Halsey enterprise. (Halsey, Linn County, Or.) 19??-1924, September 24, 1924, Page 3, Image 3

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    Tee M edtrats
A London student o f the servant
problem a a y i that ceoka would be bet-
ter pleated i f they were called "M is s .'
Why Bet "M y L a d y T
>
Ibany A
7
/
i d i ^ e t n ^ —Continued
SE PT. 24, 1914
FARM LOANS
W rite lor booklet describing our 20-
year Rural Gredit Amortized Loans
The loan pays ont in 20 payments, re­
tirin g the principal
Cheap rates. So
“•la y .
B b a m L a n d C o .,
1 M Lyon street, Albany, Ore.
directory
T h is i t good advice! “ I f you live
in Albany, trade in Albany ; if you live
in tome other town, trade in tbat town.*
But in these automobile days many re­
siding elsewhere find it advisable to do
at lowest rate of interest.
at least part of th eir buying in the
larger town. Those who go to Albany
Insurance
to transact business w ill find the firms Real Estate
named below ready to fill their require­ Prompt service. Courteous treatment.
ments w ith courtesy and fairness.
U u B a i n , Room 5, First Savings Bank
builning, Albany
A C C E S S O R IE S AND T IR E S
FARM LOANS
Auto Supplies
J. H. A l l is o n
442 W est First St.
a
*-
A lb an y Floral Co.
U
O
SHOE ©
SERVICE *
Cut flowers
A * and plants. Floral art for every
and all occasions.
Flo w er phone 458-J.
A lbany
Eleotric
O
Radio Shoes that cost less per month of wear
Store
A * tets.
G lenn
Electric wiring. Delco Light
products 202 Second
W il l a r d
W m . h o f l ic h .
Parents!
HALSEY STATE BANK
C A PITA L
AND
Commercial and
P H O N O G R A P H S
at
W O O D W O R T H 'S
D U R K H A R T & LEE
AA
sole agenis for
Phenix Pure Paint and
Dr, Hess’ oultry and Stock Tonic
U. S. A C. T. C. Tires New. low-priced Gill
More service
Batteries for
No more cost
Ford,
and
other
Skilled Auto repairing Star,
Chevrolet small cars
Auto accessories
MORE SERVICE FOR LESS MONEY
Meade & Albro,
IS s tb u r n Bros.— T w o big grocery Optometrists, Manufacturing Opticians
A-J stores, 212 W. First and 225 South
Main. Good merchandise at the right
prices
Albany, Oregon
F ailu re to think helps some men to
succeed In failing.
• * •
ENite Cafeteria and confectionery
A-J Home cooking. Pleasant surround-
ings.
Courteous, efficient service.
W e make our own candies.
W. s. D u n c a n .
LNInia
developed
and
The best way to keep the wheat
moth away Is give the grain an early
thrashing.
.
printed.
A We m ail them rig ht back to you.
Woodworth D rug Company, Albany, O r­
egon.
P0RD
A
SALES AND 8 E R V IC E
P o rtm ille r Furniture Co., furni-
C U L L E R G R O C ER Y. 285 Lyon
A^ (Successor to Stenberg Bros.)
Groceries
Fruits
Produce
Phone 263R
A
Laundrv sent Tuesdays
H alsey ,
O regon
IM P E R I A L CAKE, 209 W. First
F. M. GRAY,
DRAYM AN
JL1AUNETO E L E C T R IC CO.
A ll work done promptly and reason­
Harold G. M urphy Prop.
•
P hone 665
7
W a NKVKB CLOSE
■^’ A Official Stromberg carburetor serv­
ice station.
Conservative prices. All
work guaranteed
119-121 W . Second.
ably.
M A R 1 N E L L 0 parlors
IvA
beauty aid for every need)
Phone
No. 269
HALSEY
Cream and Produce Station
S t Francis Hotel
ITop.. W in n iv m r d R ose .
Cash paid for
and money are best when
1
i
M O O R E ’S M U S IC HOUSE
]
D O S C O K AMES H A R D W A R E ,
AV
the
am, Poultry, Eggs, Veal
[ides. M. H- SHOOK
D ELBER T STA R R
uneral Director and Li­
censed Embalmer
ficient Service.
Motor Hearse.
Lady A ttendant
W IN C H E S T E R S T O R E
322 W. First st.
C
S. G IL B K R I & SON
VJs Builders’ and shelf hardware, gar-
den tools, crockery aud glassware
New Stock.
New low prices.
k-’ Second street, opposite Ham ilton's
store.
"Sudden Service.’ '
M A R G U E R IT E SHO PPE
'
THE
J
lV 7»ld o Anderson A Hon. diatrib- '
Wednesday and Friday
’ ’ utors anJ dealers for M axw ell, Chal­
m ers Hears Hudson A Hupinobile cars
Accessories * pnliee 1st A Broadalbin. -
12 to 8:30
bought, told v«d exchanged at all times
BEN
BARBER
SHOP
Firsl-class Work
T. S U D TE LL
Thone 7b-R, 123 N. Broadalbin at, Albaay
U .W
STEPHENSO N.
With the High
School Classics
PAOE J
l.ong i t o the'Bible pointed ont the*
the »ins o f the h ith er riteuld bo
Ued utkin hla children to tbe third and
fourth gooeratloas.
Medical arlenre
has proved th a t tkis Is true o f tha
disease of the father, for certain fhs-
eases are Inherited to tbe third and
fourth generations; weakening all the
descendants of the diseased anceetor.
W hat Is trub of disease Is no doubi
true of many other evils, and M aeter­
linck spoke truly when be s a id :
‘ There Is net a gesture, a thought, a
sin. a tear, an atom ef acquired con­
sciousness that Is lost in tbe deptha
of the e arth ; and at the most Insig­
nificant of oux acts, eur ancestors
arise, not In their tombs, where tney
move not, hot In ourselves, where they
always live.”
Two things save the situation, front
pessimism: we struggle townrd good,
and not all good that a man does la
Interred with his bonea
Human beings do much that Is e v il;
but they try to be good, Just as a
plant tries always to get to the light
and away from the darknesa
W hat
progress the race has made has been
due to the good that waa not Interrad
with the hones of the doer«. A Naa-
arene carpenter and a Hindu prince,
for example, did rood that has fu r­
nished Inspiration for countless M il­
lions since their time. And although
one good man In a community has lit­
tle Influence, a group of good men
ran save any situation, as witness the
fact that Sodom and Gomorrah would
have been saved had there been but
ten good uien tn the combined cities.
rie-
Mrs. Rika’s Recital
By M A R G A R E T B O Y D
The “ musical hour ” at Mrs.
Kike's studio Tuesday of last week
l© by M argaret Boyd.)
thorouhgly pleased the musically
‘‘And If aught else great bards beside inclined people who attended. An
In sage and eolemn tunes have aung,
accident in this oflice thia morning
> . Where more la meant than meeta prevents our publishing the pro­
tha ear.”
II Psnseroso.
gram, which will probably appear
"W ell, the world haa a million w rit­ ou an outside page next week.
ers. Ona would thluk, then, ihut good
thought would be as fam ilia r us air
and water, and the gifts of each new
h o u r would exclude the Inst. Yet we
can count all our good books; nay, I
ren ember any beautiful verse for
tw enty years," wrote Emerson.
T b e classics, w hat Emerson calls
"our good books,” hove, a fte r all,
changed little since Milton's day. He
sDd succeeding w riters hava added a
few volumes; but In general tha clua-
sli-s of three centuries ago are the
classics of today.
Plato, the Greek
tragedians, Hom er and Shakespeare
sre w riters whose works w ill endure
us long ts our civilization endures.
W hat Cannes a book to endurel
Emerson says: “O nly those books
come down which deserve to last. All
tha gilt edges and vellum and morocco,
all the presentation copies to all the
libraries w ill not preserve a book In
circulation beyond Its Intrinsic date.
Blackstone, Kotzebue or Pollock may
endure for a night, but Moses and
H om er aland forever. T here are not
In the world at any one time rtmre
than a dozen persons who read and
underhand Plato— never enough to
puy fo r an edition of his w o rks; yet
to every generation these come duly
down, for the sake of th o u few per-
aons, aa I f God brought them In His
hand. . . . T he permanence o f all
books la fixed by no effort friendly or
hostile, but by tlie lr own specific grav­
ity or the Intrinsic Importance of their
contents to the constant mind of
man."
W hatever other characteristics a
clazalc may possess, It is safe to say
o f It that “more Is meant than meets
the ear.” Children reading the clas­
sics In high school rarely enjoy them
,— w hat meeta the ear la of less ab­
sorbing Interest than the latest news­
paper scandal, and high school pupils
are usually too Im m ature to gel the
meaning |h a t does not meet the ear.
T h a t meaning becomes clear only
n fte r one has lived with a book for
a long time. One test of a elastic Is
the number of times It w ill hear re-
rveullng.
"Julius C i w i r , ” for exam­
ple, reveals new meanings oa tha hun­
dredth reading, and would probably do
io on the thousandth reading. It was
•f *ui-h boohs that Thoraan w rote;
‘I t w ill be soon enough to forget them
when we have the learning and genius
which w ill enable us to attend to and
appreciate them.”
< • by M argaret Boyd.)
"Tha
evil that men do lives a fter
them ;
Tha good la e ft Intaered w ith their
bonea."
— Julius Caesar.
I t seems to ua tbat good should be
Halsey Happenings
(Continued fro m
1)
Jake Ackeruia and O. M.
Kunltin will have a combi,
nation auction vale (near Browns­
ville next Monday, Snpt. 39, in­
stead of tbe 19tb, aa a typograph­
ical error makes ihe advertisement
on page 4 aav. Some fine heavy
young horses are listed for this sale,
with enough horse machinery -to
run a large farm.
Two days
later T R. Curry will have a sale
near Halsey on the Brownsville
road,
C H. Munger was with Silas
White aud Dixie H illm at when
they, with Mr. White's hounds,
chased a hear four or five tuilea
Finally Bruin climbed a tree and
young Munger killed him with a
tingle anol through (be head.
White and H illm an killed two
uears recently. W hite’s hounds
are sure enough bear dogs.
T. B. Brown is the new (supply)
pastor of the Methodist church at
Brownsvilla and Myron Hutohln-
wn at Harrisburg. Mr. Parker
remains in Halsey, Mr. Neleti
goes Irom Shedd to Monroe and
Alpine and A. B Calder is Ike
new pastor at Sbadd.
Lloyd C. Kendall, 21, and Ethel
0 . Baull, 17, both of Shedd, and
Paul J. H art and Eatella M Bun­
nell, both of Tangent, matrimo­
nially visited the Vancouver Gret-
or Gre.u last week.
Mr. Hoffman had a 10-cent
tice in the Enterprise twice
sold all those Airedale pupa,
page 4 waa printed tb ;s week
fore we knew it.
no­
and
hut
be­
Beaaie, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. J. E . S outh w irtb, who baa
oeen visiting her parants, raumed
Tuesday to her work as a trained
nurse at Wieser, Idaho.
G. E. M iller, a Scio farmer,
committed suicide this morning by
cutting bia throat.
Ho was a
cousin of J. W M iller, recently
killed by an explosion.
.Delora Welle returned to her
home near Junction City Satur­
day. She doee not intend to go
to school bore, aa stated last week.
I f Jaraae M cW illiams doesn’t
»tulle at you this week jast remem­
ber tbat bo bad but teeth taken out
Tuesday.
of the motor girl craves our deli­ stronger than e v il; Just as light la
stronger than darkaeaa. Yet It la true,
ciously flavored and templing ioo
aa Aatnny here points out, that the
cream. Why not gratify her? Our evil men do seems to outlast the good
M r». M. M
Ward returned
l’ ce cream is more beneficial than they do.
Monday from a visit with her
W e all know that If wa pnt a sound
cheaply flavored soft drinks, which
apple In the center of a barrel of rot­ ■laughter, Mrs. David Proman of
most dainty maidens entirely tg- ten apple*, tbe sound one w ill not Albany.
make the rotten one» sound; but w ill
core. Let the fair one decide.
Kenneth C ron ia home for
Itself become rotten.
5Ve know also
school after a visit with hfs moth­
that I f we pot a rotten apple In the
er, Mrs. L a P e lle tte ot Payette,
center of a barrel of sound apple«, It
w ill noon spread rot to all the apples Idaho.
D E N T IS T
HALSEY HO TEL
T here are » “ dozen reason« why
screenings should be M ig ra te d on the
farm and fed to live stock, says the
U nited Htatee Departm ent of A gricul­
ture.
Screenings are an undesirable
fen u product, consisting principally o f
weed needs, cracked and shrunken
k e rn e l, of grain, chaff, broken stems,
and straw s, d irt and other foreign
m aterial, and often constitute 10 to 20
p«r cent of the grain hr it comes from
the thresher. They should not, how­
ever, be regarded as a waste, but
should be turned to valuable account
by feeding them to live stock.
Gives Screenings Away.
W han scrawstngs are sold w ith the
grain they are claaswj a t dockage, and
the grain fa n n e r acteally give» them
away, because bis groin Is docked ac­
cording to th a proportion o f acreen-
It contains- T h is loss to the grain
farm er mounts to huge figures when
large wectlona are considered. In 1OOT.
fo r rrnample. nearly 12,000,000 bushels
o f screenings were produced, threshed
end m arketed aa dockage la the states
ef Nbrth Dakota, South Dakota. Min
nosota and M ontana.
The sum of
$flT5X>00 was paid by the fan n ers of
these state» for tlre s h k ig their screen
logs or dockage, and 8800,000 was paid
to the railroads fo r hauling It to the
tertnlnsl markets. M illions of dollars'
w orth o f good feed was thus given,
sway. T he grain fa rm e r was the loser.
T he average screenings are more
nearly equal to oats in composition
than any ether common feed. Heavy
screenings from which the chaffy
m a te ria l has been removed are nearly
equal to corn, wheat, or hurley In tlio
The Dry, Parched Throat
DR. W H E T S T O N E
A for hem stitching and stamped goods, j
Opposite H am ilton's, 318 W. Second st. 1
FURNITURE AND
FARM MACHINERY
his Inspection and asked of Sclsaorkt
"Thia Is the white man who was
caught by soldiers w hile bringing am­
munition to the young braves at Spot­
ted T i l l agency 1"
H la expression was almost genial
as ba put the query, but Scissors shook
hla head and repeated t
“M y white brother was carrying am­
munition to the Cheyennea on the Rose­
bud."
A «cowl of disappointment darkened
the chiefs visage. H ad SelMcre re­
plied In the affirm ative several men
from the agency were ready to brand
him a t a lia r, fo r they knew the man
Crazy Horse had referred to. Crany
Horae stared at the ground and
tw irled a revolver by the trigger guard.
None ventured to break the »Hence,
and at last he said:
"They aay the white man la a friend
o f High W o lf."
Halsey and Harrisburg
C all D. T a y l o r , Halsey, or
W. L. W r ig h t . Harrisburg
A Shampooing. M arcelling and Scalp
Treatments.
Margaret Countryman,
Globe 1 heater bldg. Phone 158J Prop.
New
and
“And W hile W a W are Asking Thia of
Tunkan Our P rayer W ae Answered,"
Scissors Continued.
W L- W R IG H T
Mortician & Funeral Director
C T IM S O N T H E SHOE DOCTOR
S P E C IA L T Y SH O PPE
(P r v p a ted b y tb« U n ited S la te» D ep a rtm en t
o f A c rlcu ltu re »
L A W Y E R AND NOTARY
‘ 1 (jor. Becooud and Ferry
Master Dyers and Cleaners
M a d e -T q *M e a s u re Clothes
THE
Undesirable Farm Product,
Consisting Principally of
Various V/eed Seeds.
Amor A. Tussi ng
itb Cleaning Works, Inc.
be continued)
Screenings Good
T for Live Stock
A B E ’S P L A C E
p f u b Candy Go., First street, next
A A doo, |o Blain Clothing £o,
Noon lunches.
Horae-made Candy and ice Cream.
►
“ E veryth in g musical ”
223 W . First st.
(T o
Agency Hub Cleaning Works
E veryth in g in the line of rats
Oppoute Postoffice
Y fe n
(Continued from page 2)
Modern
Barber Shop
U O L M A N dr JACKSON
AA
"•
Grocery— Bakery
•»’ A bnsy. M ake your dollars work in
our savings department. A l b a n y S t a t e
B a k e . ’ Under government supervision,
C op yrigh t by The Bobbe-M errlll Co.
Advantages of Rape
Tires sad accessories
Repairs
K i r k - P o l l a k M otor Co.
A
HUGH
PENDEXTER
There are three distinct advantages
In itfCng rape pasture for lambs. First,
rape pasture Is cheaper than grain for
fa tte n in g ; second. It keeps the lambs
free from parasites; and, third. It
stim ulate* growth and gains, giving
the lamb a cond.tlon of flesh that
__ikes him very desirable to the
batcher and to the consumer.,
A turc, rugs, linoleum, stoves ranges.
Funeral directors. 427-^i.i west First
street, Alban Vi Oregon.
IT
AA
Crazy Horse fixed his gaze on Ding-
dale, but understanding nothing of tha
Teton dialect tba prlaoner'a face be­
trayed nothing. I t waa useless to ques­
tion him, as Scissors would answer for
blrn. T h e chief seemed to lose all In­
terest In the ulleged friend of High
W o lf nnd abruptly asked:
"W here Is Frank?"
“F ra n k O ruard?" naked Scissors.
The chief nodded. Oruard. a native
of the Sandwich Islands, had been cap­
tured by C razy Horse's men while
serving a t mallcaTrler In Montana, be­
cause of hla dark complexion he was
believed to be an Indian who had been
tuken prisoner by the whites while
very young. H e had lived w ith the
Indiana fo r several years and was
thought highly of by both C razy Horse
nnd Sitting B u ll
Scissors tru th fu lly
answered that O ruard was aerviDg an
guide and scout fo r General Crook'»
forces.
¿By
TVivenport Music company offers
A — Piano-case organ, good as new
Estey organ, good as new
Used Pianos.
It
$ 3 5 ,0 0 0
A R R O W G A R A G E , Gansle Bros.
Pay
Qravel
R U N S W IC K
SURPLUS
|
A »cientiticatly fitted pair ot
glasaee — now — may eave your
child years of needless discomfort
R e s ta u r a n t, 3 0 9 Lyon and change its whole career.
D
A->
percentages of the various nutrients.
M oot than 8,800.<kk) lambs could have
been fed w ith the wheat screenings
, that were wastod la the four spring
. wheat states In 1P28 forming the en-
j tire grain ratios.
Tha resulting In-
r r aasa la weight of the lambs, at
coots per pound, would have brought
MJSdO.OOd to tha farmers. The spring-
Savings accounts Solicited
wheat farmers who cleaned their raar
kot wheat on the farm In 1921 gained
over 6 cents per bushel as a result of
the cleaning
Can Remove Screenings.
When a farm er who grows little or
no grain wants to feed screenings, he
must pay high prices fo r them In a
ready-mixed feed, or must purchase
tbem of the elevator or m ill that has
separated them T he grain farm or. on
the other hand, can separate them at
tha thresher or grsnary and feed them
as a by-product of hla farm
H a pays
no freight or middleman's commlsaion.
By means of a cleaning machine, the
screenings can be removed from wheat
or rye at a coat o f 2 or R cents per
bushel. A number of these cleaning
machines w ill be in operation In tbe
spring-wheat states this year as a re­
cult o f the work of the United Htatee
D e t r im e n t of Agriculture In showing
'H e was welcome In his lodge In the feeding valus o f thia product for
Montana one w inter ago. H e hunted all kinds Of live stock and the practl-
w ith some of the young Cheyenne «ability and economy of separating It
and feeding It on the farm .
men."
Halsey, Oregon
A u t o Electric Service— Kecbarg-
a V able A A
b batteries— W IL L A R D
storage battery. Phone 23. 119-121 W.
Second s t H . D. Freston—J .C . Cochran
O l u e B ird
AA street Eat here when in Albany.
Open from 6 to 2 and 5 to 8.
Mas. B l o u n t .
H A L S E Y E N T E R P R IS E
Clark's Confectionery
9—
•
Any G irl in Trouble
may communicate w ith E n eij ;n Lee of the Salvation A rm y at the
W h ile Shield Home, 565 May fair avenue, Portland. Otego«.
I»»— —
f —
•
In the barrel. It Is nsitally the same
with eehools and eommoaltlea; ona
evil child or evil person will soon
spread a ril throughout tha acliool or
community, whereas on» good child of
good person w ill erdlnsrlly hare little
effect on either.
A men may do a thousand and on»
good deeds and a »Ingle evil deed.
I f so, hla community w ill give more
weight to the one evil deed than to
h i( p to u e a n l gom) deed».
W iliam Chandler’s new barn at
Ash Swale was burned Friday
night, with 100 tons of bay,
Curtis Veatch and family sod
Mis. R in g o went to Cottage Grove
Sunday.
The Brownsville woolen mills
may start up uext month.
(Contluusd on pegs 4 )
j " ‘*.