Image provided by: Joanne Skelton; Cottage Grove, OR
About Halsey enterprise. (Halsey, Linn County, Or.) 19??-1924 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 10, 1924)
c / 1 1 1 ri L -/ X RPRISE i HALSEY, LINN COUNTY, ORE ON. DEC. 10, t» ’4 H a ls e y H appenings and County Events S h o rt S to ries from Sundry Source« home fro m A lbany to Haloev Sur.- day. J°b o M cC lelland of P in . Grove sold his hop crop Tuesday. Horse Markets Coming Back Lon Chatnlee and fa m ily were 'd in n e r guests at W. H . R o b e rt-' js o n ’ s Sunday. The H arrisburg ferry is op- — i~ * ~ E M rs B ert M in c k le y went to e r a t>ng again—but—we—want (—“~ H A lb a n y to d a y. —th at— bridge. G lenn W a lto n , M r. nnd Mr». L Mies D o ris L a ke spent the week C. M e rria m , M rs. L R. W a lta o end in C o rva llis. d . . . - f- " • Hector were A lb a n y v i • O. W r r u u i sent a tru c k lo a d o f ¡to rs yesterday. bogs to S aloin Tuesday T. J. S k irv in bss e le ctric lig h t M r and M rs. J. p. lernpl-ton in hia new chicken bouse and the were A lb an y callers Wednesday biddies are up and scratching lo n g M r. and Mr». E ld o n Boner oi I before da y lig h t- E ugene visite d th e la tte r’ s m other, . *, _ ,. . . ____ ' Horse markets are coming back. As both farm und city are demanding more M rs. S ophia Base, Sunday. i J N ’ G a lb ra ith of A lb a n y has i inil better buries, better prices may ultim ately result, .according to the Keaiw M . r,, . ' ’ ’ , had tw o utrokes o f aponloxy w ith in , tv 1 ■ ?£* E va,,s le ft today a fort n ig h - and is not expected to ; soenuck Agricultural Foundation bused on a study o f the trend In the buying lower of farm horses during the ra s t 57 years. for W a lla W a lla to v is it her sn rvive . M rs. G a lb ra ith I,ow prices probably w ill continue to discourage horse and mole prodnc- m o th e r, Mr». L a u ra W oodw ard. fro m H alsev. spent several days last week with "her daughter, Mrs. E. D. Isom. Lester and Veia Boni came a fter their m other on Sun day. A down-and-out ex-soldier by the name of Joseph LiBeau came to the E. D. Isom home 1 Sunday evening. As he seem ed to be in a bad condition with something resembling rheuma tism, Mr. Isom called the Red ! Cross a t Albany and was direct ed to bring him to St. Mary’s hospital so he and E. A. Starnes 1 took ham there. H orner on Clear Lake Prof. Horner, in |.is "Short History of Oregon,” says of this region’s proposed source of w at er supply; Crater lake, the gulf the Mediterranean lon and cause a falling off In the equine population until average prices return. of Mexico, C h a rle i S tra l-v and wife drove e foundation believes. But already horse breeding operations have begun sea and Clear lake, under certain The apparent miracle of Hen- J o expand in the districts possessing the kind of foundation stock capable of to B ro w n s v ille Snodav and v i-ite d atmospheric conditions, are as th e ir new niece a t the M unkers ry Ford's production of auto producing the sort of horses the market wants. A ttractive prices are now blue as indigo. But the latter mobiles as quickly as he does aeing pa hi for all good, big sound shapely drafters coming to m arket and good homo. body of water is famous for its was made to appear common- horses of the wagon type weighing 1.400 to l,«00 pound*. Prices have ad clearness. One reason is th a t it M. E. Hassett returned place Saturday when one was vanced from the extreme depression of two years ago. „ Mrs. , is fed by numerous springs M o n d a y fro m a v is it wi*h her almost instantly assembled on How soon the turning point w ill be reached on the rank sad file of horses which have been thoroughly g ran d d au g h ter Mrs May me Rob- the stage at Charity grange s uncertain. Previous cycles of horse and mule prlcea as shown by the ac by the extended lava lo so n , and c h ild re n in P o rtland. I hall companying chart have vnried greatly In length The flrst lasted eleven years filtered which they flow. from depression to depression, the second eighteen years and the present cycle beds through The Mountain States P ow er1 vt t < j I company’s plant in Halsey is «-,?1 3' Ma,ce!la h irk arrived is already twenty-seven years. I t seems logical to believe that an upward The lake, which is a mile 01 valued a t $2,353.20 for purpose» ' ®U. d ? ’ 1?®rnin» visit her turn In prices which w ill lust for a decade or longer w ill start before long more in length and approxima that good horses and mules produced from matings In the next few years tely a half mile in width is di of taxation and in Albany at Su , # »r J ' ’i' and will get the benefit of that advance by the time they reach marketable age. vided by a narrow passage into $195 209 50 , Corcoran. Mrs. Kirk has ju st 3ood horses are the exception on farms today. I t Is unthinkable that good tlte upper lake and the lower ’ returned from San Francisco, j farmers w ill be content w ith plugs for long. F ra n k Ganele and wife and M rs. i where she accompanied a pa- lake. Of the springs which feed A dda R ingo drove io 0<egou C ityitient to the Southern Pacific the upper lake one is large PT l ho* l,i‘ «> She re tu rn e d to P o rt, we read D in t they are h a vin g the enough to turn a sawmill, ahd B ro w n s v ille Briefs at H e rb e rt Staab s and the G a te lco ; |and yegl,.rd its tem perature in summer is tim e of th e ir livea. w ent on to P o rtla n d a fte r h o o ti. I but a few degrees above the Mra. Charles E nger spent T in a The county spent $105,582 on L The :et,er rc« ^ di."’ “ h ittin g ” freezing point. (¡Enterprise Oorreepondence) da y in Salem. , thp g o ve rn o r, quoted from in the In parts of the lake, at very Rev. M. S. Woodworth sur m atket roads this year; about .first coluuiu ___ L on i T h e woolen m ill« are ru n n in g great depths, trees may lie seen, page o 2 today, w m four times as much as was fro m M u » N ettie S p tn ce r, p riu c i- prised his congregation Sunday n ig h t and d a y. standing erect, as though by reading his resigrm- resigna spent four years ago. The pa, o, chon's at Elkton We do ! “ morning ,U1 *“ “ « by re a u ,,w J118 The new Methodist church some convulsion a great dam am ount has increased steadily,< diic,Otte lhe o l ' tjon as pastor of the Baptist d st had been thrown across a moun . „ --------- 1 and we have L better roads. |c o u trib u to rrf w ith o u t th e ir c o t. church to them. He has been will be dedicated Dec. 21. Mrs. C. C. S nvder and d a u g b t' r If anybody wondered why »put, and M i»s Spencer’ s cnnsen’ , I'-odor for the p r i t liv e y e a r*. Rosem ary were io A lb a n y Wedne . there are so few lean-fleshcd wl’ich h“'J b‘’,n req0e8te’’ dia Af' er b‘" reHI« " “Uo" h"d people in the vicinity of Charity 1 "r.r' f . nut' 1 p#ge 2 had '* en f le e te d he spoke eloquently of aav. grange he could have found the , pr‘ntcJ' l*e aeeds of c\ urch and M r. and Mra, H , A. G lu m , who b are been packing apples a t Hood answer in the specimens of the j Halsey has the distinction of cooking of the community on being represented by the largest v ?v X d a t0J 1 R iver, re tu rn e d bouie M onday. the table in the refection annex number of students at O. A. C. —r - Woodworth go and to give A nine-pound g ir l was horn to to the grange hall last Saturday, tins yeai of any town of its him a letter to his new pastor M r and Mra. G ordon M o n k» :» ate. He has not decided yet Nov 29. H e r name ia K a th le e n E G. W a rd and ran F e rris of class in the tate. The 11 Hal- sev students are De Ixis C la rk w h e re he wiH loCate’ an d w hile A nne. Eugene b rought th e ir m other and s o ^ o m o r e ^ i n ^ i ^ ^ e C W i - ‘ resigiiation takes effect im- g ra n d m oth e r, Mrs. M M . W a rd , County Superintendent Geet gil Corbin, sophomore in elec- a?h' % the v J t r T . n was visiting schools in this trical engineering; William Cor- ¡ ^ /e d He vicinity Wednesday. coran; sophomore in pharm acy: I 1 .1 p> • , f, ■ , A lb a n y ’s Kenneth Cross, sophomore in ■ has the wlfhes of h?3 wholt> onlv A lfo r d A r r o w s pharm acy; Serie Doutrherty. Dougherty, 1 congrcgation. wherever he goes. EXCLUSIVE sophomore in commerce; Clarl Marvin M artin went to Port (Enterprise Correspondence) Hill, senior in commerce; Ro Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Isom went OPTICAL PARLORS land Marks, senior in pharm acy; land Friday. „ . ~ . , to Alb..ny Wednesday. Douglas Miller, sophomore in County Commissioner Joseph forestry ; Wayne Robertson, Hume was in Albany Thursday. 1 ’dr- and Mrs. A. E. Whitlieck E V E R Y T H IN G O P T IC A L sophomore in civil engineering; _ . called a t the J. W. Hussey home Ercell Sneed, junior in chemical J- A. Vokum und George Har- Fridav afternoon. Bancroft Optical Co. engineering; Delma Wahl, rison left fo r Peck, Ore., Thura-[ Aiford schooI is preparing a 313 W est First street, Albany,Or. sophomore in home economics. daX-_________________________ 1 Christm as progiam to be given (C unU nued Tu pave 4) Mrs. G. H. Coshow and daugli-1 the afternoon of Dec. 24. ters Doris and Rosemary were Mrl Ed(11, Geer> the connU in Albany Saturday. . school superintendent, visited W e fea tu re Mrs. Grace Goodall returned 1 the Alford school last week, to her home at Brownsville I . . O re g o n C i t y V ir g in W o o l Monday, a fter a visit in E ugene.1 ,^*rs: Ellsworth C urt’s enjoy ed a visit from her mother, Mrs Miss Alice Presnall of Har Wilson, several days last week risburg arrived Saturday to be S. Greene and family at the guest of Miss Ruby Haskin. tended the anniversary cel<?bra for Men and Bovs Mrs. S. A. Campbell of Mal lion a t C harity grange hall S at vern, Iowa, arrived Friday for urday. a visit at the Chase H unter Miss Lillie Rickard spent th home. week end in Tangent and A) Mrs. W. H. Williams and I, u, 1. l . have u been ..s.o ¡daughter, who visit- bony, visiting relatives and SUITS, SHIRTS & OVERCOATS ! ing in Portland, returned to their home at Crawfordsville Chester Curtis and family visited at the John Burnet’ Saturday. i . W i'» o n and »on Ira left home, near H arrisburg, Sunday to«b y f <r th e ir h n iiie in W a l owa afternoon, com tv , « Ite i a v is it w ith t h n r Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Irorn an'’ id a u g h te r and sister, Mrs. C. W . daughter Beverly and Mrs. Dsvia. Bond attended the anniveisai j The city election is over and 111’■ct 1 ng a t C h a rity grange Satur most of the former officers re da y. main. W. C. Elmore, recorder, Mias E»th»r fit» me» accom did not run and Harold Steven panied her aunt, Miss Hattie son succeeds him. woe Dannen, and the C. C. Dicksor ~ «■ the LaMar store at Peoria, has gone to the state prison on a three-year sentence. The Times has become a standard 7-column newspaper end Taylor is getting some fine work out of the good old Camp b e ll c o u n try c y lin d e r press. O r co b Cky Was««» ICUa Carvnffct. rw j l< OONTZQ ■ B .Ä , z’ G /Wkl» OOD P G A O flR O D Ü S W 'i h«ve a po»tc«rd fro m M r. and Mr». W , J. Lan», d a t'd at H o t fip rin g « , A rk . T h e y are c n the move aod between the lio e s | :,un<»ar Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Mercei and their nieces, D eEtta an' Doris Robnett of Eugene, visit ed Mrs. D. I. Isom Saturday ^night and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. George Godwir and children and Miss E tta God win of Buena Vista spent the week end with their mother. Mrs. John Rolfe. M rs L E B<)nd of A lb a n y ta in (inrg», im ,fo u n d in g ¡he wat- ers of springs. A Good M a n Gone Wbeu E Fireball of the Albany bakery dit-d, rew ently, the E n lo r- prise lost one of its best friends. One incident will illustrate the general kindly nature of the man. He was in the printing jffjce when the opening of the pheasant season was mentioned "I don’t hunt," he said “I think they are too pretty to lie shot. I love flowers, too.” When he was gone a lady who had overheard him, said • "Those are the sentim ents of a good, kind man.” M t. K irch a u ’r w ill leaves a $ l3 ,, 300 e lta te to a »on aod ila ’ ig h ’ r 1 nd tw o sisters and a bro th e r. Gulls Eat Grasshoppers in Big Alfalfa Fields Otills have recently appeared In flock» of 4.000 or 5,000 birds In Pon ders county, Montana, and destroyed •uost of the (rasshoppers. A report received by the blnlojrlral survey of the United Stetes Departm ent of Agri- ru ltn re states th a t these birds, prv- snm tbly F ranklin (tilla , have fed so extensively on the Inserts that few- of them are to be fnnnd. Farmers In •hat section look forw ard to a hop perless season nex^ yesr. In 'U ta h fu lls have been protected by law for many yearn, becaus«/of the rerofnlxed service« they rendered the early Mor- oion settlers, and they are protected everywhere by federal law. An observer states that fre a t clouds of the tmlls^bare preyed on the qrass- lioppers d n 'tlie a lfa lfa Helds lmmedl stely » tty » the hay has been taken off. T h e 'w h o le flock nstially moves shout fro m ’ place to place, end after the guile Save worked for a day or two In s fl»d . depending on Its slae, few gitnagheptiere are In evidence Pullet« Confined Will Need Spring Conditions The pallets that are confined In the bouse must heve spring conditions In order to give a spring production This means they should he supplied scratch grain, dry mash, areen feed, oyr’ er shell, grit, snd m ilk or w ater A good mesh can he prepared by grinding together equal parts o f com. wheat and oata, and to HO pounds of this mixture add 20 pounds of high- grade tankage This should ha fed 4 r j In 1 hopper available st all time» Acratch grain '-an he fam ished either once or twice dally at the rate of 12 to 14 pounds per 100 birds. A m lxtnre of equal parte of corn, wheat, kaflr, b ar ley or mllo, fed singly nr combined, makes a good ecratch feed. N e w s N otes F ro m A l l O v e r O re g o n G leaned by th e W e ste rn N ew spaper Union The first carload of head lettuce ever shipped from U m atilla county was sent from F reew ater to New York. Reports issued by the Port of As toria show that 20,49k tons of freigh t were loaded at the term inals during the past month. The third annual exhibition of poul try and w aterfow l ot the Hubbard Poultry association w ill be held a t Hubbard this week. F riday and Saturday, December I t and 20, are dates set for the annual Hood River county poultry show to be hold at Hood River. The Jordan Valley Irrigation project w ill be completed by June 1. according to H a rry Morrison of the firm of M or rison A Knudsen, contractors. T he old Aune barn at Bend, erected when that city c-uld be reached only by stage. Is bolng torn down to be re placed with a business structure. Oscar L. Daniels. 57, of M ulino, was Killed in the H u lt Lum ber company’s yard at Mulino when he fell from the top of a lum ber pile eight feet to the ground. The Azalea Co-operative Broccoli association has baen formed at M y rtle Creek and Riddle to m arket broccoli from the southern part of Douglas county. A special city election may be c a ll ed at Eugene next spring to vote on n proposed 150,000 bond Issue to fl- nnnee erection of a new w ater reser voir for the city. T he Lake hotel at K lam ath Falla, In which W . P. Richards, confessed bank, robber, was a h alf m « r , has been closed by the sheriff under attach ment proceedings. T o ta l receipts of the Springfield poetofflce et the end of the th ird quarter of 1024 were 1572«. Indicating that the office w ill be entitled to second da»» rating next year C harity and re lie f work kt the pres ent tim e Is costing Klam ath county 11000 per month. Tw enty-tw o women are receiving pension* under provi sions nt the widow’s pension act. T he (ta te highway eoramlsslon Is considering the resurfacing of The Dallas-California highway between Klam ath Falla and Barkley Springs, a distance of l.t miles. T he work w ill coat 14»,280. C. J. Pugh has announced that he and a number of associates had de cided to erect a plant in Salem for the manufacture ef fru it grading ma chines and other articles used la tbe processing of frutte. The fifth annual conference of the Oregon High School Press association and Association of High 8chool Stu dent Body officers was held In Eugena, w ith more than 450 Oregon high school students in attendance. A contract for 10,000 wool fleecea In 1(26 at 42 cents a pound was sign ed at Bend by a group of aheepmen with a Portland wool buyer. Forty- tw o cents was said by the woolmen to be the best price ever paid for Ore^ gon wool. W ord received at K lbm ath Falla, from W ashington, D. C„ tellin g of tbw projected 1741,900 appropriation fo r the K lam ath Irrigation district was ao- claltned by residenta generally. Thia was approglm ately 5(0.000 la eiceaa of the amount sought. T be K elly S u I I I v m company has completed Its contract to clear the right of way ef the Southern Pacific company's new road over tbe Cas cades above Oakridge and the equip ment In the several camps along tbe line has beea brought In. Because someoae lost or mislaid the key, the polios departm ent of The Dalles bad to break into Its own Jail F riday morning while four hungry la- mates who had missed th eir b reak fast and the early freight tra in Im patiently awaited th e ir release. O rganization ot tbe first linen m ill west ef the Mississippi riv e r was per fected at Salem through the election of a beard of directors and adoptiea of by-laws for the Miles Ltaen rom ps ny, with headquarters In Salem. The capital sleek ef tbe corporation la »260.000. w ith 1150.000 paid ap by the 41 stockholders. (C o n tin u e d on page 4)