Halsey enterprise. (Halsey, Linn County, Or.) 19??-1924, September 17, 1924, Page 4, Image 4

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HALSE V E N T E R P R IS E
PAGE 4
They are Albany school teach­
ers.
Miss I-ena Bass is picking
hops in a yard near Allrany.
Miss
Albeita Koontz left
Saturday for Salem, where .she
is soon to start on another year
at Wilhmette University.
'»••WO
I
G L O B E ALBAN 1 Y
T H R E E DAYS, starting Sept. 21
A m e ric a ’« p rem ie r artiste
io
h e r greatest p i c t l <>
NORMA TALMADGE
s’
in
? SECRETS
:
:
I
Urges W omen N ot to Be
Among Ballot “ Slackers
I
EUGENE O’BRIEN
THE
Miss Nettie Spencer left Fri­ News NotM
day for Elkton, where she is
(Continued from page 1)
principal of the schools.
The first sales of 1334 Oregon hops
Elbert Isom and family and
the late crop were mads at 13 to
W. P. Wahl and Delma are en­ of
13 ceata.
joying an outing at Waldport.
W ill H. Moore, stale insurance com­
Mr. and Mrs. E. Boner, who missioner. and W. A. Mullan, chief
have been visiting at the home deputy In the department, have de­
of Mrs. S. C. Bass, went to Eu­ signed a atlekar advertising firs pre­
gene Saturday evening.
vention week, which Is October 3 to
J. L. Spry, rgneher of the Nslsoa
creek country In the western pert of
Lens county, who had served a taw
days more than a nrouth of a long
sentence In the Lane county Jail for
11, Inclusive.
having a moonshine still on his place,
50.000 and 61.000 pounds of
was paroled for a few weeks by Oov
Lops belonging to O. R. Fish, near
ernor Pierce to build a trail and
Springfield, were burned wben fire
bridge that hfs children may attend
leveled the hop house. Lose Is about
school thia fall and winter
35000. Mr. Fish had Juat cencluded
On top ot the recent decision of
his season's plehlng
the Eugene aohool board to abolish
Fort land was visited by about 100
all secret fraternities and other or­
collection agency representatives M ob
ganisations tn the Eugene high school,
day and Tuesday, when the sixth an
the board Issued an order that all
nual convention of the Collection
ex-members of the different societies
Agencies' association of Oregon was
must sign an agreement that they will
held at the Multnomah hotel.
discontinue membership In the organ­
Automatic train controls, to atop isations and that they will substitute
an engine If the engineer through nolhlB< equivalent to thia member
sudden death or laxity runs past the ] „hlp.
warning block sígnala, are being In
The Marion county circuit court has
stalled od the O.-W R. A N. lines be
set October 13 as the date for bear­
tween Portland and The Dalles.
ing arguments of attorneys with rela­
Hop and prune picking operations tion to the modified order of the pub­
In Marlon and Folk counties are near lic service commission In the case
Ing an end. The abort picking sea brought by the several railroad com
son thia year wae due. It was said panlee operating In Oregon to enjoin
to the favorable weatbar, which has enforcement of a previous order of
permitted work without Interruption tha commission reduolng freight rates
A successor to R B Ooedla, super on hay, grains and other farm pro­
intendent of the Oregon employment ducts.
Institution for tha adult blind in Port­
A total of <83 scalps of wild ani­
land, who died last week, probably mals came Into the Portland office of
will not be considered until the next the United States bureau of biological
regular meeting of the state board of survey, from S3 trapper« hired by tha
control.
bureau In cooperation with the slate
19
picture
SEA HAW K
soon
•en n en n e n e n ee
HalMy Happening« etc.
(C o n tin u e d
page 3)
Fine weather for flies and the
rest of us.
Mrs. Barbara Dean is back here
from Oregon C ity.
Jerry Green of Brush Creek
caught a big black bear in a trap
the other day.
A. W. Foote’s foot it still in s
aling but he expects to regain full
use of it.
Mrs. Mary Taylor and Douglai
Taylor went to Salem Monday.
G . I. Burnett came over fron
Brownsville today and took the
train for Turner.
Delora Wells is with her grand
mother, Mrs. I, A. Pray, to at.
tend school again.
MRS. A L V IN T. HERT
Born on a southern Indiana farm,
the teacher of a country school,
the wife of a successful business
man whose affairs she now man­
ages, a farmer on her own Ken
tucky acres, an able business woman,
bat with all the charm and gracloua-
ness of a lady of the old school—
such Is Mrs. Alvin T. Hert, Vice-
Chairman of the Republican National
Committee.
Mrs. Hert'a headquarters are in
Chicago, from which center she Is
broadcasting to American women
Ifrst of all the measage of tholr great
responsibility. The women claimed
that If given tbo vote they would
(bake the United State« a better place
#> live In. Mrs. Hert Is urging all
iomen not to be among the twenty-
ve million ballot slackers, but to go
S> the polls on Election Day and vote
4>r what they believe to be the poli­
ces that will mean most In the light­
“ The Covered Wagon ” comes
to Brownsville Monday, Tuesday
and Wednesday.
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<09
Mr. Moody and family were
guests at the L. H. Armstrong
home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Will White had
dinner at the A. C. Armstrong
home Sunday.
Mrs. Harry Commons and
children visited her parents at
Shedd Sunday
Mrs. A. C. Armstrong and
daughter called on Mrs. Wilson
Carey Wednesday.
J. S. Nicewood and family-
drove to Salem Thursday and
spent the day visiting friends.
J
Harry Bressler is acting as sec
tion foreman at Harrisburg. Hi>
wife and hi* sister Agues are will,
him
Helen Armstrong and Gene
vieve and Lawrence Wells drovt
to Triangle lake Sunday after­
noon.
A numlrer around town are 1
attending; the round-up at Pen­
dleton this week, also the coun­
ty fair.
Mrs. N. L. Bursou returned I
from Bend last week where sh, |
has been visiting her daughtei
Blanche.
»R IALTO
Owen and LaYertla Kaiser nr,
visiting their grandmother, Mrs.
Wheeler, on tber way borne iron-
Veneta to Silverton.
Mrs. P. J. True, who lies l>eei
quite ill for several weeks, war
taken to a Corvallis hospital yes
tsrdty by her niece, Lila Dudley.
Silas W hite and Dode H ill mat
killed a hear near Brownsvilli
Sunday. They, with White’s dog
chased Brum up eight different
trees
In the last tree H illm an
put five bullets into the animal,
the lest one going through eis
heart and bringing him dowu.
ening of human burdens. In the gen
oral welfare of all.
True, Mrs. Hert Is a good Repub
llean, but her messages breathe first
ot all the soul of a humanitarian,
coupled with the conviction that of
all the agencies at hand the Republi­
can party ts the most effective one
through which what women want—
social progress, the greatest good of
the
greatest
number — can
be
achieved.
Her political creed Is summed up
In the belief that the purpose of gov­
ernment is to “establish Justice, In­
sure domestic tranquility, provide for
the common defense, promote the gen­
eral welfare, and secure the blessings
ot liberty to ourselves and our pos­
terity."
It ts hard to quarrel with such a
creed unless one wants to And fault
with the preamble of the Constitution
of the United States!
BROWNSVILLE
SATURDAY
»Rudolph Valentino*
I MONSIEUR BEAUCAIREJ
Carl Huston and wife of Al­
bany called Sunday afternoon at
the L. II. Armstrong and Ly-J
man Palmer homes.
M ONDAY
TUESDAY
W ED N ESD A Y -
Sept. 22, 23, 24
>
j The Covered Wagon
Tussing, Ringo, the bank, I state, as she no doubt will with
Koontz, Clark and Hill had ( us if ill fortune comes our way.
American Legion flags flying J
‘Friday.
Low milk yields during the summer
You may have something
that somebody wants, hut you
can’t sell it to him until he finds
it out. Advertise.
may be due to bothersome flies There
are spi-uya on the market that act as
a repellant of flies.
Killing W ild Garlic
. on
....
T h e 8 ta te f a i r
“ t Salem
w ill
A successful method of eradicating
Among those who called
Mrs
Pearl
True last
Wednes
wild
garlic 1. by spraying
with orchard
A n a .
ts in liu «
h im
nuinefl I <**upy all next week, i and ♦ the
i h heating
tetln f oil or waste
wuste motor oil, which
day were Mesdanies H. W. and I exBibits are expected to ra? should be easily procured from garages
Lyle Chance. Mrs. Armstrong
>» »H lines- In Cali- This waste oil should he diluted with
and daughter Helen, Mrs. Don-|*orn*“. however, there were no kerosene until It ts thin enough to per­
na Cross and Mrs. L. H. Arm- 1 cattle nor hogs at the state fair mit spraying with a small pressure
sprayer, but not to thin that It will
strong.
this year, owing to the foot and readily
run off the plants. First, strain
Mr. and Mrs. Titus of Leban­ mouth disease. We are more the oil through several thicknesses of
lucky,
but
not
exultant.
We
on drove up Monday for their
cheesecloth and then apply It ss a flue
two daughters, Mrs. Zeta Iaw- sympathize with our sister mist
rence and Mrs. Zelda Stringer,
who have been visiting at the
Briggs home. They returned
the same day.
E. F O O T E '
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Bramwell
took « day oil and starting at
t?XCERT Equipment
WORKMEN (
6 o’clock Thursday morning #
GATES A I res
RES " nd A-^ttirient
went to Portland. St. Helens,
Long Bell, Longview and Van­
AUTO accessories
<
couver and finished at Halsey ® ‘A*-UTO Repairing prom ptly done
1
at 2 a. m. Friday a journey of
300 miles.
H A L S E Y , Oregon ’
Miss
Mildred Martin and
Mrs. Forest Barker were in
Halsey a short time Thursday. I
HALSEY GARAGE, A.
•
J
throe weeks Bndaoardltls sad pneu
tnonla ware the direct senses of death,
according to aMendiag physi«laag
Justice McCourt was horn In Canada
50 years ago. but had lived la Cali­
fornia and Oregon alace he was four
months old.
TORRANCE
Reconditioning Shop
Parts for All Cars
Willard Batteries
212 Bast First et., Albany
Phone 379
Retwsen
«
••The secrets of a w ife”
Supported by
The year’s greatest
SEPT. 17, I « *
T.,
The September estimate ef pear
production gives the total orop ef the
United States as about tha same as
1323, bat shows a general reduction
for the Pacific coast states. The Ore
gon crop Is sstlmated at 1,163,000
bushels against 1,643,000 bushels last
year.
Just why pine squirrels should he
seeking lower altitudes and forsaking
their mountain haunts la a question
raised by S. H. W alker of Um atilla
county. Ordinarily, the little animals
remain far back In the hills, but thia
year they have come down on the
farms. Porcupines and skunks have
also came down out of tha mountains
to a greater extent than ever before.
A land and livestock deal. In which
approximately 380,000 la said to hare
been Involved, was completed at
Pendleton whereby the ranch and ohe
band of sheep of Charlea W. Mathews
of Pilot Rock became the property of
A. W. Rugg of Pendleton.
Taking of testimony In 149 catea
Involving water rights on the Dea
chutee river w ill get under way at
Bend October 14, the state englaeer
has announced. It waa predicted that
the taking of thia testimony would
require at least two weeks.
The dtltens of Rufus. Sherman
county, have riled with the Oregon
public service cemmlasloa a complaint
with relation to tha water eervtce
there. The complaint has been re­
ferred to engineers of the public serv­
ice departmeat for Investigatloa.
Matthew Shoeehlps, 40, prominent
and well educated Indian resident of
the Um atilla reservation, was found
dead In the Blue mountains. The re­
port that reached Pendleton was that
the Indian probably had died from
Injuries sustained when his horse
threw him.
The Hood River Apple Orowers' as­
sociation baa announced that H. F.
Davidson, formerly president of the
North Pacific fruit distributors, and
for many years prominent In fruit
growing and shipping bas been named
advisor to the sales department of the
organisation.
Eugene was selected as next year's
meeting place by the Pacific North­
west Ctroulatloa Managers' associa­
tion at Its concluding session in Spo-
xane, Wash. The 1936 convention w ill
be held at the same time as tho Ore­
gon state newspaper convention. In
March or April.
Five passengers and the driver on
the
McMInnvIlle-Balem
bus
were
slightly Injured when a Southern Pa­
cific electric train crashed Into the
bus at Holmes Oap, 16 miles sooth
of McMinnville. The front of the bus
was wrecked and the passengers
thrown out by the Impaet.
livestock sanitary hoard and the state
game commission. This Is a record
catch for August. Coyotes and bob­
cats, or lynx, were most nnmerous.
Trappers also sent In scalps ot 146
badgers and 133 porcupines, shot in
the coarse of their rounds.
Columbia river salmon canneries are
participating more axtenelvely In the
activities of the fall fishing season,
which opened Shptember 10. than for
many years. Practically every large
cannery In Astoria and lta environs
la paoklng fish.
The general high
quality of the Columbia river spring
and summer pack and the operation
of restrictions to lim it the output of
the Alaskan product bas so strengthen­
ed the market for fall salmon that
there la keen competition among the
packers.
After hearing the claims of
opponents of the income tax
that the tax keeps capital out
of Oregon and ruins industry,
while you see our industries
prosper and new capital come
in constantly, one is able to
discount the statement on the
same authority that the income
tax has ruined Wisconsin. The
governor of that state brands
the statement as a falsehood.
HALSEY RAILROAD TIME
North
South
No. 22, 3:02 a. m.
No. 17, 12:15 p. tn.
IS, 11:37 a. m.
33. 7,40 p. m.
24, 4:25 p. m.
31, 11:20 p. m.
No. 14, due Halsey at 5:02 p. m., stops
to let off passengers from south of
Eugene.
Noe. 31 and 32 stop only if flagged.
Not. 31. 32, 33 and 34 rnn between Port­
land and Engene only.
Passengers for south of Roseburg should
take No. 17 to Eugene and there transfer
to No. 15.
Halsey-hrewnsville stage meet« trains
18, 17, 34, 14 and 33 in order named.
SUNDAY MAIL HOURS
The delivery window of the
Halsey poetoffice is open Sundays
from 10:40 to 10:60 a. id , and 12:15
to 12:30 p. m.
Sunday mail goes out only on
the north-bound 11:37 train:
Mail goes south once a day. closiagat
11:05 a. hi . ; north twice, cloaing 11:25
in. and 5:30 p. m. M ail stage for
Brownsville, Crawfordsville and Sweet
Home leaves daily at 3:45 a. m.
Defense day, last Friday, was
a successful demonstration that
the manhood of the country
will respond promptly if there
comes a call to arms to resist
an attack from outside. Linn
county, Oregon and the United
States registered an enlistment
beyond all expectations. It may
safely be counted that there
will be a like response, should
the call come to suppress sedi­
tion at home.
C. L. Ogle of Woodburn ar­
rived Thursday for a visit to his
ranch, between Halsey and
Brownsville.
H urrah (or LaFollette and heart
Com ing to Albany
The new need Is not so much to
make two blades grow where one grew
before as It la to make one blade twice
ns good at half what It coat before.
• • e
Dr. Mellenthin
Specialist
Economical to Use Beat
in Internal Medicine for the
Kind of Oil on Tractor
past twelve years
Rapid deterioration, lac* of power,
overheating, consumption ot more fuel
and rapid rarbonlxtng of tho cylinder,
are some of the Inevitable results when
a cheap grade of tractor oil la need.''
says F. W. Duffee of Wisconsin. “The
heat oil that can ba bought la none ten
good to use In a machine working
der extreme conditions of temperature
and bearing pressure ”
The cost of lnbrlcaUng oU Is a very
m a il part of the total coot of operating
a tractor. Including repairs. Interest on
Investment and depreciation. The dif­
ference In coot between cheep oil and
the best oil la. in moot cases, not mere
than 2 or 8 par cant of the total cent
of operating the machine The cheap
oil will cost more In the long run, sell
will mean more repairs sad ms
trouble.
Duffee flods that the recommatsdg-
tlons of the manufacturers had beat be
followed as to Just what ells are sett
to their machines Reliable manufac­
turers are highly Intereeted lp the life
and satisfaction of their machines and
go to cnnslderahle expense to determine
the beet oils to use.
un­
Paid-for Paragraphs
Neighbors of Hugh Kusnstl. whose
(6c a line)
body was found on h it ranch near
Salem. February I I , with a bullet
Pups far sale. Airedales. Call
wound In the tiR» of the bend, petition­ at meat market.
ed the Marlon connty conrt to order
an official Investigation to determine
Old papere (or eale at 5c a bundle
whether Kueniil'a death was tha re­
at the Enterprise office.
sult of suicide or foul play.
D o e s N o t O p e r a te
W ill be at
HOTEL ALBANY
Wednesday, O c t 1.
Office hours 10 a. tn. to 4 p. m.
ONE DAY ONLY
No Charge for Consultation
Dr. klellenthin is a regular graduate
in medicine and surgery and it li­
censed by the state of Oregon.
Ha
Joe. not operate for chronic append­
icitis, gall stones, ulcers of stonmeh, ton­
sils or adenoids.
He has to his credit wonderful reeults
in dlreases of the stomach, liver, bow­
els, blood, skin, nerves, heart, kidneys,
bladder, bed wetting, catarrh, weak lunge,
rheumatism, sciatica, leg ulcers anthrnc-
tal ailments
Below are the names of a few of hie
many satisfied patients in Oregon
Kmaia Pekkari, Ilwaco, Wash., cheat
trouble,
e
W. O. Todd, Grass Valley, Ore., ulcer
of the stomach.
Toseph Schuster. Beaverton. Ore., ca­
tarrh and heart trouble.
Elisabeth Taylor, Baker. Ore., intest­
inal trouble,
Mrs. Ernest Lacey. Ironside. Ore.,
heart and ntrvous tronble.
C. I, Miacb. Estacada, Ore., kidney
sad bladder tronble.
Mrs. Henry Baker. Banks, O re., gall
stoaee and appendicitis.
E. C. Nichols, Lebanon, Ore., appen­
dicitis
Approximately 11 wells have been
W AN TED
drilled In Oregon In the hepe of strik­
Responsible
men or w om an ol
ing oil and not one has been sne-
ceeeful. according to Dr. Warren D. good address, wiih ante, (or a few
Smith, head of the department ef geo­ days or longer to
logy ef the University ef Oregon, who
Remember above date, that eon.
bas prepared a survey on the '^btrol
saltation on thia trip wiil be fre«
sum Possibilities of fl'eetera Oregon "
among farmers, Person fam iliar and that hia treatment is different.
John McCourt, since 1311 Jnatlee of with farm affairs.
Married women must be accompanied
Address, with
the Oregon supreme court, died nt bin references as to responsibility, As- by their hasbende
Address, 211 Bradbury bldg., Lee
home In Salem - after gp UU*M »f t o * BrLKKLix,ears Enterprise,
Angelee, Cal.
Collect and Solicit
I