fi ¿ HALSEY ENTERPRISE HALSEY, LINN COUNTY, OREGON, fH URSDAY, SEPT. 4, 1924 HALSEY HAPPENINGS AND COUNTY EVENTS Short Stories from Sundry Sources Mount Hood Sunday, Monday. returning Your Interests Are Involved Arley Cummings and wife have gone to Newport for a week. J. W . urinkard and wife at­ tended a eboot at Corvallis Sunday. Is the Linn County Fair Mrs. Pittm an’s father, A. A. I . E. Gormley suffered from Barber, and her sister Lillian ¡ntnssutecptioD of the intestines, started for California yesterday. Mr. and Mra. E- C. Green of but escaped the surgeon’s knife. Keiee, Wash., paaaeJ through Lew Davis went to Albany Mon­ Halsey ou their way to Klamath day. He expeoted to take a train This fair should be attended by every person liying in the county. It there for the soldiers’ home at Palls yesteiday. The 0- J- Albertson, Robert is, in fact, Y O U R f*>f. tb e officers are running it for Y O U Roseburg. Ramsay and L. N . Elliott families They want Y O U R assistance in making it a fair that the whole Mrs. L. H Thomas of Portland expect to go to Newport tomorrow community will be P R O U D °I- They want your attendance, stopped off the train yesterday to for the week end. visit her couein, Curtis Veatcb, but T H E Y W A N T Y O U T O - E X H I B I T S O M E T H I N G M r. and Mra. L. N Elliott, who and family. resided in Halaey six yean ago, A feir cannot be a aucceaa without Ifberal aad( suhetautial encourage­ F An interesting exhibit at the arrived from Kansas Monday and ment from the public and exhibitors. county frir w ill be the Hoffmans' expect to locate i n this vicinity. While the management assures that it will spare neither time, labor 14 Airedale pups, now a month W. H. Burbank has traded a nor expense to make the fair a success, it wants to be seconded by old, and their mother. firm for Dudley H enry’s barn oa the liberal band of the whole people, and it ie relying upon YOU • Yesterday was very enjoyablv Second street and taken the Cum­ and YO U R N E IG H B O R S and F R IE N D S to BOOST the fair in spent at Cascadia by Rev, Robert mings bouse, next the Methodist every way yoa can devise. Parker and family, Mrs. Arthur parsonage, for a residence. Feote and son Walter, J. S. Van- H ill & Co. w ill have a speoial We hope to make thia the most marked and memorable ehow ever ulce and family and the Misses salt of genuine Wear-Eyer alumi- held in Liau county. Stivers, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. St*n- nunrklrip pans from Sept. 12 to disb, M r- »od Mr». B. M- M iller S ept/20 inclusive. Regular $1.95 We are ambitious to held a fair that will have no superior in its class end daughter Gardie, Misses Ruby goods for 98c. Read the adver­ and witl bt the event of the season. Scbrell and Beulab M iller, Mrs. tisement next week. Do you approve of this? If you dp, co-operate with us in getting Curtis Veatcb and daughter Wan­ M r. aad Mra. C. P. Stafford da and H . C. Davis. The spring results; Not only be with us in tbs spirit but in GOOD W O RK S accompanied home from water seemed to bear an extra ware sparkle for the occasion and was their vacation by the latter's niece, Mrs. bred Psckover, and enjoyed (?) by all. husband and baby of Park Place, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. M iller and who went home Monday. Thomas snd Gilbert motored to Ed Sheets and and Otto Shook Portland, up the Columbia high­ terest in the chicken ranch to aud wives of Portland and M, H. way to Hood River and out to Shoog and fam ily of Hahey went his father. Lyman expects to to Eugene Monday. M H. and go to Klamath Falls, where he To Be a PROGRESS Fair ?; A Fair of the People, For the People, By the People Brownsville Briefs O P T IC A L P A R L O R OUR NEW PR IC E LIST: Double Vision Lenses Ultex, $18.50 ; Kryptok„ $17:50. Peerless. $16.50, Brights. $15;50. Cemented Segments. $14.50. Single or Distant Vision Lenses 6 D Curve Tone, $13.50 ; Mencins, $12.50. l ’-i D Cnrve Periecopic, $12;50; Flats* $10.50. t Fitted In Zilo, gold-filled or rimless frames. For heeavy Zilo frames add $1 to $2. Deduct $2 for second-grade lens. Reading glasses. $2.50 to $10, Bancroft Optical Co. 313 West First street, Albany, Ore, Ask about Punktal, the perfect lens. daughter accompanied the visitors (Enterprise Correspondence) hi me to Portland . Mr. Sheets is his cousin and Otto Shook and wife are hie parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Harrison ,were in Albany shopping Sat­ urday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Howe and daughter Emma drove to Hubbard Sunday to visit a cous­ in of Mrs. Howe. Mrs. Cushman and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. 0 . B. Stalnakar bany iany an and Salem Tuesday. returned to their home in Corvallis Prof. J. Torbet returned Tuesday, after ten days’ vacation, during whioh they visited the C -F . Klopeio and aud wife and uoinen of Karl Patton aud family son aud daughter went to Albany in Seattle and Frank Stain ater io Priday. Portland. They were accompanied Mrs. Roxy McHugh, aud grand­ on the trip by Mre. T. P. Pattou daughter, Julia Crawford, took Mrs. B. R. For be» went to New- of this city. in the “dollar day” at Albany port Saturday, C. O. Nyberg of Seattle and wife and child arrived Satur­ day for a visit of a few days with Mrs. Nyberg's niece, Mrs. T. J. Skirvin, and husband. T. A. Churchill, a Lake Creek pioneer,r eturned to his home at Los Angeles, Tuesday.» He has been visiting in this valley for three months. He lived on the Tom Jackson place fifty years ago. __ (Continued on pageTT" Come on Boys OF COURSE, no boy will really test his shoes with a saw, an auger or a chisel, but it does seem so, es­ pecially when mother just finished lecturing about the care of new shoes and father just paid the bill. And to make boys take care of their shoes all the time would be to take half of the joy out of their lives. The tohition of the problem /« to buy WEYENBERG SHOES at the »tart T h e y “S tan d th e G aff” Weyenberg Boys’ Shoes are made “All Solid Leather”—cut from the best part of the hide. They are not made like so many boys’ shoes, from the culls or left-overs of leathers used for men’s shoes. That’s the reason Weyenberg Boys’ Shoes wear so much longer and better than other shoes. The boys like them because they**stand the gaff.'* KOONTZC GOOD GOODS ALL SOLID has secured work for the win­ ter. Mrs. Howe will meet him there after visiting with her sister. LEATHER , Epitome of Events in the Beaver State Twenty thousand tons of hay from last year's crop remain In warehouses tn Haines The second annual reunion of the S t John family was held at Burnt Woods near Corvallis, with 63 prasrnt. Charles L. Loomis, mayor of Ash land, died of a complication of dis­ eases. foUowlDg two weeks of serious illness. Vessels sailing for foreign ports from Coos Bay during the past month carried 6,370,333 feet of logs, lumber and lath. Five thousand dollars' worth of blooded Jersey stock has arrived at Tbe Dalles, recently, from the W illam­ ette valley for farmers of Wasco coun­ ty. Fewer than IS par cent Ml the ragth* tered voters of Gone county went to the polls to vote on the queeihm of bonding the county f»r $$$0.000, the money to be used In m atching s»a*e money now being expended lu the coaatyt no. Thu rote waa 1»16 vest $M By the uae of 48 008 pounds af ex­ plosive the Underwater pinnacles la tbe channel of Taquloa bay have beau cut off to a depth of 17 feet at low water. Tbe project depth rails for 30 feet ta the channel, hut this w ill require tbe work of about two snore seasons. Establishment of a number of naw granges and building up tbe member­ ship of other granges which have not functioned In a manner satisfactory to the officers, was the chief topic o f Ernest Hart, an employe at Nickel- discussion at a meeting of the execu­ sen's mill nt Bandy, was killed by logs tive -committee of the Oregon State which broke from a train as tt round­ grange at Batem. Pumps are to be established In the ed a curve, crushing him. bed of Tule lake to control seepage The Scottaburg-Reedaport road was from surrounding irrigation projeots. opened to travel last week, the only according to H. D. Newell, superin­ obstacle In the roadway being at Mill tendent of the Klamath reclamation creek, where there Is no bridge. The pumping w ill protect а . a . wstsoq , wno several weeks project. ago bought a ranch for about $(10,000 some 16,000 acres of grain tn the lake near Heppner and then fame to Pen bed which will be harvested during dleton and purchased an automobile the next three months The Tumwater Lumber company of and clothes aod gave checks that were not honored, was arrested at Heppner Tumwater, Wash., through their rep­ resentative at Klamath Falls, an- and held for Umatilla county officials A. M. Dalrymple, warden of the nouaced that a plant for the manu­ facture of ready-cut bouses was plan­ Oregon state penitentiary, has return od from Salt Lake City, where he at­ ned for Klamath Falls tn bo ready fdr tended the annual conference of prls operatlons by nett spring. The plant. Is to have a rapaolty of about 100.’» on officials. The Mountain States Power com houses a year st the start. Worh on the McKenzie past road Is being rushed with a force of 130 te 140 men and Is expected to be. com­ pleted within a month. pany is planning to start at once the work of rebuilding Ita distribution system through the main section, of Cottage Orove. Mark Weygandt. veteran Mount Hood guide, has announced that more than 1700 climbers have registered at the top of the anow peak for the sea son thus far. Three residents af The Dalles— Mrs. E. B. Orelner and Mr. and Mrs. Victor Buncel— were drowned In the Colum­ bia river at Dutton's ranch, four miles west of The Dalles. Letters received by Governor Pierce from practically every section of the state Indicate that Oregon may­ ors are behind the defense test pro­ gram September 11. Thera were two fatalities dua trt Industrial accidents In Oregon during the week ending August 21, accord­ ing to a report prepared by the state Industrial accident commission. The victims were Clarence L. Monjay. Port­ land, brskeman, and Philip DortlcaB Leneve, laborer. A total of «20 acci­ dents was reported during the week. Tbe cost of the harvest of the mM- Colunrhts apple crop w ilt be material­ ly reduced this season. Tbe Hood Saturday. J lk e Ackerman and John River Apple Grower«* aesoeWtton has Men are hauling gravel and Hunter will live in town this- announced a scale of four cents per winter. crushed rock filling in market box for picking and peeking, as *• » read 31, which will make a splen­ W alter Braund shipped two nice against 6 rents last year. Day labor will receive the following this year: did road, connecting the Ash veala to Swift ifc Co., Portland, yesterday, Men. 30 cents an bony women. 26 Swale people with Shedd. cents. Mieses Louise W right and Con­ The local W. C. T. U. is givl Roy Moss, a checker for the state ¡ng an all-day meeting in the stance Fields want to Turner Sat­ Inability to pay his bills and falling highway commtseten. end a mih-oow- park Friday for the L. T. L. urday for a visit. health, together with the Invalidism named Widener were a free ted Every boy and girl is invited to Travis Martin went to Port­ of his wife, oaused Jack Redman, tractor Echo on abarges of em battle attend and join the L. T. L. land and Beaverton Tuesday i prominent realtor of Bugeae, to shoot near mnnt when R H Baldoek. dtvtotoo hie wife and thea commit suicide. Cleve Harrison, who has been for a two-weeks etny. engineer, of La Grande, eharged th at helping Clarence Boggie on his J. W. Blaine visited at Al- The Sprague River White Pine saw­ the highway commission had Inform e straw baler, was called home Tuesday after a visit to Reeds­ mill, located In the Sprague River tlon tn show that the mea worked te­ Tuesday on account of the seii- port. He will teach at Browns­ valley, north terminus of the Strahorn gs t her to obtain money to which they railroad, was »old t» J. M. Edgerton were not entitled. ous illness of his wife with ville this winter. Among Brownsville passengers of Grants Pass for approximately $40,- heart trouble. All tourist» tn Medford ahd vicinity via Halsey to Albany Saturday 000. or passing along the Paclfla highway Byrle Cevelnses, 14. son of M r aad at that time will not only be admitted Mrs. J. Loomis and cbildran, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell WM- ware Mrs. D. K. Wolgamott aud daugh­ Mra. Walter Cavelnaes af Springfield, free but a apaolal sffsrt will be made gamott of Bend have a new ter Gladys, Miss Glenda Ross, L. was killed when he was run over by eight-pound girl at their home D. Vidito and Miss Mildred Rots. an automeblle driven by I .ester Schar- io Indues them to attend tha Janhaon county fair aad southern Oregon pear Mrs. Wolganott’s mother, Mrs. man. also 14. aad residing In Spring- show at Medford. September 10. 11 M r. and Mrs. Earl Stauard and N. L. Burson, is taking care of 12 and I I . I t Is estimated shout 3800 their uncle, S. M. Jackson of field. the little lady. Canned blackberries are In great dw tourists w ill take advantage of this Iowa, took a Halsey train Friday, * t Lyman Howe has sold his in- Mr. Stanard going to Albany and rnand. according te J. O. Holt, itan- court So v during the four dayy. Fred Vardlow of Elko. Nuv, shot aad Mrs. Stauard and Mr. Jackson to agar of the Rugeae F ru it Growers' as­ Vancouver, Wash., to visit tba sociation. but not enough are arriving killed W Austin Goodman. sh eriff of home of Mrs. Stanard’s father, at the association's cannery to supply Hartley county, and than fled oa horseback. Ha «sea captured by F . Rsv. C. M. Cline, who is a Baptist the demand minister there. Oregon pensions have been granted Goodman, IT. sen af the stain sheriff, assisted by Deptoy Sheriff Renshaw Rev. J. C. Orr, pastor of the as follows Phoebe C. Buck bee. Salem. and a posse of dtlseea, after his $30; Sarah B. Ogle. Portland. $12; Prebylerian churcb, and Miss horse had been shat down from under Etta Veneta Talent were married Harry K. lxrvell, Pendleton. $16; John him, The capture was etfeoted at Hazleton, Klamath Palls. $20; Kmma Thursday, tbs pastors of tbs Bap­ the kes^ of Deep creek, ea the »Me tist. Christian aod M'tbedist I, Smith, Portland. $30 ef Steles mountain, a heat 70 mile« The surfacing of tt,e Jehn Day high churches participating in the cere­ from the scene ef the minder, whleh mony. The couple mads a geta­ way between Prairie GRy and Dlgle was at Folly farm, near the harder af has been completed The contractorn way to the railroad station and out Haleey Church of Christ are now finishing the grade from Malheur and Harney counties. Church Announcements Church of C b ria t: Lon Chtmlee, m mister. Bible school. 10, W. H. Robert- of town while would-be tin-can serenaders were chasing sundry Dixie to Austin and this work la cars in a strenuous effort to locate expected te be completed within the them. In this quest Jim Fox had month. The Marine Products company's fish tn auto mishap in which bis face was somewhat cut and scratched. oil and fertilizer plant at Warrenton, Mrs. Harry Commons and son, superintendent. children attended church Sun­ Christian Endeavor, 7. Morning worship, 11. Lord’s day at Shedd and visited the lady’s parents, Mr. and Mix. »upper every Lord's day. T. B. Sprenger. Evening service, 8. The church without a bishop, in Eighty Ulan county business and I the country without a king. professional men, members of a dele­ I f you have no church home gation that went to Bend over the come aud worship with us. MeKeeste pass. returned to western Methodist: Robert Parker, pastor. Sunday School, 10. Preaching, 11. Intermediate League, 7. Epworth League, 7. Prayer meeting Thursday, Preaching, 8. I NEWS NOTES FROM ALL OVER OREGON 8, Oregen with the aaauraaco that oeu tral Oregon ceunUee would support plans for the coaetrunOoa of a high way arrest the Baptism pase The meeting tn Bend was attended by aiore than ISO persona end resulted In the organisation of a Bantlam Highway aaaoclatloa. ___ ______ . — Following a pahMc hearing la tha office ef tha port of Umpqua cnmmte- tloo a new basin of oe-operatlea be­ tween the port dtstrfat agd the United State« govs ram sat a c t be reoqm- over which a controversy raged In the mended by Captain Georgs Mayo, dis­ circuit court last fall, has been 4uc trict engineer for district He. 1 Since ceesfully deodorized and Is operating adoption of (he north Jetty project ea without inconvenience to residents Of the Umpqua snd aetheiUaettea of a surrey of the toner harbor the pert the city. has been co-operating aa a 60 NO basis. б, 'zchange of approximately 70,000 If tbe dlstrlot engineer's recommenda­ acres of scattered state lands In Coat tion la carried out the new working and Curry oouatles for a similar basis w ill be to for tba port and $0 far amount of national forest lands Inolud the government. ed In one tract. Is being oonsldared hy the state land hoard. In event the exchange ia made the federal tract Mrs. A. M. Chamberlin, who will be set aside as a forest reserve. has been visiting her mother, Members of the state land board will Mrs. J. Edwards, returned te leave for Coos tnd Cufry counties Friday, where they will Inspect all of her home at Portland Tuesday. the lands Involved tn the proposed Mr. and Mrs. Edwards expect to follow soon ard make their transaction. home there.