Rural enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1924-1927, December 02, 1925, Image 1

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    A g rc u ltu re
H o r t e u 11 u r e
L iv e s to c k
NTERPRI
A \\ eekly t hronicle of Local Events and Progress on Linn County Land
Halsey Happenings
and County Events
1926 calendars and they are
beauties.
Mrs. Eliza Brandon has been
quite sick the past week, but
Doings of Our Populace is improving.
Chronicled in Brief
Miss Dorothy Satchwell of
Shedd was the guest of Mrs.
Paragraphs
L. C. Merriam Wednesday.
Curtis Veatch was in Al­
The new bridge over the
bany Wednesday.
W illamette at Albany is open
Frank Kirk is back at the for traffice, beating the Har­
risburg contractors.
Oaco orchard, Monroe.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Brandon
Lewis Skin-in of Seattle
came lor a visit with his uncle. and daughter Harriet andMiss
Beulah Miller were guests at
T. J., and wife.
the Ped Templeton home Sat-
Mrs. L. H. Ai-mstrong has urday-
been taken to Boswell springs
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Brandon
for her rheumatism.
of St. John, Wash., and daugh­
The returns from the bask­ ter
Harriet arrived Tuesday
et social at the Kirk school
are guests of Miss Beulah
last Wednesday evening were and
Miller
and Mrs.Eliza Brandon.
$43.55.
Mrs. P. J. Forster has been
♦ Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Elam quite
ill since having her teeth
and son Ivan, Murine, sister extracted.
dentist left a
of Miss Alice Simmons, and part of the The
hypodermic nee­
J. W. Pugh and family were dle, which he broke off, in her
thanksgiving guests of Mrs. gums.
Pugh at the restaurant.
Mrs. Irma Shotwell spent
Mrs. Hettie Saylor and Mrs.
Fannie Ross have returned to the vacation days at her home
Portland after visiting their in Salem. Mr. Shotwell ac­
companied her back to Halsey
mother, Mrs. M. M. Ward.
Saturday to take in the high
Mrs. Edith Robnett and school play.
Truman and
D a i r y
P o u ltry
W ool
HALSEY, OREGON
Pine Grove Points
(By Special Correspondent)
■j. «OÄ»* • . >
w ÜRj
“Stand Bv
* Us a Little Longer*’
C7
Observe International Golden Rule Sunday,
December 6th, for Near East Relief Orphans
Louisa were home
Happenings in
PubllC Schools
P. A. Pehrsson was at June-
(School Reporter)
!tion City Saturday.
Since thp ,lbrary worR u k M
7 '.i G' ? * e[! a.nd famiIy up so much time« a motion was
I visited at A. F. Albertson’s paMcd (o pay
the librarian
Friday.
¡$2.50 a semester.
iliere will be a community
At this time of year there
entertainment at the school-
are
many high school conven­
house Friday evening.
tions
to which Halsey high, as
Bert Haynes and family
well
as
others, has been asked
spent thanksgiving at Everett
to send delegates. According­
Hover’s an Harrisburg
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gib- ly
. the , . student body elected
son of Corvallis visited a t: • 0 “ e*e8at®s to the conven-
Frank Gibson’s Tuesdav.
iIon at University of Oregon,
December 4 and 5.
L. E. Eagy left Monday
The return party, which the
morning for Portland, being freshman
class gave the soph-
called to sen e on the federal omores, was declared the most
jury.
successful event this year by
Miss Sophia Heinrich and all the students who attended.
Fred Heinrich of Conallis
The first basketball game
spent the week end with their of the season will be played
parents.
December 4 at Coburg.
The senior play was a de­
A number of Pine Grove
people
attended the high cided success and everyone
school play at Halsey Satur­ who attended agreed that it
was one of the best plays
day evening.
which had been given in Hal­
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sylvester sey for several years. Even
and Misses Nora and Pearl the seniors themselves were
Pehrsson and Eunice Sylvester satisfied with the results as
were Corvallis visitors Friday. the door receipts showed a to­
tal over $102.
Agnes
(handler,
Grace
The orchestra was Mrs.
Pehrsson and Iona Albertson
tame from Monmouth Wed­ George Hayes at the piano, T.
nesday to spend thanksgiving J. Skirvvin, C. P. Moody, Hrfr-
ry Mason, Lawrence Taylor
at their homes here.
and Leighton Henderson.
Miss Pearl Pehrsson, who
A member of the audience,
is teaching school at Moro, asked which were the best
spent Thanksgiving at her actors of both sexes on the
home. Miss Nora Pehrsson stage, said: “Tom Palmer and
came from Salem for the Agnes Hayes.”
j thanksgiving holiday at home
(By an Bnterptise Rapoyter)
Mrs. Johnson and Miss Haz-
It was Torn Miller'« first ap­
i el Johnson drove to Kings Val- pearance on the «lag« and hl«
i ley Sunday, taking Sam Camp­ Irlenda were agreeably itirpriaed,*
bell and family, who have
The whol« cait was carried off
I been at the Johnson home for in a way that ahowed (bat Halsey
rome time, to their home there. need not send «bread for enter­
“Care and Feeding of Poul­
try” was Prof. Crosby's sub­
ject at the Lake Creek* com­
munity meeting Tuesday night Millions Saved
O u r Unfinished 1 ask
ol last week. He is an agri­
cultural college specialist on
in P ear P,ast
Am ong the O rphans
poultry.
Governor P ierce signed papers
J. W. Moore of Brownsville,
They Need Help Until
authorizing the extradition of Roy C. who more flagrantly than the B elieve T ask W ill be Com ­
Old Enough to Help
W alters, alias Fred Cram er, w ho is editor of the Enterprise
has
pleted In the N e x t F e w
wanted in Los Angeles on a charge of violated Solomon’s rule which
Themselves
Y e a rs .
forgery. W alters was under a rre s t a t would cut us off at threescore
Alhanv
and ten years, found gold-
l’urtluiid, Nuv. 30,
T hat America will com plete Its wor!
F. H. Porter shipped one of bearing ore in the Calapooia
,
E
d
.
Hural
linterpriae 1
*
his prize red poll bulls Nov. liver gravel on a Brownsville In th e N ear E ast In the next th ree or
Mrs.
Aristene
Felts
of
Port­
four
years
Is
th
e
confident
assertion
24 to a buyer in Lewiston, street the other day. Mr. of J. J. H andsaker, N orthw est Region
land, former president Ore­
Idaho.
Moore has a nose for gold, be­
D irector of N ear East Relief.
gon
P. T. A., who is spending
ing one of the most experienc­ al “For
tainer«.
ten years we have been busy
Mrs. LaFollette, now of Cor­ ed prospectors in Oregon
the
winter
in
Paris,
has
writ-
binding
up
the
wounds
left
by
the
vallis, has been visiting her
Mrs. Shotwell has added
Kirk Kinks
Worid W ar and the w ars which foi ten an interesting l'tte r to J.
sister, Mrs. W. F. White, and
Henry Bert Wolfe died very lowed
two
beautiful goldfish for bi­
the W orld W ar. A million lives
J. Handsaker, Northwest re­
her sons, the Cross boys, and suddenly Monday afternoon have been
ological study in the school
saved and 200,000 children
(Enterprise
Correspondent)
the wives of the married ones. on the way home from Salem, rescued and many of them given train gional director of the near east
room.
where
he
had
gone
for
treat­
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Gage
visited
Ing for lives of future usefulness. To relief. She spvs :
Mesdames Bradford Moss
Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Moody, ment. He had been in poor day th ere a re some 35.000 children In
mid S. J. Smith were visitors
“America must continue her at A. L. Falk’s Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred S. Moody health for several months. A m erica’s care In the N ear E ast. Their
and family of Harrisburg and Mr. Wolfe and family moved average age is about ten years, 2000 work in the near east for a few
Mr«. McNiece left Haturduy for 1,1
grade rooms Wednes-
Mrs. Edith O. Thompson of onto
are under the age of four years. The years more, for she is dealing her home in Idaho, «(ter an e x -¡d a y .
the present home place
T.
,
.
Yoncalla were the thanksgiving just east of Brownsville about N ear E ast R elief keeps them only un with children and some of the tended visit with her daughter,
Mrs. W A Falk
I here were short thanks-
til they are sixteen. So carefully are
they
trained
in
various
han
d
icraft»
:
,
»
OS[
P
,'O
lm
^
i
n
«
\
h
H
d
r
t,'
P
n
day guests at the home of C. six years ago and by industry
Miss Ellen Vannice, who is £ 3 7°*™ ™ hHeld >n th,e
P. Moody.
th a t they are able to support them
.
L i t t l e 18 being (lone by
and care had one of the best ......
.....
.......................
.
.
-----------------
---
^
te
n d in g Willamette univer- 1?e r n o o n
A m o re
^ x u is fv t
selves at th a t age. and although we relief agencies for adults, al-
The Halsey meat market places in the community. — try
to
follow
them
a
fte
r
they
have
left
though
they
are
worthy
of
S
1
came
Wednesday
evening
:one
jg
beinir
nrenared
fo r n»vt
and the Southern Pacific com­ Brownsville Times.
the orphanages to care for them ii help, for the Armenian
will : to sPend thanksgiving at home ,f rjdav evening when the
pany are first in the field with
they are ill or to find them new jobr
at everything and any-
■ ■ ■ ■
'
(Continued on page 8)
The program and basket ^«chers’ branch meeting is to
in case they are m isfits still our ,e ,v thing,
j
f
hj
school,
1
e
h<*ld.
Ice practically ends when they an daj|y |,read
-J h
social at the Kirk
BlItoen
| ---- —
»ue presence of
where
Kenneth
Van Nice i 1 he next regular meeting of thw
"N early all th e money th at A m erica1^ ® 8« thousands of refugees
Needs No Br&âking In
teaches, last Wednesday was Community Parent-Teacbere «•-
gives N ear E ast R elief today is spent
’ moi alizcd the labor Slt- a success and $43.50 was tak- "delation will be bald at the Hel­
for children. Help given to adult? n a t i o n in a country where lab-
en in from the baskets to be
«choolhouie Friday evtuing,
tak es the form of clothing and this it oi' is already poorly paid and
used for equipment about the December 11, at 7:46. The pro­
never furnished free If the refu g ed where there is little work and
schoolhouse.
gram committee haa prepared a
a re able to work or can pay even a 1’ttle money.
______________
v*ry intereating achedule «nd the
few cents for th e ir garm en ts Money
“ Boys trajned jn American
D is n a tc h e s th e la st fe w davs ,oc' * 1 committee ha« a «urpriae io
is spent on th e children and a . soon o r p h a n a g e g w j |,
,
h
nispaicnes tne last lew days s,ore ln
- en«rel good
as they are in a position to care foi . ;
*
7 m u v ii
pictured , war • conditions
tim. »•
gooa
them selves o u r work will cease.
Jt c l ( fiances than the pres- nave
c
. .
time. No member can afford tw
in Syria. Tucked in between [niig ¡,
“It cannot be repeated too often ! nt generation, for they
are the
accounts of the movements
th at the children are out of Turkey > eitlg taught carpentry, black-
etc., while most of the revolting tribesmen and . Hie C«l»pooi« Teacher«’ »«saei«.
and are safe frem the slaughter te smithing,
which th eir p aren ts were exposed adult refugees are fitted only cf the French forces, are brief ' lon 1,1/-o,,e 2 w'll meet Friday,
' December 4, at 8. , Mr.
Carleton
r Carleton
They are under friendly but impover lor common labor.
I wish . , accounts of the suffering of
the people driven from their ", ’* 'llv* r"‘t 7
°r«»on will be
Ished governm ents In Armenia. Syria could take you
through
,B "P*" er ° th« evening. Kvery-
P alestine and Greece, and the chll
little carpenter shop in N • aze-,, homes and congregating in re- one
ia invited to attend the pro­
d ren 's only hope, not only of life, but
camps.
"Sanitary
ar-
gram and enjoy the address,
of training n ecessary for au ■ “ss in reth where the boys are learn-
rangements
totally
inadquate,
life, ________
la In America
Rufferiag I- in mg carpentry just opposite the
tease in ihe refugee cam ps in Ai« ppe spot where Jesus learned his water scarce, many refugees
The average cost of book»
ill, no medicine, children sick."
and G recA , although more than one t r a d o .
for
sixth grade pupils per
It
is
impossible
to
say
whe­
million people have come back to sell
“ What lugs at your heart
.... ....................
support a fte r being robbed and exiled most is (he babies four and ther (he near east
relief will vear in Oregon is litlte over
from th eir an cestral homes in Turkey
ne able to help these refugee
I)er PUP*D (he average cost
T here are no few er than 10,000 exiles five years old, of whom there children, as its funds are ex-
books for all pupils in Ore-
are
more
than
2,000
in
near
Including m others with little children
You have probably concluded that
relief orphanages now. hausted in the care of the K” n elementary schools is very
who are aaking tem p o rary «id thia cast
to be tough and durable a shoe must
w inter, and at a cost of only two i «nta Children are leaving the or­ 35,000 children now in its or- Lttle over a dollar a year per
be uncomfortable. You have a new
per day per child could he given milk phanages at the rate of 300 a phanages and homes. Aid to PPP'F — Oregon Voter,
sense o f satisfaction coming w ith your
will depend
How many in Halsey havt»
but N ear E ast R elief funds are ex month, making room for oth­ these sufferers
first pair of Wcycnberg Comdex “ A ll
had
experience that would
hausted In th e care of th e 35,000 ch it ers in the refugee camps.
upon
the
responses
made
to
In
Solid Leather” shoes.
dren.
»he last two year«, homes have noar east relief on golden rule confirm these figures?
“It 1» the hope of the N ear E ast Re been found for 25,000.
¡Sunday and Christmas.
M g
W EYCNBERC'S
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Vannice
ll" f th at Golden Rule Sunday. I " '« ' "
“
I
am
most
enthusiastic
o
v
e r --------------------
h er Sth. will so bring home to the
left early Monday morning for
Willard Maxwell, —
21, of Clarkston, Wash., where they
coaaclence of A m erica th e needs of the work the near east relief |
these children th at funds may be
doing and feel that the mag- Drain, and Edith Ross, 20, of will visit their son. They ex-
available, not only for the w ants In liitudf
I f you want work shoes that w ill
iltude and necessity of the Tangent were among couples nect to be gone for about tw o
wear longer, that w ill be comfortable
th e orphanaxea but th at r. nef m.M b< v.Ork can not be overestimat- getting
marriage
licenses weeks Thei daughter Ellen
given to Mine, at least, of th e other» , d ••
---
-
-
°
x i i c i Hhem to
Wednesday.
accompanied
Salem
and flexible, that w ill protect your
for the week end.
The Standard Bearers will
hold a bazaar and cooked food
sale Saturday evening a t 8
o’clock at the town hall. A
short program will be given.
j
Lender W ear
Greater Comfort.
G o m f l e X
feet and your health-get Weyenberg's
Comdex w ith the double-tan soles—
we sell them because they offer our cus­
tomers, at a moderate price, the best
service tha» can be bought at any price.
M. V. KOONTZ CO.
“N ear East Relief offices are at 613;
Ftock Excbaage. P o rtlan d ; 339 Burke
Bldg. B eattie; and for the Golden
Rule Campaign tem porary offices have
b«en opened a t 301 W alker Bank Bid.,
Salt Lake C ity; «27 Peyton Bldg . hpo
kane; Briatol Hotel, Bolae, and Y. M
C. A., Tacoma ''
72
Zo
Sfatti*
M. E. Church
Th«y were m arried at th« bride'« where she is attending school»
home at T a n g 'n t T hursday and I
-
[ w ill reside al D'aiu.
Mr. Max­
Miss Julia Hulse took a va­
w ell ia e m p lire d in a garage there
cation thanksgiving morning
R obert ¡’ ark ‘f pastor.
S unday school, ¡0-
P reaching, 11.
Metzger's shoe store adver­ to Sunday night and attended
J u n io r le ague, 3,
tised elsewhere sold more foot- a wedding at her home town.
E p w o rth league, 6:30
vear the latter part of last Grant« P««a, where ih« waa
¡’ reaching, 7:80.
James
Rector
P r a v e r - m t r t ii.x , Thursday, 7:30. v/ec,t th a n a l* o ther
Albany bridesmaid.
B.ble StuJy ïueaday, I.
¡houses com bined.
substituted at the drugstore.
wf r