Rural enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1924-1927, April 15, 1925, Page 6, Image 6

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    R U R A L B N I E K r M lo lS
HACK 6
f
look a,ad con«- qu-nfly considered her
a plain womim
'there was urn.tiler silence between
luxury of tue P rairie avenue house
the two. T h e n : "Mother, what would
ALBANY
bis farm bedroom seemed almost star­
you think of my going east next fail,
tlingly stark and bare.
to take a course in architecture?”
Sunday— M>nd»y •Tuesday
Selina frankly enjoyed D irk ’s some­
“ Would you like that, D irk ? ”
April 1 8 -2 0 21
what fragmentary accounts of these
"Yes. I think so— yes."
visits; extracted from them as much
R ichard Barthelm ess
“Then I ’d like it better then any­
Raybeatos Hi-speed Brake
vicarious pleasure as be bad bad In
thing in the world. I — it makes me
ID
Service Station
(he reality— more, probably.
happy Just to think of It."
“Now. tell me w hat you bad to eat,”
“It would— cost an awCui kit."
J 12 East First st. A I bin y,'
ihe would say, sociably, like a child.
T ’ll manage, I'll manage. . .
the skating r
'W hat did you have for dinner, for
•
-------------------------------------------
W hat made you decide oh architec­
Phon • «
example? Was It grand? Julie tells
9 the greatest achievement of
ture?"
ne they have a butler now. W ell I I
5
hia career
”1 don’t know, exactly. The new
•an’t watt till I bear Aug Hempel on
buildings at the university—Gothic,
the subject."
you know— are such a contrast to tbe
H e would tell her of the grandeurs
Halsey Railroad TJme
old. Then Paula and I were talking
>f the Arnold menage. She would In­
the other day. She hates th e ir house
North
South
terrupt and exclaim ;
"Mayonnaise!
• the famous White Mahatma
on P rairie— terrible old lumpy graj
No. 32, 3:20 a. ra.
No. 17. 12:09 p. m.
On fru it I Oh, I don’t believe I ’d like
stone
pile,
w
ith
the
black
of
the
I.
C.
lb. 10:43 a .m .
33, 7 ,1 1 p .m .
bat. You did I Well, I ’ll have It for
d a y s, s ta r tin g
i trains all over It.. She wants her fa
34, 4:25 p .m .
31, 11:34 p.
next week when you come home, | tlier to build north— an Italia n villa or
• F rid a y
A p r il 24 $ zou
No. 14, due H alie y at 5:02 p. m., stop*
’ll get the recipe from Julie."
' French chateau.
Something of that to let off passengers from south of
He didn’t think he'd be home next
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Eugene
reek One of the fellows he’d met at < sort. So many of her friends are mov
Nos. 31 and 32 stop only if flagged.
Ing to the North shore, away from
he Amolds"*had Invited him to th eir
Nos. 31. 32, 33 and 34rnn between Port­
Halsey Happenings
dace out north, on the lake. H e bud these hideous South-side and North- land and Engene only.
i side Chicago houses w ith their stoops,
i boat.
(Continued from page 1)
i and their bay windows, and their ter­ Passengers for south of Roseburg should
'T h a t'll be lovely I" Selina exclaimed,
take No. 17 to Eugene and there transfer
rible turrets. U g h !“
No. 15.
W. M. Burbank proposes to lite r an almost unnotlceable moment
"W
ell,
now,
do
you
know."
Selina
stage meets trains
wrack tbe old Henry barn and put >f silence—silence with panic In It. remonstrated m ildly, “I like ’em. I 18, Halsey-Prownsville
17, 14, 34 and 33 in order named.
I'll try not to fuss and be worried
up a concrete garage; also build « ike
suppose
I
’m
wrong,
but
to
me
they
an old ben every minute of tbe
new and larger eating house, *
Ime I think you’re on the water. . . . seem sort of natural and solid and
unpretentious, like the clothes that old Outgoing Mail
One week from today ie clean-up Vow, do g o on. Soblg. F irst fru it Auguat
Hempel wears, so squarecut
day, appointed by the city council vlth mayonnalae, b'm? W hat kind of and baggy. Those houses look digni­
At the Halsey poetoffice mails
oup 7”
at Monday eYeuing'a meeting.
He was not a nattirally talkative per- fied to me, and fitting. They may be close going north at 11:50 a. in
Nothing else but roulioe businett on. There was nothing surly about ugly—probably are— but,
anyway,
and 5:20 p. m.
was done.
its silence. I t wag a taciturn streak they’re not ridiculous. They have a
Going south, 11:10 a. ni. and
certain rugged grandeur. T hey’re Chi
Some children playing around nherlted from his Dutch ancestry. cage. Those French and Ita lia n glm 5:20 p. m.
ls time, though, he was more volu­
To Brownsville, 6:20 a. ro. and
an auto Sunday started it and it Ih
me th.-in usual. "Paula . . .” came cracky things they— they’re incongru­ 12 m.
Morning stage to Browns
rao o»er and killed 2-year-oid ignln and again Info his conversation. ous. I t ’s as if Abraham Lincoln were
Robert Scbimmelpftmnig at his Paula . . . Paula . . ." and to appear suddenly In pink satin knee villa goes on to Crawfordsville,
home two miles south of Albany .ignln ", . . Paula.” H e did not Inmwio.» and buckled shoes, and laee Holley and Sweet Home.
on the highway.
■eeru conscious of the repetition, hut ruffiea at (he wrists.”
quick ear caught IL
(T o be continued)
If you have heard the music Selina's
" I haven't seen her," Selina (aid,
Paid-for Paragraphs
, _____ •
sent out by Weiner's old-9ime since she went sway to school the
The bull in tliu China shop has noth
orchestra of Forest Grove you may first year. She must be— let’s see
(5c a line)
Ing on the scrub bull In the good herd
he glad to know that the Walkers
she’s a year older than you are. She's
when
It
comes
to
destroying
profits
will play at Tumble Inn a week nineteen going on twenty. Last time
• • •
\«w fence and anchor posts. C.
from tonight.
Ben Sudtell keep» 1 saw her I thought she was a dark
E.
Quiuioy, cart A. W. Dykstra
H
a
saves
53
cents
a
ton
who
hauls
putting» on attractive programs scrawny little thing. Too bad ahe
his manure direct to Ihe fields, the
there.
didn’t Inherit Julie's lovely gold color--
Ohio agricultural experiment station
Carnival— May 1, I. (). O. F.
Ing and good looks. Inslend of Ku-
lias found.
Sheriff Richards is after delin­ sene, who doesn’t need 'em."
hail. big time lor everybody.
s
e
e
quent taxpayers of two or three
“She Isn't I" said D irk , hotly. “ She’s
All you nave ever seeu at a car-
Better gardens and home butchering
years ago, under an act parsed dark and slim and sort of— uh— seusu
nival, and more, loo.
and
canning
may
save
more
money
at the last legislative session. Ih oua"— Selina started visibly, and raised
the farm er than raising food, to del]
cases where oertificates of delin­ her hand quickly to her mouth to bide for
cheap.
Old papers lor sale at 6c a bundle
quency have not been issued all a smile— “like Cleopatra. H e r eyes
e e •
at the thuterprise office.
penalties will be waived if payment are big and kind of slanting—not
The best way to meet the dairy
aqulnty I don’t mean, but slanting up
is made this month.
c o * ’s uilnerai needs la to-app ly lime
a little at the corners. Gut out, kind
H. C. Davis, Mrs. Hugh Leeper, of, ao that they look bigger thun moat and phosphorus. In the form of ground Baseball at Harrisburg
Hmestone and Acid phosphate, to the
Mr. and Mrs. C S. Davis of Shedd people’s.”
At Harrisburg Friday tbe Hal­
soli, and thereby grow more high m in­
“My eyes used to be considered rath-
and Mrs. Eltha Turner attended
sey
girls were defeated, 11 to »9.
eral
roughages,
auch
as
clover
and
the dedication of a new Christian ar fine." said Selina, mischievously; a lfa lfa .
The Halsey beys beat Harris­
mt he did not hear.
•••••••••«•••!•■•••(••••«
TORRANCE
G LO BE
Reconditioning Shop
| C lassmates
-,
| “ M URDOCK”
•
8
cbureh at Turner easter Sunday.
The church was built and donated
to tbe sect by Mrs. C. A. Davis of
Turner and cost about 140.000.
W. H. Campbell at d wife aT’d
brother Jam es visited a t J. P.
Templeton’s last week- W. H.,
who is a form er Uaiseyite, was
on the way to California and
Arizona, looking for a climate
suitable to asthm a patients.
At C. F. Morse’s Wednesday
a t dinner were Mrs. Morse’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
Davidson, their daughter. Mrs.
Clara McCoy and Miss Lilia
McCoy, all of Brownsville and
Oral Davidson of Harrisburg.
M. Arnold of Lebanon sued
the veterans’ bureau for iiene-
fits of his war risk insurance
on the ground th at he was per­
manently and totally disabled
while serving with the field a r­
tillery in France. On the first
ballot it is reported th a t the
ju ry was evenly divided. A fter
20 hours it reported a disagree­
ment, though Arnold’s friends
were said to have won all but 2
of the jurym en In that time.
So Big
(Continued from page 5)
Capper, enft-epoken, Ironic, In hla shiny
boot» und hla hat alwaya a little on one
aide
Pervus DeJeng. a blue-shlrted
giant with strong tender bands and
U tile fine golden hairs on the backs of
tbutn.
lu strange contrast to these
was the patient. Ureleaa figure of
M iia rtje Pool standing In the doorway
of Roelf’« little shed, her arms tucked
In her apron for warmth. "You make
Din. huh?" the laid, w lsifully. “you
nnd
Roelf.
You make fun.“
And
Roelf, the dark vivid boy, misunder­
stood.
Roelf, ihe genius.
He was
always oue of the company.
Oh, Selina Dejong never was lonely
an these winter evenings before her
Are.
She end D irk sat there one fine
sharp evening In early April. It was
Saturday. O f late D lik had not al­
ways come to the farm for the week­
end
Eugene sad Paula Arnold had
been home for the Faster holidays.
Julie Arnold had Invited D irk to the
fe y parties i t the Prairie avenue
house. He had even spent two entire
FO R SA L E
Da» end vetch Baled Ilay
Also dry fir and ash
16-inch Wood
Ire A Miner,
OLD-TIME DANCE
at
'F u m b le I n n
W c iln e N tla y E v e n in g , A p r i l 2 2
M usic by w a|ker Brothers, old-time players,
9
€
e
&
e
«
e
th e b e s t in th o w e s t
T h o u s a n d s o f p e o p le h a v e h e a rd th e m o v e r th e
O re g o n ia n r a d io in th e p a s t tw o y e a r s
E v e ry b o d y is g o in g
C o in e a n d h a v e a g o o d t im o a t T u m b le I n n ’
W e d n e s d a y e v e n in g
r c p u i»
"She makee all the other girls look A Good Day at Shedd
sort of blowxy." He was silent « mo­
C harity grange drill team, ac­
ment. Selina was silent, 'too, and It
grange
Samuel M. Nagle, who kept a
w a . not a happy silence. D irk fpoke companied by several
again, suddenly, as though contlgulng patrons,
went to Oak Plain general merchandise store in Hal­
aloud a train of thought, "— all but her grange at Shedd Saturday af- sey, going from here to Sheridan
hands."
I ternoon and initiated 4 candi- in 1900, died at the lattar place a
Selina made her voice sound la fu m l,
! dates into the m ysteries of the week ago Saturday aged 72. Mr
not sharply Inqulsltl-e. "W h e t’s tho
3rd and 4th degrees. They Nagle »pen 30 year» of his life a»
m slter with her hands. D irk?“
He pondwe-l a nuMueni. hla brows were given a very cordial wel­ a school teacher before coining to
He is beet re me inhered
knitted At lost, slowly, "W ell, 1 don’t come by tho Oak Plain grange, Oregon.
ae the leader of a atuoufemale
know.
They’re brown, and aw fully
which was highly appreciated quartet.
thin and sort o f- grubby. I mean It
by Charity.
makes roe nervous to weteh them.
And when the rent of her le cool
The lecturer's hour, headed w aeningron U n iversity Craw W ins.
they’re hot when you touch them."
Oakland. C al.— T he U n ive rs ity of
by the w orthy lecturer, Mrs-
H e looked at hla mother’s hands
W ashington row ing crew defeated the
Shedd,
was
enjoyed,
especially
that were hnay with some sewing The
well-prepared article on U n ive rs ity of C alifo rn ia varsity here
stuff on which she was working was a her
In the annual three-m ile race. The
“Child
Training.”
l i t of satin ribbon, part of a hood
northerners led tha entire distance
Intended to grace the head of Geertje
Mr. Saltsm an of Callipooia and
crossed the line almost 10 lengths
Pool Vander Sljde’s second baby, she grange
a t Brownsville was ahead of the Bears. By tho victory,
bud difficulty In keeping her rough present
in the interest
ot the Huskies w ill represent the coast
fingers from catching on the soft sur­
"¡grangers’ day ” during the pio In the Poughkeepsie regatta.
face of the satin
Manual work, wa
ter. sun, and wind had tanned th»»e near picnic at Urownsville iojuue.
bands, hardened them, enlarged the
Ice cream, cake and coffee
Kid McCoy It Now In Prison.
knuckles, spread them,
roughened were heartily partaken of af­
San Quentin. C a l— “ Kid McCoy."
them. Yet how sure they were, and
ter
the
meeting
and
ail
left
once dapper beau brummel of th«
strong, and cool and reliable— end ten
day had been very prlxe ring, known to few by his real
der. Suddenly, looking at them. D irk feeling the
sold. "Now your hands. I love your well spent and also feeling very
name, Norm an Selby, la now con
much ashamed of th e amount riot No. 40,714. The e x flg h te r must
hands, Mother."
She put down her work hastily, yet the
other fellow ate. Those serve an Indeterm inate term for man
quietly, so that the sudden rush of present from C harity were, Mr.
slaughter, aa a result of the death In
bnppy grateful tears In her eyes nnd Mrs. Curtis Veatch, Mr. and
Lee Angelas of Mrs Theresa Mora.
should not sully the pink satin ribbon
Mrs.
Francis
Kizer.
Mr.
and
she was flashed. Uke a girl. "Do you.
Mrs. Chancy Sickels, Mr. and
SohlgT” aha said.
N O T1C B TO T A X P A Y E R S
A fte r a moment ahe took up her Mrs. C. P Kizer, Mr. and Mrs.
Notice is hereby given (b » t in accord­
Sperling, Mrs. Nancy- ance w ith chapter 214 of the general
sewing «gain. H e r face looked young, August
eager, fresh, like Ihe fere of the girl Pence, Mrs. Doliie Pence and laws of Oregon for 1925 and an order of
who had found cabhagea so beautiful son Lyman, Mr. and Mrs. Ross the countv court of Linn county, Ore­
gon. laaueil m accordance therewith *11
that night when ahe bounced along
Dougherty. Mr. and Mrs. Harold interest penalties and costa which have
Ihe n itty Halated road w ith Klaas
Virginia, ! been or may he incurred on all taxes
Pool, many years ago
It ra m * Into Kizer and daughter
, levied in Linn county Oregon on the
her face, that look, when she was Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kizer, Mr and tax rolls for Ihe years |92t. io j j and
hnppy. exhilarated
excited
T hat Mrs. Beryl Kizer, Mrs. Charles 192J, w ill be remitted if »och delinquent
was why those who loved her and ■ Hamer and son Jam es Allen and taxes are paid on or before M«v 1 i - g
This does not apply te t a r t,g „
brought that look Into her race j Lucile Sperling.
which a certificate ef d e h .q lfBev ‘h
thought her beautiful, while those
Visitors were also present
,,
Frank Richards.
I
who did not love her never saw the
from Western Star grange.
Sheriff of L isa county. Orego«
—
HALSEY STA TE
BANK
4
at Halsey, in tbe sutc of Oregon, st the close of business A p ril
1)25
RES O U R C ES
4
1. Loans amidisconnts, lucluding rediscounts shown in items 29 and
1/1 i ll t «n
- - - . $139,004.)J
30,
any w ------------------------- ----------------------------------- . . a . - . - . - . - --------
2. OverJratts secured and u n s e c u re d ....---------------------------- --------- . . .
455.43
3. U. S. government securities owned, including those shown m
items 3d and 35, it a n y . . . . ------------ . . . . . — ------------------. . . . . . . .
t, sotto
4. Other bonds, warrants and securities, including foreign govern­
ment, state, municipal, corporation, etc., including those shown
in items 30 and 35, if a n y ----------- ------- -----------. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
n .a w .jo
6. S in k in g house, 52,606 ; furniture and fixture», $ 3 , 5 3 8 . . . . . . . . ------- -
4,144.00
9. (ab) Lash on hand in vault and due from hanka, banker»
and trust companies designated and approved reserve agent» of
this b a n k ................................................. ......................................................... J9.383.7t
Checks on.banks oatside of city or town of reportiug bank and other
cash item s______________ . . . -------------- ---------------------- ------- ------- -
31.44
Total cash and due from banks, items 8, 9, 10 and I I , >39,416.55
T o t a l ________ __________________________ ________1 .------ - "TyTTSoTl
L IA IL IT IB S
16. Capital stock paid i n . . _____ . . . ________ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . j . . . . .
17. Surplus fu n d .. . . . . . .
....... ................................
IS. (aj Undivided profits____ _____________________________ >4.745.89
(b| Less curreut expenses, interest anti taxes paid_____ ..2 ,9 6 6 15
U u ta N D DarosiTS, other than banka, snbject to reserve :
23. Ind ividu al deposits subject to check, including deposits due the
state oi Oregon, county, citiea or other public f u n d s ____ . . . . .
24. Demand certihcates of deposit outstanding___________ . . . . . . __ . . .
25. Cashier’s checks of this bank outstanding payable on demand . . . .
Total of demand deposits, other than bank deposits, subject
to reserve, items 23, 24, 25, 26, >95,760 11
T im k a n d S a v in g s D k p o s its , subject to reserve and payable on
demand or subject to notice :
T im e certificates of deposit o u ts ta n d in g ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
28. bavmgs deposits, payable subject to n o tic e ________________ . . . . . . .
20,000.00
15,000.8V
1,779.74
93.229,71
153.45
2,376.95
33,997.89
33,393.47
Total of tim e and savings deposits payable on demand or
subject to notice, items 27 and 28, <67,390.56
T o U l - — ............................................................................................... i l 99,930.41
State of Oregon, county of Linn, sa.
I, 8. M. Bond, cashier oi tbe above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the
above statement is true to the best of ray knowledge and belief.
_
,
B. M. Bond, Cashier,
C orrect-cA ttest: C. H. Koontx, D T aylo r, L. D. T a y lo r, Directors
Subscribed aud sworn to before me this 11th day of A pril, 1925
,,
Amor A. TuSsiaff, Notary Public,
i l y commission expires 3-12-28.
The Enterprise
one year for
one dollar
The Pap er will Stop Coming at
tha end of
the term u u I shs the subscriptiou ig rvuewed. The
money will be used in making a better paper for the
subscriber diuqnir^thieJ^Hej^^hejMibscription, not io
improving it for the beuedi of lotuebody else tbe next
J ear.
burg 4 to 3. 'Ihe math iuuiug
hegau with that More aud waa ex-
oiling, but Haleey was able to hold
it down. Palmer made X of Hul­
sey’e 4 pointe, Corbin 1 and leoui
1. Morton struck out 7. The in­
nings stood:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Halsey
1 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0—4
Harrisburg 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 —3
World’s Record Held at Halsey
D uring the Everding park
shooting tournam ent of the
Rose City Gun Club, Mr. and
Mrs. J. W. D rinkaid were in
Portland, returning Sunday.
Jim made a world record at
the shoot, when he made 81
targets straig h t, trapped from
the tower. The form er record
was 67, held by Ben Trenk'man
wi
Cutting Out W aste
Credit is waste. Bookkeep-
ing and collecting consume time, and time is money,
Some debtors die, amoe move away, some go bankrupt
and some are downright dishonest persoas. Those who
pay $1.50 cover these losses.
Any Linn County Farmer not now uki«
tbe Enterprise can have it on trial
25 weeks for
25 cents .
»
and it will stop coming to him when the time expires
unless he orders it eontiuued. One or two cople.
might not give a fair idea of the work the paper is
doing, but after 25 weeks’ ecqu .in t.n e. sub.rib.r
can decide whether or not it is worth f l a year.
Py
C” h t0 ,eh* >1 pupil‘ who Procure these
trial sobscr.pt,on. from farmer, in Linn county.
Write or call for particulars.
1
Those who have farmed fifty year, haTe k#r(i#d
thing e v e ry year. None of us knows it all Every I inn
c u m ,
w
«o r h .,h ,I,
-o r lb
, , p
S
to
o
m
E ...,
„
tb jf>
eb„
L ...
P
, 0 |w ( ip ( . “
The Enterprise «¡11 coBiin». iWprov, „
"bi.“’“1’“
°“l‘' ‘“»"’•»•»i p«.-
Linn County Farm Features .111 ...u.«.
X
i b
«
7
J
"
"
' T
E ’ " 1'
something from some other farmer under
In
•
'’ - » • ' I » " - »
More than twioe'aa much local naw.
gossip . . Can be found elsewhere
a
u . 1 -
.
good-natured
Oregon n. Wi in br)ef p#ragraphg
Caddy . evening fairy f . | ei
,
Join the Lucky Dollar
Class»
Have a share in making a better paper
a sey - a credit tc» the community