Rural enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1924-1927, February 04, 1925, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    i —;
I C. 0 Hawkins, cashier of the West-
News Notes From
I ern State bank at Newport, pleaded
to three charges tn the circuit
All Over Oregon ( guilty
court at Toledo and was sentenced to
Gleaned by the W estern
Newspaper Union
Registration In Portland schools has
passed beyond the 47.000 mark.
An educational conference will be
held at the Oregon City high school
building Saturday.
Beggars will be compelled to work
on the streets of Eugene, according to
an edict of the police department.
Emery J. Newton w,*s elected sheriff
of Benton county to succeed the late
Sheriff S. N. Warfield by the board
of county commissioners.
Practically all the unmacadamized
roads In Klamath county were Impass­
able because of a thaw which follow­
ed snow and cold weather.
Probably the oldest married couple
in Oregon. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Still­
well of Bandon, last week celebrated
the 69th anniversary of their wedding.
State officials with a big snow plow
began work last week tn an attempt
to clear the McKenzie pass of snow.
The snow is estimated to be 18 feet
deep.
The Silverton Health officer has is­
sued an order that all school children
be vaccinated or remain home from
school during the present smallpox
epidemic.
Miss Agnes Johnson, who for many
years was a teacher in rural schools
of Douglas county, has been tempor­
arily appointed school supervisor for
the county. .
Packing has been started by the
Lane County Co-Operative Prune
Growers' association, a branch of the
state organization, at the Scarbrough
plant at Creswell.
Jetty construction on the north side
of the entrance to Cooe bay now ex­
tends almost one mile to sea, while
trestle work is more than one mile
from the receiving plant.
During the soason of 1924 there were
76 forest fires In the Umatilla na­
tional forest, burning 270 acres of
valuable tijnber. The total cost of
suppressing the fires was 63224.
Herbert E. Allen of Bend, assistant
general manager of the Brooks-Scan
lo» company, has been elected pres!
dent of the recently organized Central
Oregon Council of the Boy Scouts of
America.
ISie Independence branch of the
normal training school Rysteni has
been closed as a precaution against
the spread of diphtheria, several cases
of which have been reported in Inde­
pendence.
Deputy sheriffs made a raid upon
the Japanese colony at Mabel, a saw­
mill town 20 miles up the Mohawk
valley from Eugene, and arrested three
men on a charge of possessing intoxi­
cating liquor.
One hundred million feet of fine
timber, mostly white cedar, will be
opened by a proiected logging road
which the Stout Lumber company will
construct this spring on South slough
In Coos county.
The city of La Grande has sold
173,160 worth of municipal bonds to
the First National bank of Baker at
ti03.42 on the basis of (100 par value,
the highest price ever received for
improvement bonds.
After having spent several months
and hundreds of dollars trying to find
him, relatives of August Stadt of Em­
mett, Idaho, an incompetent, found
him last week working on the ranch
of J. M. Morgan in Jordan valley.
Figures showing a 40 per cent In
crease in suicides last year over 1923
in Multnomah county wer* announced
In the annual report of Dr. Earl Smith,
coroner. There were 77 In 1924. an
Increase of 22 over the previous year
as an Indication that deer are
plentiful In the Cascade mountains 15
w>re seen at one time in George N.
McLean s meadow on what Is known
at the Rigdon ranch above Oakridge.
»
William Lovelace, who escaped from
the state penitentiary at Salem Octo-
b,'r 7, 1922, has been apprehended in
Los 'Angelas and will be returned to
the prison to serve out his unexpired
term. \ ,
The pi 'ejected expenditure of 63000
In beautl tying the upper Columbia
river, She,’man and John Day high­
ways by plsTtlng trees was announc­
ed at The DaUea by the state highway
office.
I
Two candidates for the United
States district »attorneyship for Ore­
gon are still under consideration by
Senators Stanfield and McNary. They
are George Neuner of Roseburg and
Robert Kuykendall of Klamath Falls
With the turning of a 60-lnch valve
by Mayor Baker at the Bull Run head
work«. Portland's new 62.600,000 r j >
line, the third, was placed in comi ¡3
sion end the city now hea a valla He
65,000,000 additional gallons of water
a day.
____
w
FEB. 4, I « »
ARROW GARAGE, Gansle Bros.
U. S. <£ C. T. C. Tires I New, low-priced Gill
More service
Batteries for
No more cost
Ford,
and
other
Skilled Auto repairing Star,
Chevrolet small cars
A uto accessories
Announcement was made at Port­
land that the Oregon Trunk railroad
would build its own line from Bend
to Klamath Falls if it does not receive
common-user privilege over the Odell
Junction Klamath Falls link of the
Eugene-Klamath Falls line.
Moderation of eastern Oregon
weather has practically terminated
danger to game birds, according to
Otto M. Jones, educational director
of the state game commission. Snow
Is still on the gTound. hut food Is
pleantitul for pheasants, quail and
MORE SERVICE FOR LESS MONEY
Halsey Happenings
'Three Killed When Train Hite Auto.
Prosser, Wash. — Three prominent
young persona of this community were
killed instantly and another critically
Injured when Northern Pacific east
bound train No 42 hit their automobile
on a crossing a quarter mile from the
• iot at 1 o'clock Sunday morning
- l
dead are:
Marie Miles. 18;
i t irothy Wilson. 17. and George Jo
¡•tisuu. 18. Critically Injured, George
¡Wilson, 1».
1
.
/ • i
•
A —
ibe Enterprise bud been- mailed
(Continued on page 6)
L. E. Arnold has
electrified
his
poultry farm ; 5000 eggs are in
Portland's long fight for a perman­
ent veterans' hospital has been won
and appropriations of 61.350.000 for an
institution of 300 beds have been ap­
proved by Director Htnes. according
to a telegram received by Mayor Baker
from Elton Watkins, representative in
congress.
William Green, who succeeded the
late Samuel GOmpera aa president of
the American Federation of Labor.
Brownsville news, postmarked at
12 o’clock Jan. 27 at Shedd, was re­
ceived at the postoffice here last
Thursday morning, the 25th, after
\Vahl. George L Workmger, Hen­
ry Zimmerman, Mabel Whttbeck,
John C. Bramwell, William J. Ca­
rey, Charles L-
Falk, Albert
Foote, Inez Freeland, Ernest E.
Gourley, Mary E. Hayes, Frank
Kirk. George M. Maxwell. John
W, Miller. J. W. Moore, Viva M.
Marks, Alroariue Quimby, James
W. Rector, William H. Robertson,
Chaocy Sickels, Ruby H Stan­
dish, Thom»» Ardry, L. Horace
Armstrong, Karl A. Bramwell,
Agnes Brown, Eldon F. Cross,
John A. Cleminene, A rthur W.
Dykstra and Fred VV. Falk.
(Continued from page 1)
ducks.
W IL L IA M G REEN
__________________
PAGE 5
CROSS-WORD PUZZLE No. 8
serve three years tn the penitentiary.
, He was charged with misappropriation
of funds.
Company C of the national guard
at Eugene was first in Oregon in 1924
in qualifying men for the national
rifle shoot, according to Adjutant-
General George White, and has receiv­
ed a silver trophy from the United
States government in recognition of
its record.
The taking of salmon, shad or stur­
geon in seines or drag seines In coast
streams of Oregon emptying into the
ocean south of the Columbia river
within the district now known as No.
2 would be prohibited by the bill of
Representative Winslow Introduced
in the house.
».
Dr. R. E. Lee Steiner, superintend­
ent of the Oregon state hospital, has
returned from the Philippine islands,
where he delivered a number of insane
patients formerly in the Oregon insti­
tution. Mrs. Steiner accompanied her
husband on the trip which required
more than two months.
Representatives from cherry grow­
ers’ associations of all partB of the
Pacific coast met In Portland Monday
to consider plans for appeal to the
tariff commission of the recent cut
in the import duty on cherries import
ed in brine from 40 per cent ad va­
lorem to 2 cents a pound.
Erection of a penitentiary for east
ern Oregon, increase of the facilities
of the state prison at Salem, and
changes In the system of sentences o’.
prisoners will be recommended to the
governor and the state legislature by
a committee named by the Portland
city and Multnomah county commis­
sioners. “
One hundred and seventeen mills
reporting to the: West Coast Lumber­
men's association for the week end­
ing January 24 manufactured 102,517,-
163 feet of lumber; sold 91,196,654 feet
and shipped 104,062,792 feet. New busi­
ness was 11 per cent below production.
Shipments were|14 per cent above new
business.
<
There were two fatalities In Ore­
gon due to industrial accidents dur
ins the week «ovding January 29, ac­
cording to a report prepared by the
state industrial accident commission.
The victims were Oliver Train, Myrtle
Point, rigger, and Humphrey Ander­
son, laborer, Ashland. A total of 533
accidents was reported.
RURAL KMfcRPKlSE
electric incubator«.
The appraisers of Mrs. Pamer’s es­
tate are C. H. Koontz, E. E. Gorm­
ley and Edith Robnett. J. C. Bram­
well is administrator.
(© by W estern N ew spaper Union.)
Horizontal.
1—> A n t h r o p o id
4— B ir d 4»f t a b l e
7 — T o o t a n ip
O— P u » » k |ie M u y
11— o ffe r
1> — A c tin g
14— l a . c c t
1ft— O n e
1 7 —- H u m a n b e i n g
1 5 — - H a s t e n e d o ff
ID— P r e p a r e s by c o o k i n g In a
heat
3 8 — M o n th t a b lir .)
3-4— P r e c i p i t o u s
2fl— A w a k e
2S — K n o c k
2 0 — V o n r u n c le
80— T a n g le
82— T o b e c o m e a c c u a to m e d
86— B e e r
Aft— O lM trlb u ted
8S — < o n a iim e
4 0 — F e m a l e r a b b it
4 1 — B lo o d r e l a t i v e ( n h b r .)
42— T o r o v e r w ith gran a
4 3 — ll n l a e d a t r i p o f g r o u n d
47— S a m e a a N o. 14 k o r la o u ta l
4N— A f o ld
8 0 — D e a t h n o t ic e «
5 3 — G erm c e ll
68— In se c t
Vertical.
3— I n m b le d t y p e
3— r i n l a h
4— ( 'n r r ln g e
6— B one
ft— \ o l « e
7— P r i n t i n g m e a s u r e (p t .)
5— P r e p o s i t i o n
• — A r tic le
10— T o m a k e In to a la w
11— S a lo o n f ix t u r e
d ry
13 'C o lo r e d flu id
18— A a e x p l o s i v e
IP— W h la h e r a
20— F r u it
21— A s ta n d a r d
22— D e c l i n a t i o n
27— A u s t r a l i a n b ir d
SO— S a i l b o a t
3 1 — M e w in g I m p l e m e n t
33— H e t u r u e d m o n e y
34— W o r k » f o r
36— P u b l i s h e r ’s s o u r c e o f
( a b b r .)
87— C o n j u n e t lo a
3®— ' hllrf
48— T o r n c lo th
44— P r o n o u n
46— L e a v e
4ft— F ' lo w in g o a t
40— F o r e x a m p l e
6 1 — T h a t Is
T h e s o l u t i o n w i l l a p p e a r In n e x t I s s u e .
Solution of Puzzle No. 7.
Greeks and Turks
May Fight Again
N ation A roused O ve r E xpu lsion
of P a tria rc h a te From C on­
stan tin o p le.
W ednesday evening.
Hhe county has recieved from sec­
retary of state Kozer $5,644 of about
$6,500 estimated to be its share of re­
ceipts from the Santiam National
fort t. One-third goes to schools and
the balance to roads.
roxrei
“ 1 he Right Can
Afford to Wait
Washington, D. C.—The child labor
amendment to the federal constitution
npparently lias been defeated, for the
present at least.
The legislatures of 13 states have
taken unfavorable action on the
amendment which would give the fed­
eral government power to forbid em­
ployment of anyone under 18 years old
In factory, store or on the farm.
To lie enacted the amendment had
to be ratified by three-fourths of the
48 states. Thus 13 negative votes
meant defeat.
Advocates of the
amendment will not consider them­
selves defeated as, according to all
precedent, constitutional amendments
are pending until ratified, the prohi­
bition amendment beiDg the only one
ever passed with a time limit for rati­
fication.
The Stenberg contract for straw­
berries at not leas than 5 cents, and
more if the market warrants, is for
5 years. For this year the contract
minimum now is 6 cents a pound.
Plant some, and plant them early,
so you may get a full yield.
A B E 'S P L A C E
F. M. GRAY.
D R A 4. Y M A N
All work done promptly and reason-
ably.
Phone 2fc9
W ebster ’ s N ew
I nternational D ictionary
Washington. D. C.- President Cool­
idge signed the Smith-Hoch resolution
directing the interstate commerce
commission to conduct an investiga­
tion Into the general freight rate
structure to develop whether agricul­
tural products new bear an unfair por­
tion of the general rate charges
Ovt tho
Bv.-.r
H e re a re
a feu) sample»
broadcast
abreaction
agrimotor
hot pursuit
mystery ship
Blue Cross
rotogravure
junior college
askari
Esthonia
Fascista
Riksdag
altigraph
cyper
Flag Day
sippio
Red Star
mud gun
sterol
paravane
Swaraj
megabar
Rvthene
rolimop
taiga
plasmon
sugamo
sokol
shonccn
pso rosis
precool
soviet
duvetyn
realtor
S. P. boat
Czecho-Slovak
camp-fire girl
aerial cascade
A ir Council
Devil Dog
activation
Federal Land Bank
.Suthortry"
Rex Tussing brought in the first
correct answer to the cross-word
puzzle in last week’s Enterprise and
got the 50 cent prize. The anser is
published this week.
Although
last week's Enterprise told of five
people sent to the Oregon state asy­
lum after having gone insane over
cross-word puzzles, Rex still ap­
pears to be quite sane.
Halsey name« in the list front
which jurym en ara to be drawn
ibis year are Nell C. Frum, Irwin
L. Gardner, G. W. Gibson, Elmer
E.
Gormley,
Mabel Hadley,
George G. Hockensmith, Freder­
ick Jackson, A. L. Knigbten, John
LaRue, Seth A. Mills, Oliver P.
Nicholson, John M. Porter. John
Palmer, Ralph Tobey, William P.
/ • th is Storsho uso
o f In fo rm a tio n
S ir v in iY o u t
2 7 0 0 pa««
<»«)<)O illustration«'"
M DictiuHSrr » ?
ir,
W rite for » «aw l.i p r o of tlM Ata»
Words, speolman of Kegulsr cSd Indis râpent Faca.
C A C . I lE R R IA M C O .S p rin g fisU f.M *ss .U .S A .
L J u b Cleaning Works, Inc.
^/^lbany j2)irectory
AA Master Dyers
Qjr, geooond and Ferry
and Cleaners
Made-To-Measure Clothes
i IM P E R IA L CAFE, *209 ’V. First
Harold G. Murphy Prop.
This it good advice: ’’ It you life
Phone 665
in Albany, trade iu Albany ; if you life
W r nrvrr ci .osa
in some other town, trade iu that town.'-
But in these automobile days many re­ TLf AGNETO ELECTRIC CO.
siding elsewhere find it advisable to do i-’A official Strömberg carburetor serv­
at least part of their buying in the ice station. Conservative prices. Ail
larger town. Those who go to Albany Work guaranteed
119-121 W. Second.
lo transact business will find the firms
named below ready to fill their require­ IlflA K lN ELLO PARLORS
ments with courtesy an 1 fairness.
^’A
(A beauty aid for every need)
St. Francis Hotel
ACCESSORIES AND T IR ES
Prop.. W innifrrd Rosi.
2»
Auto Supplies
lVlen
aud
money ara best when
J. H. A llison
^■’A busy. »lake your dollars work in
44 ¿¡West First St
jur savings department. A lsanv S tate
A lbany Floral Co. Cut flowers H ank . Under government supervision.
TA and plants, l’ioral art for every
^ J O O K E ’S MUSIC HOUSE
and all occasions.
Flower phone 458-f.
*'Everything musical"
R R U N 8 W IC K
223 W. First i t
PH O NO O RAPH S
ÖTIMSON T H E SHOE DOCTOR
at
W O O D W O R T H 'S
Second street, opposite Hamilton's
store.
“ Sudden Service."
T V ivenport Music com pany offers
"A Piano-case organ, gwod as new
T ’HE M A liliI R R IlE SH O PPE
Estey organ, good as new
Shampooing, Marcelling and Scalp
Used Pianos.
treatments.
|lr in e McDaniel.
C b sib u rn Bros. — Two big grocery 110 Wes’ Second st. Phone 22.
stores, 212 W. First afld 225 South
Main. Good merchandise at tho right T H E SPECIALTY 8H O P P E
A lor hemstitching and slumped goods,
prices.
ipposite Hamilton's, J1H W. secondai.
A
A>
A
LNite Cafeteria and confectionery
A-J Howe cooking Pleasant surround­ 1 V a ld o Anderson <fc Hon. distrib-
ings.
Courteous, efficient serviee.
Wc make our own candies.
W S. D uncan .
’ ’ utors and dealers for Maxwell, Chal-
ners, Essex, Hudson A Hupmobile cars.
\tcessonrs, a pollea. 1st & Broadalbin.
*«*
furniture and
LYlm s developed and printed.
* We marl them right back to you.
X
FARM MACHINERY
Woodworth Drug Company, Albany, Or­
egon.
bought, sold aid exchanged at/all tunes
tp o R D SALES AND SERVICE
A
Coolidge Orders F reight Rate Inquiry.
Lftuadrv «ent Tuesdays
\gcncy Hub Cleaning Work»
fhohSonds o f' th e m spelled,
p ro n o v n e e d , e n d dofYnecf t r v
Th»
Athens.—With ueithef money nor
manpower, but with the populace
G ENER AL W E IG E L
worked up to a fever heat over what
is considered an indignity on the
nation's church. Greece talked loud­
ly of going to war again with her old
enemy. Turkey.
The government went so far as to
sever diplomatic relations with An
gora. recalling the charge d'affaires,
and then decided to compromise on a
nation-wide protest and an appeal to
the League of Nations.
Turkey expelled the ancient Oecu
menical patriarchate of the Greek
Catholic church, which had been lo­
cated In Constantinople since 1600.
After Turkey had soundly whipped
Greece In the war started by King
Constantine, a trealy drawn up at
Lausanne stipulated that the patri­
archates of the orthodox church, es
lablished for centuries in Constant!
nople, should not be disturbed.
The Greek government contends
that Turkey has broken the treaty and
that other bishops of the church are
destined for expulsion.
The Oecumenical patriarch, as the
name implies, was head of the Greek
MaJ. Gen W illia m W eigel, who h at
Catholic church throughout the world,
and his being driven out by the Turk? assumed command of the United
is considered an affront by every pious States forces in the Philippines.
Greek.
Modern
Barber Shop
“TleuìZl/ùìds ‘TLeusZf/btcti
Tires and accessaries
Repairs
K irk -P ullak M otor C o .
EV rtm iller Furniture Co,, furni-
* ture, rugs, linoleum, stoves ranges.
Funeral directors. 427-433 west First
street, Albany, Oregon.
B E N T. S U D T E L L
Phone 76-K. 123 N. Broadalbin st., Albany
FARM LOANS
Write tor booklet describing ottr 20-
year Rural Credit Amortized Loan«
LLER GROCERY, 2H5 Lyon The loan pays out in 20 payments, re­
tiring the principal. Cheap rate* No
* (Successor to Stenberg Bros,)
delay.
B eam I. and C o .,
Groceries
Fruita
Produoe
133 Lyon street. Albany, Ore.
I’hone 2b3K
pc
11OLM AN & JACKSON
Il
FARM LOANS
Grocery—Bakery
Everything in the line of eats
at lowest rate of interest.
Berlin -Chancellor Luther told the
Opposite Postoffice
Real Estate
Insurance
foreign press Germany is willing to
co-operate In formulating a world wide L l'ib Candy Co., F'rst street, next Prompt service. Courteous treatment.
door to Blain Clothing Co.
safety pact, or one ou narrower lines.
W m B aiis , RoomS, First Savings B rur
Noon lunches.
)
buitning, Albany
If this Is impossible.
Home made candy and ice Creaiti."
Germ any Favors Safety Pact
*1