Rural enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1924-1927, April 29, 1925, Page 5, Image 5

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    A p r il :*», i».ff
• Halsey Garage
•Ull the btut-wi|uipptd
—
- ehop io town
w .h » » « • f»H H o. of T ub«, fir « , aud M?e..o r m .
J ohn c. M c K enzie
R. W. DUNLAP
U nion O m < qu Otle.
All work done in this shop is fully guaranteed
I sp eein lii. io .11 m ake. of car. and tractor., magne.er-
starting m otor, .h d b a tten ...
"
I want jo b . where other, have failed.
If you need me phooe 16x5.
Halsey Garage
P. P A P M A N
News Notes From
A ll Over Oreg on
Gleaned b y th e W e s te rn
N ew sap o r U n io n fo r
B u sy P e e p le
La Grande’» first observance of a
community music week will be May
3-9.
The Lutheran Brotherhood of Ore­
gon will convene in Silverton May 2,
3 and 4.
P. A. Elliott, B«ke forester. Is at­
tending a series of forest fire con­
ferences In eastern Oregon.
The annual meeting of the Oregon
State Retail Jewelers ’association will
be held In Salem May 11 and 12.
By a vote of 53 to 8, a commercial
course was voted for the Cottage
Grove high school at the hudg'et meet­
ing
The new 395,000 depot of the Spo­
kane. Portland A Seattle railroad at
Astoria will be opened to the public
on May 4.
The load limit for motor vehicles on
the Old Oregon Trail In the Blue
Mountains, recently Imposed by the
state highway commission, has been
lifted.
Members of Capitol post. American
Legion, with headquarters in Salem,
have launched a plan whereby they
expect to erect a home for the organ­
ization.
The Clatsop county court has award­
ed a contract to John Slotte A Co. for
the grading of three miles on the Ne­
halem highway. The contract price
wa, 351.131.54.
John Day highway Is to be finished
without delay. The last gap, 21 miles,
has bee. ordered advertised tor grad­
ing at the May meeting of the high-
WSfr commission.
fw o hundred members of the Bap­
tist churches In Lane and Douglas
ccjinUes convened at Springfield for
thjs annual meeting of the Umpqua
.ptlst association.
budget of (25,000 for the coming
y<far was voted at the 33d annual con­
ference at Astoria of the Lutheran
Columbia conference of the Augustana
Synod of North America.
vCoos county must rearrange its pro­
posed bond election for 37OO.OO0, as a
mistake In the order of election neces­
sitates a new call *before the bond at­
torneys will approve the Issue.
Milton A. Miller of Portland has
been appointed by Governor Pierce, a
•delegate from Oregon to attend the
national child welfare commission to
W held In New York city May 15
to, 20.
X. L. McEwen of Athena, breeder
4)f registered Spotted Poland China
hogs, has tendered each of the pig
clubs In Umatilla county one of his
Tigs as a apecial award for good work
Muring 1925
Sylvia Louise, a 4-year-old girl. Is
dead following a beating administered
by her grandmother, Mrs. M. C. Paton.,
with whom she had been livingson a
farm in the Meda district, about 35
miles south of Tillamook.
Because of the projected operations
•of the Shevlln-Hlxon company In
Klamath county this year. tUP Bend
Iron works will establish a large plant
in Klamath Falls early this summer,
according to announcement.
IV. J. h . Clark of Portland, state
senator from Multnomah county, was
»’""ted superintendent of the Oregon
H a l l ’s C a t a r r h
do what we
M e d id n e will
claim for it —
rid Tc y system
rytt
of Catarrh or Deafness
caused l 3T ’ Catarrh.
Cal
J, V
b Awf _ »vt» A** O*XT 40 year»
V»»
F. J. CH VNEY
TNEY a CO.. Toledo. Ohio
RXE T UTOR'S NOTICK
Notice it h »rebv given that the (Inal
»ecount of Cl l* e P- Stafford as executor
of the last w i.f, and testament of Rose
*nn Price, deceased, has been filed in
the County Con V»W Linn County. State
Oregon, and * *A t the 1 at day of June.
•♦23, at I. o’clock at ui . hat been dn,r
»»pointed by rat.fleA,trt for the hearing
* 'hjectiona to said \1n al account aad
•he settlement thereof!, «» which ,i,D*
»»» person interested A »*<<• «•»*<* ■*»’
»»Pear and fil.H objections thereto in
wrtting and crnH st the sa me.
, Nted and first published April 23,
•12J.
•
, c iire P.\ Stafford
1 Eaecutor Aforesaid.
Amor A. Tn«gj ng. Atty, for Ear.
4
rl
PAGE 1
heeler Cleared
Hindenburg Wins
a Second Time
•
in Germany
Defendant's Friends Stage a
Demonstration Despite
Dr. Marx Gets Second Place in
First Popular Vote of
Order of Judge.
•
employment Institution for the adult
blind in Portland He will succeed |
3irs- R. B. Goodin, who has resigned
The state highway commission has I
sought permission from the public
service comml.sion to establish an
overhead crossing over the track ol |
the Central Pacific railroad in Klarn
ath county. The cost of the proposed |
improvement was estimated at »38-
260.
The navy department will detail a
representative at once to go to As
torla and make a careful study of the
situation at the mouth of the Colum
bia river, so far as It concerns the
national defense, Senator McNary was
assured by Secretary of the Navy Wil
bur.
Sportsmen of Coos county have
been surprised by an announcement
coming from the Coquille river dis­
trict recently that catfish were be­
coming common in that stream. A
quantity of this variety of fish were
planted in the Coquille several years
ago.
Announcement of the plans of his
company to attempt to divert much
of the halibut packing business from
Puget sound to the Columbia river
wag made at Astoria by J. R. Burke
of the Burke Fish company, who is
superintending rebuilding of the old
Lindenberger cold storage plant iD
that city. Mr. Burke announced that
a new dock will be constructed, ex
tensive repairs made to the building,
and new equipment Installed.
The Clatsop county court has an­
nounced that in the future all con
tractors doing couitty work must
(urnish personal bonds and that con
tractors' bonds offered by bonding
companies, will not be accented.
Since his recent discovery of me
cause of salmon poisoning In dogs,
Dr. C. R. Donham, instructor in veter
Inary medicine at the Oregon Agricul
tural college, has been devoting all
spare time to working out an effective
treatment for doge affected by the
poisoning.
SURAL EN i URI’Rl Sh
John C. McKenzie of Illinois, «(ho
has been named chairman of the com­
mission to consider the problem of
operating the Muscle Shoals enter­
prise.
M ore Grain Goes
to Foreign Ports
Washington, D. C. — One result of
he violent fluctuation In grain prices
during the last six months was noted
by commerce department calculations
'.hat the value of grain exports for the
nine months ending with March, was
3231,000,000 in excess of those during
the same period a year ago.
For March alone grain exporta were
valued at more than 339.000.000. the
Increased price of wheat being large
ly responsible for the gain. For the
nine months wheat exports. Including
those of March, were valued at 3187,-
000,000 more than during the cor­
responding period of the prev^u.
year.
Total value of grain and grain Pfo
ducts exported during the ntne
months' period ending with March,
was $431,454,000.
---------------------- :—
It's time to begin thinking nbqiui
feeding next winter’s dairy cows.
'
• • •
Before planning to Increase produc­
tion. make sure that the product can
lie sold. >
.
Graat Falla, Mont. — Burton K
Wheeler, Montana senator, was acquit
led of a charge of unlawfully using hie
influence as a senator before the de
partment of the interior by a jury
which reported tn federal court her*
The accused senator received two
pieces of good news simultaneously—
the acquittal and that of birth to Mrs
Wheeler of a daughter In Washington
But one ballot was taken, tn spite
of Judge Dietrich's order against
demonstrations there was a rush to­
ward the bench when the verdict was
read. Friends of Senator Wheeler
crowded about him and offered double
congratuations, on the birth of a
daughter and his acquittal.
The Montana senator was charged
with appearing before the department
Renniek W. Dunlap of Ohio, who to prosecute oil prospecting claims of
hat been appointed assistant seers Gordon Campbell. Montana oil oper
tary of agriculture. He was formerly
ator. after his election to the senate
secretary of the Ohio state board of
The government charged hte appear
agriculture.
ance was a violation of nectlon 113
of the United States pennl code.
Earthquakes Shake
Mothers Day to be
Eastern States
W id ely Observed
Chicago.—Earthquake shocks w en
felt throughout parts of Qhip, ken
lucky, Indiana and Illinois Sunday,
night. There were three distinct
tremors, but no damage was done, ex
cept for slight Interruption to wire
service In a few places. According to
seismograph records, the first shock
lasted five seconds at 10:08 o’clock
The second, eight minutes later, was
of like duration, but the third, begin
Ding at 10:30, lasted half a minute.
The disturbance was the most wide
spread of any recorded in this region
for many years. No reports of the
shock were received from points north
of Central Illinois, and apparently the
belt did not reach soufh of the Ohio
river to any extent.
Small articles were upset at Spring
field, while only slight tremors were
felt in and near Cincinnati.
At Indianapolis slight damage was
done to bric-a-brac, but In most places
within the seismic zona the disturb
ance was so slight that It was not
even noticed by most of tile inhabl
tanls. In many places only the third
quake was felt, while in others two
of the threo tremors were felt.
Bert (Oregon) Jones, who with
other convicts made a sensational es­
cape from the state penitentiary at
Salem on the morning of March 28,
1924, was returned to the prison from
Sacramento, where he was arrested
ub Candy C o., First street, next
on a charge of stealing automobile at*
door to Blain Clothing Co.
cessories.
Noon lunches.
Home made candv and ice Cream.
The heaviest sentence ever given In
Umatilla county for violation of pro­
hibition laws, as far as records dis­ i „ s u a Ä . / V i i v s ; k :
Harold G. Murphy Prop.
close, was imposed at Hermiston when in some other town, trade in that town."
"
Justice West sentenced Art Spinning Butin these automobile days many re-
siding elsewhere find it advisable to do
NBVK> CLOSE
snd J. D. Fshlen to serve one year
each in the county Jail and fined them
h. transact busmess will fi.d the firms
Strömberg cgrburelor terv
51500 each.
named below ready Io fill their require-'*«
Conservative prices. Al|
Buena Vista addition of Oregon City I ments with courtesy and fajrneM.
^work guaranteed
119-121 W. Second.
has the honor of producing the first
M A R lN E L L O PARLORS
roses of the season In Clackamas A CCESSOKIEb ’AND TIK ES
Anto Supplies 1±
beauty aid for every need)
county. Mrs. Eva Williams of Six­
I H Arrian*
St. rrancie Hotel
teenth and Division streets has a beau­ HJjWcst First St
___________J
Prep. W .NNI-.gP Ro»«.
tiful climbing Hermosa rose In bloom,
en and money are best when
LINDAHL, hardware.
the blossoms making their appearance
busy. Make your dollars work tn
Dinnerware
Easter Sundav
our savings department. A lbany S tate
Tin shop in connection
Crater lake national park, will be
lit) W. First St.
Albany, Oregon H ank . Under government supervision.
ready for opening on the regular date.
i . . Sue Breckenridge
July 1, C. O. Thompson, superintend­
lbany Floral Co. Cut flower,
Hemstitching. Stamped goods
and plants. Floral art for every
ent has announced. Mr. Thompson
33.1 West Second street, Albany, Oregon
and a crew of men are on their way and all occasions.
Phone 452R
Flower phone 458-f.
into the lake and with high explosives
C ÏIM 8 O N TH E SHOE DOCTOR
will clear away the snow from the en­
U N S W I C K
Second street, opposite Hamilton’s
PHONOG RAPHS
trance so that cars can reach the
store.
•
st
(
lodge.
"Sudden Service.’’
W O O D W O R T H ’S
Unless Governor Pierce reinstates
Ben Dorris of Eugene to the state fish fbavenport Music company offers V ^ n lilo Anderson^A Son. distrib-
’ ’ utors «ml dealers for Maxwell, Chal­
commission a recall movement will ” l’iann-cate organ, good as new
mers, Essex, Hudson A Hupmobile cars.
Eatey organ, good at new
be Initiated and prosecuted to com
Accessories, a pnlies 1st A Broadalbin
plellon by the sportsmen of Oregon »Used Piano».
This was the announcement made pub
E.SPEC IA LTY SHOPPE
astburn Bros.—Two big grocery
hemstitching and stamped goods.
lie in Klamath Falls by R. J. Kirk­
•tores, 212 \V. First and 225 South
318 W. Second st.
Albany. Oregon
Main. Good merchandise at the right
wood of Portland, secretary of the
Owner, Irene McDaniel.
prices.
State Sportsmen’s association.
An initial petition looking to the
plito Cafeteria nnd confectionery New
F U R N IT U R E A N D
-J Home cooking. Pleasant surround­ snd
referendum of the tobacco tax l.w
ings.
Courteous, efficient serviee. used F A R M M A C H IN E R Y
enacted at the last session of the
State legislature was filed in the of We make our own candies.
bought, sold acd exchanged at all times
W S.'D unca N.
fiees of the secretary of state at
ilms developed ami printed,
Salem. The petition was signed by Of
B E N T. S U D T E L L
We mail them rtgl
ight hack to ycu.
ficera of the Oregon Retail Clgai Deal
Phone
76-R. 1X3 N. Broadalbin st.. Albany
era* association and Individual to Woodworth Drug Company, Albany, Or­
egon.
t
'
_______
__
bacco dealers In the city of Portland
)R1) SA L E S AND fiERViCE
Rhea Luper, state engineer, has fil­
Tires and accessories
ed in the circuit court of Malheur
Write tor booklet describing our 20-
Repairs
»
county, an order in the Owyhee river
K ibk -P ollak MoTorf Co.
year Rural Credit Amortized Loans
water adjudlehtion
There are 217
The loan paysrout in 20 payments, re­
jrtmiller Furniture Co., fnrni* tiring the principal Cheap rates. No
water rights IntoRred. with 29.250
ture,
rugs,
linoleum,
stoves
ranges.
tur
delay.
B kam L and C o ..
acre, of Irrigable lands represented
133 Lyon streel, Albany, Ore.
The order provides that the water Funeral directors. 427 43.3 west First
street, Albany, Oregon.
shall not exceed three acre feet an
I L L fiit G ROCERY, m
Lyon
acre during the Irrigation season. April
(Successor to Stenberg Broa.)
1 to October 16. Another limitation Is
Groceries
Fruits
Produce
that no0 more than one acre foot ol
At lowest rate of interest
w ater shall he used on any single acre’ Phone 2h3R
Real Entate
Insurance
of land during any one month prior
OLMAN A JACKSON
Grocery—Balt ery Prompt service. Courteous treatment.
to June 1. and not more than three
Wli' B ain . Room 3, First Savings Bank
fourth, of an acre foot during any Everything in the line of eats
Opposite Postoffice
builning. Albany
calendar mwa’-fc AlU't June E
^ y ^ b a n y j^ /jire c to ry
H
i
t t Ä T t S T Ä An-; MA,;NK™ E^c™c ,co-
A.J
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Republic.
FA R M LOANS
Washington, D. C. — A nation wide
demonstration by the army to express
Its affection and appreciation for the
mothers of the soldiers of America
has been ordered by the war depart
ment on Mothers’ day. May 10.
Inatrnctions to commanding gen
erala of all corps areas and independ
ent army commands, ordering them to
arrange nultabe ceremonies at posts,
camps and other stations, were for
warded by Major General Robert
Davis, adjutant general of the army.
Wherever practicable, the orders
said, a ceremony by the personnel of
the army In honor of attending and
absent mothers shall ba held and the
graves In post cemeteries where .ol
diers' mothers are at rest shall bo
decorated.
Commanding generals
were Instructed to Issue Invitations to
mothers of soldiers to attend th
ceremonies and It was suggested that
special invitations be presented to all
Gold Star mothers who could he reach­
ed.
BRIEF GENERAL NEWS
B. J. Henning, assistant secretary of
labor, was appointed to the federal
bench for southern California.
Erection of a 32.000.00« auditorium
In Washington, D. Cw was voted by
the Daughters of the American Revo­
lution.
The April 13 Issue of the Lampoon,
a publication conducted hy Harvard
college students, was held hy the PdSt-
<fflce department to he unmallehlav ,
Southeastern Massachusetts, Includ­
ing Cape Cod. the Islands of Martha's
Vineyard and Nantucket, was shaken
early Saturday by a alight earthquake
George A. Sanderson of Chicago, sec­
retary of the United States
since May 19. 1919, died tn Washing
ton, D. C. A heart attack was given
as the cause.
. «
Chicago's worst elevator fire in 20
year, gutted two huge structures tnd
destroyed
approximately
2.00..000
bushels of corn and oats, doing dam
age estimated at 92,260,000
Oregon Highway Body Sued on Paving
Portland. Or—Suit has lyjen filed
against the-state highway cunralaslon
to determine two Rolnte, first whether
the commission baa the right to re­
build a paved highway when other
state highways are still unpaved, and
the second, whether the commission
can decide, after bide are received
whether It wants concrete or "black­
top” pavement. This la the first time
that these matters have ever b«en
raised since the creation of the com
mission.
Oregon farmers to the number of
10.007 have availed themselves ol
loans totaling 330.948,850 from federal
land hanks, Joint stock land banks
and federal Intermediate credit banks
alnoe these agencies were first estab­
lished hy law, according to the Bears-
Roebuck Agricultural foundation.
Berlin. — The people of Germany
have rallied to the heanwr of Field
Marshal von Hindenburg and elected
htro president of the republic. He M
the ftrot president of Germany to b«
elected hy popular ballot. He waa
nominated hy the tnaUonallst-eon.erv>
atlve bloc to replace Dr Karl Jarrea,
who failed of election la the first bal­
loting on March 29.
His opponent wae Dr. Wilhelm Marx,
candidate of the republican bloc, ^d-
herenls of the Weimar coalition, com­
posed of centrists, eoclalleta'and dem­
ocrats The third candidate was Ebnst
Thaelmann. communist
Von Hindenburg triumphed In his
race for the presidency with a plural­
ity close to 845,000.
The official provisional figures ol
the presidential election follow;
Von Hindenburg. 14.639,399; Marx,
13,762,640;
Thaelmann.
1.931,69^.
Votes declared Invalid, 21,910 To<al,
80,346,640
Von Hindenburg comes to the chatr
once occupied by Friedrich Ebert; who
was chosen president by the national
assembly at Welmar’ln February, 1919,
and who died In Berlin In February.
xS26.
I
Dollar Wins
Over Pacific Mail
Washington, D. C.—The restraining
order of sale by the shipping board
of the five vessels and service of (be
California-Orient line to the Dollar In­
terests was dissolved by th . District
of Columbia supreme court.
.
The ships are to be sold to the
Dollar Interests for 96.625,000 and will
bo continued In operation out of San
Francisco In addition- to the five
Presldentdype ships now operated eut
of Seattle over the northern route to
the orient by the Dollar lines fer the
shipping board, and to their vestele
going to the orient out of Farlfic porte
in a round-the world service.
Their acquisition of the five ves­
sels Involved In the sale, which are
at present operated out of San Fran­
cisco for the hoard hy the Pacific
Mall, will leave the latter company
without any vessels In the orient serv­
ice and with none which can com­
pete With the president-type vessala
apparently available for purchase.
WETS
TO TEST STRENGTH
Wisconsin Assembly Expected te Ap­
prove Straw Vote Flan.
Madison, Wig.—Thi^state assembly
this week fa expected to add Its ap­
proval to the resolution already adopt­
ed by the upper house calling for a
a state wide "strew vote" oh prohi­
bition.
,
The resolution, which calls for a
elate referendum on memorialising
congress for a 2.79 per cent beer, was
adopted by the senate, 1* to 10. It
provides that the direct question of
modifying the Volstead act so as to
permit the sale of 2.75 per cent beer
be submitted to the people at the
November election In 1928.
The referendum may be merely a
gesture. It ran have no legal effect
except that the poll will be an Indica­
tion of public sentiment.
8enate Land Hearings Concluded.
Washington, D C. — Hearings In
Washington on administration of the
public lands were concluded by thn
senate public lands committee, hut It
will hear other evidence later In thn
west. The western hearings are to be
held at places' yet tn he selected and
will begin about August 16.
Child Beater Feces Life Imprleenment.
Tillamook, Or.—Murder la the sec­
ond degree Is charged to Mrs M C.
Paton. 59. homesteader of the Meda
district, 36 miles (rom Tillamook, for
j beating her 4-year-old granddaughter,
, Sylvia Izjulse Descampa. so severely
that the child died a few hours after
i the punishment An Indictment was
returned against Mrs Paton. The
i penalty I. life Imprisonment.
.
A R R O W G A R A G E , Gansle Bros.
F
U. S. A’ C. T. C. T ire s ! Now. lo w -p ric e d
F
M oro sorvico
N o m o re cost
S k ille d A u to re p a irin g
A uto accessories
FA RM LOANS
(»ill
B a tte rie s fo r
F o rd ,
and
S ta r,
o th e r
C h e v ro le t
s m a ll cars
MORE SERVICE FOR LESS MONEY
A
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