Image provided by: Joanne Skelton; Cottage Grove, OR
About Rural enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1924-1927 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 14, 1925)
N e w s N o tes F ro m A ll O v e r O re g o n G le a n e d b y th e W e s te r n N e w s p a p e r U n io n JAN. 14, 1‘A’d G o v ern o r A rre s te d owned, must pay taxes as employes or every other utility. GOVERNOR DAVIS on B rib e ry C h a rg e Although light snows continue to ] fall throughout the Haines valley and foothill district adjoining, there Is Kansas Governor and Son Ac not sufficient snow’ to assure crops In cused of Accepting Pay the irrigated sections, where snows are depended upon for water through For Pardon. out the growing season. The state fair board, at its annual Topeka. Kas. — Governor Jonathan meeting tn Salem Monday, consider M. Davis of Kansas personally appear ed the advisability of holding a mid ed in court here Monday to answer to winter poultry show at the state fair warrants sworn out by County At grounds. In event the show is author torney Tinkham Veale charging him ized it probably would be held in and his son, Russell, with accepting a January, starting in 1926. bribe. Murdered in his cabin home behind The bond for each defendant was a church In Bend, the charred body of set at »1000 and a hearing was set Aleck Rouchek, a citizen of Boland, for Friday, January 23. was found by firemen. After killing Ifoucbek, who was struck on the head Topeka. Kas.—Kansas political cir with an ax as he entered hla home, cles were stirred Saturday with the the slayer fired the house. allegation that Russell G. Davis, son It is believed that the board of en of Governor Jonathan M Davis, ac gineers will soon make a favorable re cepted »1200 and delivered a pardon Jonathan M. Davit, governor of port on the project to improve Tllla- to Fred W. Pollman, a convicted forger modk bay. The report has been ap Kansas, who retired Monday under • and former president of a Kansas proved by the board of engineers and cloud, hie eon having been accused of bank. Is now in the hands of the chief of selling paroles. The transaction took place ln a engineers for his judgment. hotel room here and was exposed by Homer C. Parrett of Newberg, son the Kansas City Journal, whose repre of Sam L. Parrett, president of the P o w e rs A g re e on sentatives. in conjunction with Poll- United States National bank of New man, had set a trap for the governor’s C laim s P a y m e n ts son. berg, was appointed county treasurer by the Yamhill county court. C. E. Young Davis. It Is alleged, accepted Dukenfleld, elected in November over Paris.—The work of the finance »1000 from Pollman, left the room and Mrs. Nellie Dodson, resigned. ministers who have been ln confer returned with the pardon and was paid The rivers and harbors bill as re ence here on financial problems con an additional $250. ported to the house carries provision nected with German reparations end The youth denied charges that his for surveys of both Coos bay and the ed Saturday when a general agree father knew of the transaction and Umpqua river with a view to their ment was reached between the United returned the money to Pollman when further improvement. The Coos bay States, Great Britain, Italy, Fra'-ce, faced by his accusers. project calls for a 25-foot channel and Belgium and Japan on broad lines on Governor Davis characterized as a the Umpqua for a 22-foot channel. all the questions on the agenda. The “frameup” and a plot “to get me’’ the The curve In the Eugene-Coburg British and American delegations both story wherein his son is alleged to highway where Charles Adler, Port announced an accord also, subject to have accepted a $1250 bribe. land traveling salesman, was drowned Washington’s approval, on the ques "It was framed up by my political a short time ago when he drove his tion of payment of war damage clalmp enemies,” the governor asserted. automobile into overflow waters of to the United States. Davis declared that his son deliver the Willamette river, is being straight Neither the British nor America^ ed the pardon to Pollman which al ened to eliminate danger of similar delegations would divulge the details ready had been granted and that accidents ,n the future. of the solutions reached, but a note “somehow they inveigled my son Into Approximately 40,000 sheep, mostly tssned by the semi-official news accepting the money.” ewes and feeder lambs, are being fat agency states that the Americans have The white of eggs is cmeiiy water tened and wintered on hay grown In c greed to wait for two years before country. In former ' sharing the plan of annujtje.a or until j combined with protein The yolk has the Deschutes ’5 years not more e than a few thousand Belgium has received the fulttfcmount aon3e protein an ,uuc at- " It Is nec .u ____ . I v — - . , i0Ugiv e - . . the protein In egg production It is nec- head were wintered in this section. A of her priority. This Is variously esti essnry to feed liberal rutlons of pro considerable number of the sheep were mated at between 100,000,000 and 200,- teln the same us Is needed ln feeding 000.000 gold marks brought from Lake county. cows for milk. The Hood River county court having authorized the expenditure of approxi mately $35,000 ln the purchase of a suitable tract of land for a permanent experimental tract, the Oregon legls lature will be asked to make appropri ation ' for maintenance of the Hood at River branch experimont station. About 210 men are employed on the government dam under construction • a McKay creek, seven miles south of Pendleton. Purchase of a hook-and-la'dder truck for the McMinnville fire department has been put in the hands of a com mittee tor action. A total of 481,127 tons were handled In the port terminals of Astoria dur ing the last year, according to data prepared by port authorities. Steps have been taken for the crea tion of a new school district with Westfir, the new sawmill town two miles east of Oakridge, as the center. The Northwestern Society of High way Engineers held its annual meeting In Portland Saturday, with more than 200 members of the organization in attendance. A special meeting of Oregon dairy men and representatives of allied in dustries called to consider proposed legislation was postponed to Monday, January 19. Nearly 1000 more homes were erect ed In Portland in 1924 than in 1923 and the value was 24,094,125 greater than the year before. Homes erected numbered 3997. The compilation of gross postal re oetpts of the Medford postoffice, »55,- 101.20 Cor the year, shows an increase of more than 9 per cent over gross receipts In 1923. The condition of W. J. Kerr, presi dent of Oregon Agricultural college, who has been seriously 111 for some time, is reported by attending physi cians to be Improved. Richard H. Thornton, 79, one of the state's ablest lawyers and founder and first dean of the University of Ore gon law school, died at Oood Samari tan hospital In Portland. Dr. W. J. Spillman, chief of the bu reau of farm management, federal de partment of agriculture, is on a trip through the Pacific northwest visiting the agricultural colleges. AU travel ever the Columbia high way between Hood River and The Dalles was blocked hy a 150-foot rock slide which occurred at the tunnel about a mile west of Mosier. C. S. Pletcher, who for five years has been county agricultural agent at Moscow, Idaho, has been appointed to Because of unsatisfactory conditions a similar position In Lane county and 3aid to exist ln the wheat-growing dis RINGO'S DRUG STORE wilt assume his duties February 1. trices of eastern Oregon, Governor J. M. Devers, attorney for the state Pierce may go before the legislature highway department, has been re and urge an appropriation with which quested to prepare a bill for presenta to purchase seed for those farmers tion to the legislature providing for a whose crops have been destroyed as a result of the late intense oold weather. tag on otgarettes sold In this state. tutlon was adopted by the Association A new railroad story comes from C oolidge A g a in s t Rolo JDraln died at the Eugene hos of County Commissioners of Idaho. pital at a result of burns suffered Curry county to the effect that the F lp va G ju un s t)on Industries engaged ln the produc- when a davenport upon which he was Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul rail m ev a t i i in o n n n o i f v iii) of logg and otber tlmber pr0 sleeping several weeks ago caught road proposes to build down the Ore ________ | ducts had an output In 1923 valued at Hr«. He was badly burned on his arms gon coast from Seaside to California Washington, D. C.—President Cool-' 11.494,259,321, according to a bienrfial and thence on to San Francisco, prob and bedy. ldge is opposed to the proposal to | census report by the commerce depart ably to attach to the Northwestern Pa Oeorge Hinkle and Clinton Bramber elevate the guns on 13 American ment. The figure Is an increase of • f Sutherlin are In the Roseburg hos clfic at Its northern terminus at Eu battleships, Secretary of the Navy Wil 65.6 per cent over 1921. reka. pital suffering from Injuries sustained Theodore Douglas Robinson, who One hundred and nineteen mills re bur Informed the house naval affalrt when a tree fell across their car while has been serving as assistant secre committee. they wefe driving on the Calapoola porting to the West Coast Lumber Wilbur said the proposed alteration, tary of the navy ’ under a recess ap men's association for the week ending »oad east of Sutherlin. January 3, manufactured 56,968,412 ■ costing »6,500,000, would restore tlfe polntment, Saturday was officially Consolidation of 22 Individual road feet of lumber; sold 60,150,664 feet; navy to the 6-5-3 ratio of the Washing nominated for the position by Presi (Jlstrlots In Wasco county Into five and shipped 77,449,192 feet. New busl- j ton arms treaty. He Informed the dent Coolidge His nomination was large districts for the purpose of mak ntss was 6 per cent above production , committee, however, that the presi- transmitted to the senate for confirma- ing more money available for genera, Shlpments were 29 per cent above new i dent, after due deliberation, had de- tlnn road1, purposes, was announced by bustness. ! elded the expenditure was hi "conflict County Judge Adklsson. L in n ’s P o u ltr y P rog ress William P. Downing, a prominent w*1*1 financial program, If. B. Cullison and R. F. Edgar of figure in the development of Bend for ! Great Britain is the only world pow (A lb a n y Dem ocrat ) Portland have received a contract the past 23 years, and the owner of ”r that hai‘ made »" offie,al Prot#'" The Pacific Coast Co-operative from the Klamath county court to a hotel there, was shot through the «««>«»« 1'»* elevation of <i»ns. It was Poultry Producers' association will cruise 75,000 acres of white pine tim head in the room of Mrs. Ethel Nor revealed by the state department In m eet in the A lb an y city library at ber land in Klamath county. They ton, an ex-employe. Death was the I response to congressional demands for 1 o'clock W ednesday [tod ay] te will receive 20 cents per acre. result of a bullet fired by Downing's 1 information on the subject. The pro Mies Kathleen Mills, defeated can own band, according to the story told j test waa made in 1923. when the sub- name a director to represent Lino county at the regular m onthly didate for the office of county treas ject was first brought forward. - , s„ , ... . j .v . — i m eeting of the state association in urer of Tillamook county at the fall by Mrs. Norton. Japan did not consider that gun sle- . », At a meeting of (he raw products Portland election, succeeded herself as the re vation was a violation of the treaty, The Linn branch has one di sult of refusal of County Treasurer- committee of the Roseburg chamber of the letter said. rector, but so greatly baa the commerce, steps were taken to deter elect Bryan to accept the office. President Coolidge’s position against poultry industry iu this sectioo Lake county Is clearing the tax rolls mine the amount of damage done to the broccoli crop by the recent extreme elevation of the big guns of the Ain r th a t a second ha* been of delinquent taxpayers by a foreclos we oher The cron was badlv i battleships was supported bf F » a llo t t e d .________ ________ cold weather. The crop was badly , • ure eult Involving more than 4000 de hurt according to all Indication., and Chairman Borah of the senate foreign fendants, representing property own the chamber of commerce Is taking up rsIad<”lf’ committee, who said In a F. A Lyon of Perrydale has d e ers of the qmnty whose taxes have with agricultural experts the matter of | Oregon Silver It was better to waive ad- veloped another been unpaid fer the last two years. take the place [ vantage technically given by the arms j aaedul Jersey in E ladean St.- The residence of W. A. Unibanhower starting crops that will 1 treaty than to give Justification for j Mawes 564013. T b il h eifer pro on Orand Island, about ten miles soutl. of broccoli. violation of the treaty by others. j dueed 659.17 l ounds of butterfai Neither the secretary of state nor Of Deyton, upset and caused damage ______________ — — lan d 10,608 pounds of m ilk iu 865 estimated at between $250 and $300. any other official has any right to d ays. ________________ BRIEF GENERAL NEWS The house was built on piles about six set aside or extend the time for en Woman May Be Named Federal Judge forcement of the laws in this state. I’xpt In the air to put It above high Washington, D. C - Appointment of The arbitration treaty between the wn?*** danger. The accident was This was announced by Bam A. Kozer, United States and Sweden, signed Mre Mabel Walker Wlllebrandt. now secretary of state, following receipt of thoug'^t to have boon caused by a set June 4, 1924, was raJlfled by the sen an assistant attorney-general, to the tlem ent the underpinning on one reports that in some parts of Oregon vacancy ln tbe federal court for North ate. motor vehicle owners apparently were tide tollc'wlug the recent heavy freeze The California legislature adopted •rn California la understood to be un of the opinion that they were exempt Herbert Chandler of Baker won first from placing 1926 license plates on I the resolution ratifying the child der consideration by President Cool prize on a ,'W»load of registered Here their cars until February 1. labor amendmen*. to the federal con idge. Mrs Wlllebrandt has been ln ford range bull» at the Ogden livestock charge of prohibition case» is the de .... _ ! atltutlon. The Brownsville woolen mill Is now , rhlc#<<) . „ orn. r, who gavvi partment of justice. •how st Ogden. .Utah. In addition to the carload prize' Chandler’s Hereford! employing several shifts of men and LwpoM Jr. , nd Richard Ix>eb for th< Q, won all other prizes in the Hereford the machines are running day and No Printer» In Oregon Prison. class. night. 14-year-old Robert Franks will fe- Salem. Or —Lend a Hand, the new»- Two hundred and fifty employes of George M. Gelsendorfer hae been , ce(Te ji3o,000 for their work. p sp e r published for twenty years at the city water bureau of Portland will 1 recommended by Representative Haw- ; A resolution opposing ratification the Oregon penitentiary, has had to have to pay »60.000 in back taxes to lev for appointment as postmaster at by the gUt< logl.|.» urH oj tbs child suspend publication because ao prlnl- labqr ame>dm»mt;t© the »sdsrel conAl- pgs are iqoercerateu there. the government because of a decision Cascadia. t£«t employes of a ftubljp “Uyty- cl,F KUILU, l.-'.l ERI’RISE HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE W h v » t h e c o r r e c t l e t t e r « a r e > li oed l a t b s w h i t e s p a c e s t h i a p w s a ls W i l l s p e ll w o r d « b o th v e r t i c a l l y n » J h o r t s o a t a l l y . T b e t ir s i l e t t e r la s a e b w a r d la l a d lc s t e d b y a N u m b e r , w h ic h r e f e r s t o t h e d e tta I t i « a l is t e d b e l e w t h e p a a s le . T h u s h o . 1 u n d e r t h e e o lu m u h e a d e d “ b o r ì - B o n ta l" d e fin e « a w o r d w h ic h w i l l t il l t h e w h i t e s p a r e s u p t e t h e f l r e t h i s e h s q u a r e t o t h e r i g h t , u n d a n u m b e r u n d e r “ e e r t le a l* * d e f la e s a w o r d w h ic h w i l l A ll t h e w h i t e s q u a r e s t e t h e a e x t b l a c k o n e b e l e w . K e le tt e r s < e la th e b la c k s p a c e *. I l l w o rd s u se d a re d ic t io n a r y w e rd a , exc e p t p ro p e r M a te » . A b b r e v i a t lo a s . a l a a * . l a l t l a l a . t e c h n i c a l t e r m s a n d o b s o le t a f e r m a a r e In d i c a t e d l a t h e d e f i n it i o n s . CROSS-WORD PUZZLE No. 5 “THE MERRY-GO-ROUND” A whirl on thia Merry-Go-Round won’t make you dizzy, and your d’rpo«ltlon will be perfectly safe. «It hough you wont be able Co do It with the w. k. rollIng-ofT-n-log ease (Copyright, 1124.) Vortical. Horizontal. 1— F a i r y q u e e n 4— T a i n t 1 0 — l .n n d m e a s u r e r 1 1 — —A fis h 12— U n c h a s te 14— P la c e 1 ft— C o n s e q u e n t ly Id — H y p o t h e t ic a l fo rc e 17— O r g a n i s a t i o n < a b l> r.) 1M— T o f e l l 21— Dy 2.3— A r e l a t i v e 21— M anic a s 10 v e r t i c a l 25— S m a ll p a r t i c l e 2d— A a n d d it lo a < a b b r ./ 27— T ra p 2tt— P r e p o s it i o n 20— G r e e k l e t t e r 8 1 — S k e l e t a l p ie c e 88— P a r a d is e 8 4 — B r i e f a p n e e o f t im e ftS— M e m b e r o f s o l a r a y s te n 8 9 — G i r l ’s n a m e 4 0 — M e lo d r a m a t i c 48— J a p a n e s e c o la 1 b e s o le tto -M o th e r S n a c t lo a 8— T w o 4— I n w e n s l h l ll t y ft— N a t i v e m e t a l 6— I n f o r m a t i o n 7— S o u r A— D i g i t 0— P e r t a i n i n g t o ( r u i n i n g 18— P e r f o r m 14— B e h o ld 17— T o c r o w n 1H— F o w l 10— ‘t a m e an 24 h o r i z o n t a l 20 — H u m id 22— N u m e r a l 20— S ta te t s b b r .) es SO— P r e p o s it i o n 81— B o n e 82— T w i r l 84— S u t f le le n t 85— R o u t i n e 8 7 — G i r l ’s a n i s e 41— L ik e 42— N a t o u t w ill ap p ear Edison Solution of Puzzle No. 4. Mazda Lamps In n e x t Issue« olman a jackson Grocery—Bakery H Everything in the line oi eats Opposite Postoffce C o ., First street, next H ub door Candy to Blain Clothing Co. Noon lunches. A T Home made candv and ice Cream. W1 Prices R educed ’’ PAGE 5 oigr, luu. Hu o C leaning Cor. W gecoond and Kerry c R R E D LD A; R KJ Master Dyers and Cleaners Made-To-Measure Clothes [M F E R IA L C A FE , 209 >V. First L Harold G. Murphy Prop. Phone 665 VV r nkvrr closk 1 4 A G N E T 0 ELECTRIC CO. Official Stromberg carburetor serv es station. Conservative prices. All vork guaranteed 119-121 VV. Second. ¿ ( À R I N E L L O PA RLO R S (A beauty aid for every need) St. Francis Hotel Thi» i* good advice; “ If you livi Prop., WtNNivaan Rosa. in Albany, trade iu Albany ; if you liv» in tome other town, trade in that town.' V I co and money are beat when But in theze automobile day* many re busy. Make your dollars work in siding elsewhere find it advisable to dt >ur savings department. A lbany S ta TX at least part of their buying in ib« 4 ank . Under government supervision. larger town. Those who go to Alhant to transact business will find the firm; F O U K E ’S M USIC H O U SE named below ready Io fill their require ments with courtesy and fairness. “ Everything musical" 223 W. First st A C C E S S O R IE S AND T IR E S I *■ Auto Supol Supplie, T IN S O N T H E SH O E DOCTOR J H. A llison S econ d street street, opposite Hamilton's Second 442,West First St «tore. ’Sudden Service." A Ibany Floral Co. C ut flow er he marg U er TT e sho ppe w and . nH plants. D Floral art for every Shampooing. Marcelling and Scalp and all occasions. freatuients Margaret Countryman, , Flower phone 458-j. ItO W es’ Second »L Phone 22. R UN 8 r f c K PHONOO RAPHS he S pecialty sho ppe at for hemstitching and stamped goods. W O O D W O R T H 'S Opposite Hamilton's, J18 W. Second st. ^/^lbany^/)irectory S T B T avenport Music coni pai, y otter. Piano-case organ, good as new Estey organ, good as new Used Pianos. D pastburn Bros.— Two big grocert aldo Anderson it Son. d istrib and dealers (or Maxwell, Chal W utors mers, Essex, Hudson A Hupmobile cars. Accessories, a pnliea. 1st A Broadslbiu. New stores, 212 W. First and 225 South u F J Main. Good merchandise at the rigid “ d prices. FURNITURE AND FARM MACHINERY . bought, sold sad exchanged at all tiuiet l’liki C aM eria and confectioner) B E N T. S U D T E L L J Home cooking. Pleasant surround ings. Courteous, efficient aerviee Phone 76-R, 123 N. Brosdaltin sL, Albany We make our own candies. i , W. s. D uncan . l’ilui* developed and printed FARM LOANS We mail them right beck to you. i Woodworth Drug Company, Albany, Or Write tor booklet describing our 20- egon. year Rural Credit Amortized Loans ¡’ORD SA L E S AND SE R V IC E The loan pays out in 20 payments, re tiring the principal. Cheap rates. No Tires and accessories delay. B kam L and C o .. Repairs 133 Lyon street, Albany, Ore. K ir k -P ollak M otor C o . I pot trai I ler Furniture C o., furni FARM LOANS ture, rngs, linoleum, stoves ranges. I Funeral directors. 427-43J west First at lowest rate of interest. street, Albany, Oregon. Real Eatate Insurance P L U . I . k OROCBRY. 286 Lyon Prompt service. Courteous treatment. 1- (Successor to Stenberg tiros.) Groceries Phone 263 R Fruits Produce W m B a in . RoomS, First Savings Bank builmug, Albany