* t y A W eekly C hronicle of Local E v en ts and P ro g re ss on L inn C ounty L and HAL8EV, OREGG n JU N E 17, 1925 where Eldon Crete and wife are now. H a l s e y H a p p e n in g s a n d C o u n t y E v e n ts Miss Mona Bond is home from her school. I t is thought that Mrs. Mary Palmer’s sight w ill be saved. B r a n d o n B its A lf o r d A r r o w s (Enterprise Correspondent) Mrs. J. H. Rickard and son Jesse have been having a siege ! of grip. Mrs. C. P. Moody attended the Lee Ingram and family visited W . C. T . U. at Harrisburg Friday. A. C. Armstrong’s brood3r house at Wallace Hawk’s in Spring- Make hay. The sbq ahines. and 700 eeven-week’a-old chicks 1 field Sunday. W . }■ Cary has gone to the sol burned Sunday night. Mr. and Mrs Carl Seefeld diers’ home et Roseburg. Mrs. Lenuye Wallace, formerly and children visited at Cheste» Samuel C. Cooper of Plain- of Brownsville, and eon Leo, from Ctirtis’ Sunday. San Francisco are visiting here view died Friday, aged 62. E. A. Starnes and family Sidon Cross and wife have and at Brownsville this weeg. called at Merle Rode’s one even rented L. E- W alton’s resideuce Mrs. Ida M. Cummings of Al ing last week. for their home. bany was looking over her prop Henrietta Starnes hai gone to J. C. Bramwell brought a load erty holdings in Halsey Wednes Harrisburg for a few days to help of strawberries from Lebanon day. M tt. M iller, who is ill. Monday for home cannere. C. S. Veatch returned from Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Starnes Charles K irk and fam ily from Cottage Grove Saturday and, called on Mrs. Workinger, who Athena are taking in the pioneer with his wife and Miss Beulah is ill, Sunday afternoon. picnlo and visiting in Helaey. Miller went to Eugene next day. Ellsworth Curtis and family J. C. Walton is laid up with Mrs. Alva Smith is taking spent Sunday with Mr. Curtis’ rheumatism. Mrs. J. C. Bram care of her daughter, Mrs. El sister, Alice Allen, and family. well has been looking after him. mer Munson, who is sick with E. D. Isom went to Albany Mrs. McMahan will continue pneumonia. Friday, bringing home his wife the cement sidewalk from the city Leake and threatened leaks in and daughter, who had spent council lot on peet her property to the roof of the Christian church the week there- Third street. » have been repaired with new Mrs. E. A. Starnes Is enjoying shingles until it reminds one of a D oings o f O ur P opulace C h ro n icled in Brief P a ra g ra p h s Mrs. James Rice of Holley, whose husband died recently, has crore-word pussle. gone to Portland with her daugh Guests of C.. ter, Mrs. Hettie Dow. family Sunday Mrs. F. H . Porter and Gertrude and Mr. MoCalson called at the c . P. Stafford home Sunday, on their way to Epgene. a visit from her cousin, Mrs. Fenny Lettenmeier, and aon H e r- old of Oregon City. P. Moody and were Mr. Clyde Ingram of Portland and Moody’s cousin, Grant Brawn, Wayne Ingram of Norwood Is and Mrs. Brawn and her sister, land visited their uncle, Lee In Mrs. Collins, all of Portland. gram, one day last week. Less then 1000 people voted at the school meeting Monday. D The seventh annual croup meeting Taylor was re-elected director and of rural Sunday schools held by the B M. Bond clerk. 8ome improve American Sunday School union w ill ments at the schoolhouse were be held at Waterloo. June 28. talked of, but got no farther, though there may be news in that The Tangent cheese factory line by and by. plan is to get owners of 600 oh more cows to take a $5 share for each cow and have the busi ness strictly co-operative. Mention of a pullet that is la y ing at three months old got under the head of “ F ruit Outlook*’ on page 2 instead of into this column, but that’s all right. She ie pro ducing hen fru it. Mrs. E. A. P. LaFollette, mother of the Cross boys, and Mr. LaFollette are coming back to re- side in Mrs. LsFollatte’s house, Albany’s only EXCLUSIVE OPTICAL PARLORS EV ER YTH IN G O PTICA L Bancroft Optical Co. 313 West First street, Albany,Or. Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Isom and daughter Beverly took Sunday Mie. W illiam Wheeler wee put dinner at Pete Troutman’s, near ting up strawberries in Mason Jars Shedd, and attended the funeral yesterday when one exploded close of Mr. Isom’s unde, Sam Coop to t e r face. Her glasses eaved-her er, near Plainview in the after t'fe tf but her forehead anil around noon. her eyes were scalded so that they Mr. and Mrs. Brian Perry are were painful during the afternoon and night, ,'fh e injury is not the parents of an 8’/^ pound daughter, born Monday of last serious. week. Mr. Perry’s mother, Mrs. Lyman Marsters has gone to Kump of Eugene, is caring for California to spend the summer hetz daughter-in-law and new with brothers and sisters. Misa Helen Pearl, granddaughter of granddaughter. Mr. end Mrs. Marsters, who has been visiting them since the termi AGED YAKIMA INDIAN DEAD nation of her echool at Veneta .ac companied Lyman to Santa Ana, W ar Veteran Falla te Keep Boast of the home of her parents. Living Forovtr. A. C. Armstrong is enjoying a visit from hie cousin end boyhood friend, A. T. Craft of Orlgon City, whom he had not mot for th irty , seven years. • They and Mrs. A rm strong attended the graduating exercises at the U . of O. Monday, where Helen Armstrong was one of those getting diplomas. (Continued on page 6) Preferred Stock ; : Canned Goods ; “ P re fe rre d S to c k ” m ea n s all th a t th e n am e J im p lies—th e choice o f th e pack. i W h e n y o u buy P re fe rre d Stock goods y o u J have wisely c h o sen in co m p arab ly th e best, s e - < lected fo r size, flavor a n d q u ality . i M ake th o te s t y eurself. C om pare P re ferre d J Stock w ith o th e r b ran d s and it will m eet with < y o u r d isc rim in a tin g choice < P re fe rre d Stock goods a re n o t packed to m e e ^ a price. T hey aro sold o nly to th o se who ap-i p re c ia te first q u ality . • < I t is tru e som e b ra n d s a re sold cheaper, b u t , th e y arc sold solely on p rice appeal. i W e a re d is trib u te rs o f a b o u t th irty varieties ] o f P re fe rre d Stock goods. < M. V. KOONTZ CO. ; H A L S E Y , O R EG O N e The annual school meeting was held in the Alford district Monday afternoon. Cheater Curtis wai re-elected director and E. D. Isom was elected clerk. ' » I » * (By Special Correspondent) for the Brooder House vention here. Rail Brotherhood President Diss. Cleveland. O. — W arren 8. Stone, president of the Brotherhood of Loco motive Engineers and the Brother hood of Locomotive Engineers Co-Op erative National beak, and Interested In a number of other labor banks, died here after a long Illness. Between 4000 and 6000 acres of growing wheat were damaged In a district centering around Helix by a hall storm that lasted for shout 15 minute«. Great a« Soil Builder A lfalfa stand« In tha front rank» ' among the crops which build up the Successful farming la planned ; It -fertility of the soil. Farmers who doesn't Juat happen. 1 wve grown It .report that they get • • e _ uch higher yields of grain and other y>» on land which has been In Don’t be afraid to try something;new r . i f . V a than on land where no le- thia year, but don't try It too hard. • • • goml ^ous crop has b**® » \rralng sections where no lime Sow celery seed for winter cslerg. nee i . *« •<’ <’* ’ ,h* ” end sow cabbage seed for late crop. r ’*’ - In • • • * Rape should be drilled on plowed ground at the rate of six to sight Itounds per sere. I t grows well dor- lag the cool periods of the spring and la la shape for feeding In June. H ran also be seeded between the com rows at the last cultivation and makes an excellent crop for fall gsrag»- B ro w n s v ille B riefs P in e G r o v e P o in ts (KnUrpriM OorrMPondcnc«) (By an Enterpiise Reportar) Mr. and Mrs. Waltz drove to Cecil Quimby is at home now. Eugene Monday. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Richols ,, „ „ , , , . I were Albany visitors Friday. Mrs. P. Hoy and daughter: Ervine Weger is helping his Mrs. Albertson attended cen- brother Henry to shear sheep Myra are visiting relatives in Ssattle. I ference at Woodburn last week. Mr. Quimby's sister visited at Marvel Lawrence is quite ill*. Ed Dyer of Albany was shear- the Quimby home Sunday. with appendicitis at her home J sheep in this neighborhood The Morses were in Lebanon Monday. in Ash Swale. after strawberries one day last Bert Haynes and family visit Miss Esther O’Mara has gone week. ed at Everett Hover’s in Harria- to Walla Walla to visit her sis Annette Long and Ethel, burg Sunday. Irene, and Ruth Quimby were ter, Mrs. Marvin Allen. R. K. Stewart and Pete Settle Cleve Cochell's little boy was in Alsea Sunday. are spending a few days at work operated on for appendicitis at Mr. aud Mrs. Charles Bus 11 the local hospital last week. - at the Stewart place at Pleasant Hill- from Eugene, spent Sunday Mrs. Emma Harrison enter with Mr. and Mrs. Sickels. tained the Baptist minister, Rev Mr and Mrs. E. E. flover and Clinton Morse and family Mr. Parks, over the week end. Robert visited Mr. and Mrs. visited Mrs. Morse’s nephew, Mrs. Wayne Whealdon of Arthur Springgate, near Row Charles McCoy, at Brush Creek. Portland is here visiting he» land, Sunday. Glenn Chance and family parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. W. G. McNeil and Ruth and spent Sunday in Alsea at tho Stanard Lulu went to Woodburn Thurs home of Mrs. Lee Steeprow, who Mrs. Delpha Paine and daugh day to attend conference and is a sister of Mrs. Chance. ter June are here visiting Mrs. visit Mrs. Warn Perry. Curtis Veatch and family Paine’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mesdames N. E. Chandler, L. were in Eugene the first of the Will Harrison. E- Eagv, Floyd Nichols and E. Rev. Earl Cochran of St. E. Hover attended tho uiiesion- week attending the bacculaurato sermon. Enid Veatch is gradu Helens was here Monday and preached the funeral sermon of jry meeting at Mrs. Alice ating this year. his aunt, Mrs. Martha Callaway. I Dunn s at Peona Thursday af- Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Tyler | ternoon- BRIEF GENERAL NEWS and Mrs. Ida Hansen drove over f Mrs. George Chandler enter- Nellie Taylor Boat, governor of to Corvallis last Sunday. While tained the You-go-I-go club at Wyoming, announced that she hud re there they visited with Mrs.' her home Thursday afternoon. Some time was passed in visit moved W illiam H. Loomis from the Hazel Moyer. ing and sewing, after which th« office of sheriff of Park county. Premier Baldwin announced In com Jim Callaway w-s graduated at hostess served refreshments. mom that the British, government had O- A. C. thin year. Pine Grove, Oakville, Green decided to Inaugurate a new secretary- David D’Armond, civil war back and Shedd have all been ship of state for dominion affairs. invited to join Peoria in the 4th F. E. Williamson of New York has veteran, died Sunday. been appointed vice president of the John O’Keefe and Irene Har of July celebration at Smith Northern Pacific Railway company, in rison were married a week ago grove, each community will charge of maintenance and operation, furnish a part of the program Friday. to succeed A. M. Burt, who died In and have a candidate .for the Fred Schrunk and Caroline honor of goddess of liberty. April. A temporary organisation has been Berry of Corvallis were married f-r^aed at Astoria. (U r, tar tha purpose a week ago Sunday. A number of Pine Grove peo of obtaining congressional apprnprla- ple attended the community died Mrs. Martha Callaway tlons for tha continuation of the con Brownsville Friday, She meeting at Riverside Saturday atructlon of the Tongue Point naval at evening. Several communities was a widow, aged 73. base. ware repreaaoted, each furnish Striking miners of the British Em Carroll, son of Mr. and Mr3. ing part of the program, after pire Steel corporation In Cape Breton J. B. Howe, is recovering from which ice cream, cake and cof- coal fields took law Into their own ee were served About 400 peo hands and controlled situations a dog bite on his leg. Probably throughout colliery districts of the Is the animal was not rabid. ple were present and a most en land. Stores of the company were Rudolph Wesley of Scio was joyable time was had. raided and looted at night, and in reported as rejoicing itecause some cases destroyed. Homes of com a cow of his had twin calves, pany officials were etoued by strikers and now Chariot Howe has a Beat Rfcifr Over the Mountain« Damage done le estimated at J.lbO,- Leonard Gilkey, secretary of cow that has won fame the same 000. tho Albany chamber of com way at Brownsville. merce, has interested C. M. Ta« Many Law« Oeelare Credit Men. Granger, northwest district Washington. D. C.— There are toe forester, in the improvement of many laws, la the opinion of the Na Catching Chickens tional Aasoclatioa of Credit Men. The Helps in Culling the Santiam pass cross-moun association, at the concluding session tain road, which is now nat o f its unaual convention here, passed urally free from snow, while Ooldendale, Wash. — Wbh-ta-clneh (Black Jim), 102, veteran, of early day Indian ware, la dead, In »pit“ of boaata made to white roit<tnnts on Rock Crook, 20 miles eaat ofi Oolil-vn dale that he waa going to Hvg forever. Jim waa kicked to death last Friday by a wild horae. As a fully matured "youth Jim saw desolations stating that legislation Is the tlrat covered wagon comm over the too prolific "to Insure the proper oh old Oregon trail. H e waa a warrior servence of laws and the building up In the forcea of K am taln n. Yakima of a morale that reals upon proper oh chieftain who battled tb * whites In Serranos.” the 60-s, and the here of many per Ohio Woman Heads Music Clubs. sonal encounters with settler», In the Portland. Or.— Mrs. Edgar Stillman early days. Kelly of Oxford, Ohio, was elected president of the National Federation Ventilation Necessary of Music clubs aS the national con Brooding houses should hare ant »<b ventilation to prevent stuffiness or any smell of gas from tho beater, but they must be kept at tha proper t< V»- perature, too much ventilation In co Id. stormy weather will be Injurious. Tl W usual method of ventilation la by low t ering the windows at the front and1 opening small openings st'the back un der the rafter«. Ruch methods nat urally require pretty careful watching In cold weather. In some caaea the fresh air la brought In through a floor duct and admitted under the center of the brooder, the Impure air escaping at top of windows or by an opening under the rafters at tho back. In any case, the openings must be provided' with dampers so the ventilation can he controlled. « D a iry P o u ltry W ool r . ;».. \ » o m*/ made pnrt of a definite readily A . system « . \ crop r#t»ilon- people from were There other near-by y and Brownsvill places and . * in,8? r‘ from and Peoria 0 the tent meeting Sunday nighi I, h i w*I Beet Way Ie to Have Crates the Dearest other available p u s , With Wire Sides. the McKenzie, is being cleared Catching the chickens Is a large part of the work Involved In culling, and experience shows that any help In thia direction Is valuable. The beet wey to retch chickens for culling, says H. E. Bo»«ford of the New York 8tate College of Agriculture at Ithaca, la to have one or more catching crates, about four feet long, one and a half feet high, and two feet wide. The crates should have wire sides and one end should be removable. The crate Is plaribl where the birds leave (he henhouse and they are driven Into It. Another good method la to construct a small catching pen outslda of each building where the birds ire to be caught, says Profeesor Bolaford. Drive four stakes Into the ground, one on either side of the exit end the the other two stakes four feet away, each pair two feet apart. Join the stakes, top and bottom, with narrow strips of boards. Tack two-inch mesh wire around the sides and outer end Fasten wire across the top leaving one side free. The birds tnay then be driven Into the pen and caught easily. For work Inside tho house, he sug gested the following: Take ten or twelve feet of poultry w lm flvo or all feet high, and fasten a atrip of ono-by two-inch material at each end. Fasten several pieces of two-by-four about three feet long to tha bottom of the wire. Nell one end to the wall live feet from a corner. The other end la swung out Into the room, and twenty flvo or thirty birds can easily bo rounded up and passed to tho culler. of snow with a steam shovel. The outlook is good for the early building of tho road by a combined county, stato and federal effort, and Linn county will bo oo tho line of the principal highway eon- nsetiog eastern and wester* O»e- f?on. 0. A. C. Commltto Delma Wahl (chairman), Wil liam Corcoran and Wayne Rob ertson have been appointed by the Greater O. A. C. council as a special committee to look after O. A. C. interests in Hal sey for the coming year- The Greater 0. A. C. council is composed of a chairman and two other representatives from every important town in tho state. It is organized to carry out the work of the Greater O. A. C. committee in the various parts of the state, and to pro mote interest in the college among students and alumni. Mrs. Ed. Zimmerman was hostess to the Potter sewing club Wednesday. The afternoon was spent in each sewing a quilt block and in guessing games. After that Mrs. Zimmerman served lunch, assisted By Ellen Zimmerman and Mrs. Snodgrass. Mrs. W. A. Muller and Mrs Fifteen members were present P. H. Freerksen were guests at Guests were Mrs. Bertha Jensen, a dinner party in Albany Tues Mrs. Allice Dunn and Mrs. Min day given in honor of Mrs. Mul nie Layten. This was the last ler's mother, Mrs Fox. meeting until October- a t i-t