ide; and nt what she calls her "life’s sunset i P by Marcar.t Boy*) Cash paid for three times as many for cloth a yard period, with wonderful real lights out the earth and various substances have filtered Into the cracks, giving rise to -vide They knew, too, that when "Thle l* * allght unmarltable mart. over the mountain* to the east nod the warp threads were In place, the the blue grass of the north. Thera the colored vein* which make It unfit Mea» te be kent en arrand«: I* It flt, weaver began to ,ca«t hack and forth, are equally high colors In the lbes of for statuary use. For some mysteri­ The thrse-fold worlfi g.vtded, he ahould ous reason the Carrara marbles have from one side of the loom to the 225 mountain boys, who range from stand remained for the mo« part free from other. ovi> one warp thresd and un- fifteen to thirty five year* of sge, and One of th* thCbe te ahar* t t r I der the next, a shuttle con’ nlnlng the from the A B C to the eighth grad* such disfiguring accidents. Tn thia —Jullua Catear. T'urlng a prolongad atudy of th* 1 threail that wns to run crosswise certificate. It Is pioneer work. No condition the ancients found them.— Popular Mechanic*. live* of varfbus men both great find of the web, the woof thread. They woman has ever lived with these boy* Firat-Clnss Work small,'’ write* Goethe. " I earn* upon knew that the closer together the and I live t very thrilling Ilf* at old »oof thread* were crowded, the firmer well-known Feres college." this thought; In th* web of the world Agect Ice Eugene Steam Laundry RA'L SPEED L IM IT REACHED the on* may well be regarded a* the the cloth. Sent Tuesdays. Perhaps one must have knows Nowadays few people know much Laura Drake Gill of Boston and Naw warp, the other a* the woof. It is J. W- S TE P H E N S O N , rrep the Utile men. after ait, who give nt weaving, and the comparison I* but York, magazine writer and one time Experiment* Show Tracks as Made Now W ill Not Stand Exces­ meaningless words unless one know* college dean, personally, to sense how breadth tn the web. and the great men sive Strain. what weh and warp and woof are. much charm and richness of fine az Itrmaees and solidity, also, the addl ties of soma sort of patter*." That understood, the comparison be­ S u n , " hnu.!,’ n « ’ ufeb of " f ” * , u , u " Thia figure I* lea* forceful now than comes one of the moat forceful In all th . edge of th . mountain c o u n £ . “ It wa* during Goethe’* day, when tv literature, and one seea the unnerlt- able man and the brilliant man In eryone was thoroughly farattlar with : : h/ , .*T*.n . ' Orain traction and the use of m n lt.p K n U wearing and most homes had a loom tlielr true relation to each other and GUI feel*, is thst no Main Street la Efficient Service. Motor Hearse. In some corner or In the attic Then to the universe The slight nnmerlt ‘ too isolated for the Jole de rlvre. as trains The moltlple-unit method per­ Lady Attendant. mits of a great Increase in the total everyone knew that a weh was any Brownsville.................................. Oregon . sble . men . . thst . . make up the warp - of , French fallsnUy phrase the Joy finished place of wearing whether a he wcrld are qu te .» essential a- of lb In,, to com* In. that man, of >h. horsepower without exceeding the loading limit for rails, bridges and the showier poets, Srtlsts, musld« strip of rag carpet, a blanket, a table gcod communtty organizations ere doth, a length nr towelling, nt a pat statesmen. Irventors, business i se--u- eager to be of service, and that ell structures. The fastest speed ever made on a w . L. W R IG H T tern of dross go-do Then evarxoae ttves, and others who make up th* they leek I* « hearty Invttstioo from railroad was achieved some 20 year* knew that whan a waster begs a a woof. Mortician & Funeral Director some one who want* more of tha ago In Germany, on a military railroad weh, ho first of alt fastened the Halsey and Harrisbarg beauty of life imported Into te r town between Berlin and Zoesen, where some Devil* a-d Sin* threads thst were te run length * 1 ^ ) . T a v io n , Halagy, or and who win g*t her fellow citizen, costly experiment* were carried on to tVhan d rills will their hla< kr «III« of the wjb jo the w»rp bespi gf H H i W. L. W siCBT, Harrisburg to help distribute It. put on. they do suggest at fir; ft, Oregon and California produce only 87 per cent of the dairy products they consume. I f Oregon dairymen bring this pro­ duct up to the standard of that which sells best there is no lim it to the demand awaiting it outside the state at a profitable price, and there will be none for year» to come. Rais* your own feed. protein-carrying Raise the varieties Raise your own grain. of hay. An O. A. C. crop report says that doubling the corn acreage of Oregon would cut out the annual importation of 1600 to 2000 r a n of corn, an-1 adds; Oregon live­ stock owners are learning the value of growing their own feed as largely as possible. This means more barley in moat counties, more alfalfa, more M ary Succeed?! on M ain Street Bee-Ware Pine H ives Sm okers V eils Hive Tools, etc. at attractive prices ’Stic 9 r W ith the High School Clascics Cream and Produce Station Cream, Poultry, Eggs, Veal & Hides. M. H- S H O O K Barber «hop ?? Baths DELBERT STARR uneral Director and Li­ censed Embalmer win