Rural enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1924-1927, January 06, 1926, Page 4, Image 4

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RURAL ENTERPRISE
Alaaka Juneau Mina Break« Record'
Ao lodspoadsot—Not neutral—new«- J Janeau. Alaaka—Thu Alaaka Junuau
paper, published «rely Weduesday,
gold mine broke all production rec­
ords during the year 1925, producing
12.193.496 worth of the yellow metal.
The Great Outdoors
*1 a year ia advance
Arrearages. 1 2 \c a montq
Death Take« Mother of Italy'» King.
Advertlaaiig, 20c an inch ; no diacoun
Bordlghera, Italy.— Margherita, be­
tor ume or space ; no charge for com loved queen mother of Italy, died at
aoeihon or r jaugea.
the royal caatle here after apparently
Sa T n ie foi faracrapbs.** te a line.
having won a brave fight agalnat
«•• adv «rua ng disguised aa news
pleural pneumonia.
Her aon. King
Victor Emmanuel, and other members
SCATTERG UN SHOTS
of the royal family were at the bed
■Ide when the end carni.
What our forefathers did
well we can probably do bet­
ter, and our posterity better
than we. The world moves.
Coming to Albany
Perhaps Mrs. Palmer could
not have died any quicker
without those doctors, but she
might have done it at less cost.
Dr. M ellenthin
D o e s N o t O p e r a te
W ill be at
Don’t know which is prefer­
able, death from cold, as in
eastern.cities, or from an auto­
mobile crash, as both there
and here.
HOTEL ALBANY
Wednesday, Jan. 27
Office houre 10 a. m. to 4 p. m.
O N E DAY ONLY
No man’s personal liberty is
so sacred that he ought to be No Charge for Consultatiou
permitted to get drunk and
menace the life and limb and Dr. Mellethliin is a regular graduate
in medicine and »urgery and la licensed
the property of his neighbor.
by Ihe slate of Oregon
He doe« not
When Mr. Fall boasted to
Mr. Magee that he had “learn­
ed how’’ he had some more
to learn that he had not
dreamed of. See the story
beginning on page 1,
Oh, Mr. Jardine! Did you
notice that the Chicago board
of trade gamblers jumped the
price of wheat nearly 100 pet
cent more than 5 per cent the
other day and the board did
nothing ubout it?
If one of our readers, stimu­
lated by Mr. McMillen’s arti­
cle on this page, produces
enough more food to supply
one or two of those who are
flocking from the farm to the
city, that will justify the cost
of publishing the essay.
Relief on many a farm can
be had sooner by courageous­
ly dealing with home problems
than by waiting for legislative
mills which, like those of the
gods, grind slowly, but unlike
them sometimes do not grind
fine enough, for use.
A Portland banker who
would like to be United States
senator declined to seek the
republican nomination because
the law restricts campaign ex­
penses to 10 per cent of the
salary of the position sought.
The nomination would cost
more than that and he refused
to evade the law by camou­
flaging part of his expenses.
Several others are either more
optimistic or less scrupulous.
Mr. Fall had a fall one fall,
or some other time of year,
after having boasted: "We
have learned how.” Now the
world can know how. He got
his money, but he lost his cabi­
net position and his friends
(except a few' crooks) and he
is not yet certain that he may
not go to prison. Any man
can learn how to make crook­
ed money, but not every man
is willing to pay the price, even
for $100,000. Perhaps Fall
wouldn’t be if he could start
over again. Perhaps when he
boasted that he had learned
Jiow he had not learned it all.
W hat’s the Matter
(Grain Income Less
With the Farmer?i I
Than Last Year
Why Has a Banker or a
Hodcarrier a Better
Average Income?
trouble.
Mrs. A. M. Ewan. Coquille, stomach
tiouble.
Robert Ziglmski, S jcio , atoiuaeh and
heart trouble,
John Rotb, Albany, adenoids and
tonsils
Mrs. M. L. Olsen, Portland, appendi-
ci.ia.
Remember above date, that con­
sultation on thin trip w ill be free
ami that his treatment is different
Married women must be accompanied
by their husbands.
Address; 211
Angeles. C«l.
Bradbury
bldg., Los
H a ll’s C a ta r r h
Medicine
a&Wlff
lid your system of Catarrh or Deafness
caused by Catarrh.
SoU 6y rfr-sfuf, /m> sw r SO ytm
F. J. C H E N E Y &. C O .. Toledo, Ohio
Despite Increased Production,
Total Value Is $708,000,*
000 Less.
crank case oil because It Is both cheap
and effective. Mix 1 per cent of
cresol or other standard disinfectant
with the waste oil and either dip or
spray the hogs, but do It thoroughly.
Repeat the treatment If necessary,
Keep treated hogs out of the sun for
a day to prevent sun scald.
Best Soy Bean Varieties
Named by Kansas Station
Your total is probably a pretty
sizable sum as compared w ith your
income for the last year. Aou can
see for yourself bow hard you can
afford to work toward bringing
about these improvements
A ll o f the.» helps w .ll require
tim e.
A t least two are very
uncertain. Is n ’t there a shorter
cut to increased income on your
farm?
I ca n't answer the question be­
cause I d o n 't know your farm nor
how you farm it.
There ie a shorter cut to bigger
ncomee for tw o-tbirds of the six
m illio n farmers in this country.
The average yield, in each
ristance below, is for five years,
1920-24, ss taken from government
reports. The other figure is the
yield that can be and Is reasonably J e ^ u o ^ h e « ' ^ . . '
were greatly
expected from land fa irly well above 1924.
Portland
adapted and fa irly well farm ed ; , The
potato
crop
100 000 000
-------------------
-------------------------
Wheat—
Big Bend
bluestem, 91.65;
The potato
'tlie not, as io u w ill see, unreason- j bughelg Iegg than ,n 1924 but ,tg value hard white, soft white and western
-
,
,
. . ' was estimated at 1605,327.000, c o m iwhite- »L61; hard
winter, northern
The average yield o
of f wheat is | pared wlth , 228>047>000 |n 1924
spring, 31.58; western red. 3157.
2 7 bushels per acre. From 111
Other crops which showed Increased
Hay—Alfalfa. 319.50®20 ton; valley
1» 25 bushels can reasonably be
values Include clover seed, dry beans,' timothy, 319®18.S0; eastern Oregon
xpected in most places from good sweet potatoes, hops, apples, pears, or timothy, 321 @22
a rm in g ; from 80 to 45 bushels in anges and cotton seed.
Butterfat—44c shippers' track.
ections of the northwest ; from
Eggs—Ranch, 26®30c.
15 10 20 bushels in spring wheat
Cheese— Prices f. o. b. Tillamook;
Crank Case Oil Used as
sections.
Triplets, 31c; loaf. 32c per lb.
Cure
for
Mange
in
Hogs
The average yield of corn 11
Cattle—Steers, good | 8.35@8.75.
Mur.ge In hogs, a parasitic skin dis­
28.4 bushels; 40 to 60 is common
Hogs — Medium to choice, |12.00®
ease, Is quite common and Is on the 12.75.
from fa irly good farm ing.
Rye, average yield, 14 bushels ; Increase, a recent survey Indicates,
Sheep— Lambs, medium to choice
Replies to questionnaires sent out to
reasonably good, 15 to 25.
312.50@14.25.
Oats, average 81.4 ; fa irly good, farmers all over Iowa last year esti­
mate that mange Is present on 80 per
40 to 55
Seattle.
cent of the farms and Is becoming more
Barley, average, 24.5 ; 50 to 60 Intense, states Dr. C. D. Rice, veteri­
Wheat— Soft white, western white,
is common.
Big Bend bluestem, 31.62; hard win­
nary, Iowa State college.
F laxseed, average, 8 bushels;
Loss from this affliction Is due to ter, western red, northern spring 31.58.
12 to 15 is easily possible.
lowered gains from feeding and also
Hay—Alfalfa. 326; D. C„ 328; tim­
Rice, average, 39 ; 40 to 60 w ill to the lower valuation placed on othy, 320; mixed hay, 924.
mangy hogs by tbe packer, because the
grow.
Butter—Creamery, 43® 47c.
Potatoes, average, 108 ; fair roughened skins detract greatly from
Eggs—Ranch, 38®40c.
the appearance of the meat. In severe
farm ing produces 150 to 800.
Hogs—Prime, 312.75® 13.00.
Sugar beets, average, 9.7 tous ; cases, carcasses have to be iklnoed
Cattle—Prime steers, 38.0008.50.
before they can be told at all. A
12 to 16 is fa ir ly good.
Cheese— Oregon fancy, 28c; Oregon
conservative estimate placet the an­
Clover and mixed hay, 1.4 tons
nual lota through reduced selling value standards 26c; Washington triplets
is uverago ; 2 tons is pretty good. of mangy hogs at 31.878.000 for the 28c.
The average dairy cow gives less states of Iowa. Nebraska, Minnesota
than 4000 pounds of m ilk a year. and the Dakotas.
Spokane.
Tne average ben lays 75 to 90 eggn
Yet mange can be easily and com­
Hogs—Good to choice, 312012.25.
a year. F a irly good eows yield pletely controlled by the use of waste
Cattle—Prime steers. 37.5008.00.
7000 to 8000 pouuds of m ilk and
the better heus lay 125 to 175 eggs I
2,000,000 Farmers Below Average
/
O ne.third of the approxim ately
six m illio n farmers in the couotrv I
produce less than average yelds ;
one-third grow o nly average, and ;
another th ird grow yields hatter
than the average. Then about 1
4,000,000 farm ers are growing!
only avenge yields or less
A |
great percentage o f these could
definitely increase their yields and
O ptician thereby th e ir incomes.
ALBANY
Profitable short cuts to better
OREGON
yields are generally neglected
Among these are seed selection,
••«d
testing,
seed treatm ent,
D ELBER T STARR
proper c u ltiv a tio n , proper crops,
Funeral Di rec tar and Licensed pest eradication, good breeding
Emhalmer
stock and efficient feeding metb
ode.
Brow nsville, Oregon
A voice says th a t i l a ll farmers
Call U. P STarPOBB, Halsey,
were to adopt the known methods
or D k l b k b t S t a r a Brownsville
of increasing th sir production
prices would q u ic k ly be borne
down by the surplus.
W R IG H T & C O .
A ll farmers are not going to
etart along good farm ing methods,
Funeral Directors
now or in the future. Human
W , L. W rig h t, H arrisburg
nature guarantees that.
Mrs. J. C. Bram w ell, Halsey
/¡!
/¡\ lots or more of
E. C. Meade, Op,„„„
H. Albro,
£ KERR’S OR FISHER'S EGG PRODUCER
/ft
Molasses in barrel lots.
» O. \V . 1 R I M
A
Modern
Barber Shop
Laundry sent Tuesday a
\gency Hub Cleaning Works
A B E S
P LA C E
TOSSING & TOSSING
LAW YERS
H a lse y and B ro w u sv illt
O regon
To meet the Increased demand for
marketing Information and aasistaaca,
L. R. Rrelthaupt. for six years county
agent of Malheur rounty. has been ap­
pointed specialist ln marketing and
economics on the staff of the exten­
sion service of the Oregon Agricultural
college.
The directorate of the Coos and
Curry fuir association at Myrtle Point,
where annual fairs are held, have de­
cided to open the baataeas affairs of
the organisation to the la vest lag pate­
lle la both COUB'te«
A m e ric a n E ag le
Fire Insurance Co.
Hay is worth just as much in storage as
you might get for it in case of fire. Th î
American f a s ta Fin- hw um toe o o m p tn n
u ill p.iv vm i H5% «4 tin« cash \n lu e in < us--|
of
loss by fire.
C. P. STAFFORD, Agent
£
Farm Crops Is Most Trouble­
some Problem Confront­
Washington, D. C.— W ith the Christ­
mas recess behind It. congress reas­
sembled Monday to remain dontlnnoue-
ly In session for probably six months.
AU of the major problems which
faced It when it first met a month ago
still are to be solved and new ones
are yet to be met.
W hile the world court Is the unfin­
ished business before the senate and
appropriation bills are the order ol
business in the house, the moel
troublesome problem confronting ad­
ministration leaders Is that of work
ing out some means of handling sur
plus farm crops.
Conferences looking to this end have
been called for this month by Secre
tary Jardine, but meanwhile members
of the Iowa congressional delegation
will Introduce surplus crop bills and
seek immediate hearings before the
house agriculture committee.
Although the world court has right
of way ln the senate, It probably will
be displaced temporarily by the Nye
case, ln which Is Involved the legal
right of the governor of North Dakota
to till a senate vacancy by appoint­
ment.
After disposing of the treasury and
postoffice appropriation bill the house
will take up a resolution proposing the
appointment of a joint congressional
commission to receive bids for the
Muscle Shoals power and nitrate plant
An Investigation which Is expected
to have far-reaching consequences will
be started during the week by the
house Interstate commerce commis­
sion. It will center around a resolu­
tion alleging manipulation of crude
rubber by the British colonial govern­
ments.
At the same time the senate Inter
stale commerce commission will be
gin hearings on the Gooding bill, which
would prohibit railroads from making
a greater charge for a short haul than
for a long haul.
London, U. S. Radios Are Exchanged
New Y o rk — An experiment of fat
reaching Importance In attempts t<
span the world by radio was partiallj
successful when music broadcastet
from Great Britain was picked up her«
and rebroadcasted back across the At
lantic in one-thirty-second of a seconc
IN T U B CIRCUll COURT of the Stae
of Oregon, in and for tbe
County of Linn
%
Attractive prices are given on half'ton
They T oy W ith
Farm Problems
ing Leaders.
A few of the hundreds of varieties
of soy beans have proved their value,
according to tests conducted by the
Kansas agricultural experiment station
In co-operative experiments with fann­
ers.
The Manchu. Huberlandt. Midwest,
and Morse varieties have given good
results for seed and pasture purposes.
Manchu Is an excellent Variety for
grain or pasture.
HaberlSndt Is a
heavy seed producer and suitable for
grain and pasture. Midwest is a good
preTi0U8 year, the estimated gross seed and pasture variety. Morse, while
value wag only $U 5 , >32i,000 compar adapted mainly for seed production.
Is also a good variety for hay. W il­
ed wRh $2 270 564 000 in 1924.
Wlnter wheat prodnctlon waa BearIy son Is an excellent variety for hny.
200.000,ooo bushels less than in 1924 Virginia Is distinctly a hay variety
and usually produces high yields.
and although the December 1 price Sabie produces a good quality of hay.
wag aomewhat higher
182B than
Soy beans, like other legumes, must
1924, the gross value of the crop was be supplied with the proper bacteria
9689,504,000 as compared with 1776,- In order to enable them to make a
normal growth on poor soils. The par­
227,000 ln the previous year.
Spring wheat, on the other hand, ticular kind of bacteria necessary for
showed an Increase ln gross value, be­ soy beans Is seldom If ever present ln
ing estimated at 9358,489,000 last year Kansas soils except where soy beans
have been grown. For this reason It
and 9344.560,000 ln 1924,
Is usually necessary to place the bac­
All other grain crops, Including oats, teria ln the fields where soy beans are
barley, rye, buckwheat and flax, but to be planted. This can be done by
not Including rice, showed decreases treating the seed with Inoculating ma
ln gross value ranging from 9615,000,- terlal which contains large numbers of
000 on buckwheat to 9155,000,000 on soy bean bacteria.
oats.
THE MARKETS
Potatoes were the outstanding ex
Washington, D. C.— Despite Increas­
ed production of grain In the United
States in 1925. the gross value of the
crop was 9708,0(10,000 less than In 1924,
the agricultural department announc­
ed.
The gross value of grain crops for
1925 wag $3,810,713,000, compared with
would increase if a ll of thee. $4,B1g,71«,000 the previous year,
things «sine a b o u t-lo w e r taxes.
The largegt d,,creaae wa, ln corn
fre ig h t rates, favorable ta riff revis. W hlle 2,9oo,581.000 bushels were pro­
ton and im proved m a rk etin g
compared wlth 2.232.526.000 the
Wheeler M c M ille n writes very
ite llig e n tly ou this subject for
Farm and Fireside and we here
pass along some of the things be
saye
Add up the am ount your iocome
operate for chronic appendicitis, gall
•tone«, ulcers of stomach, tonsils
adenoids.
He has to hie credit wonderful results
in diieaaes of the stomach, liver, bow­
els, blood, skin, nerves, heart, kidney«
bladder, lied wetting, catarrh, weak lungs,
rheumatism, sciatica, leg ulcers and rac­
ial ailments.
Below are the names of a few of hu
many satiafied patients in Oregon
Koas J. Aplin, Carson, Wash , nervous
trouble.
Mrs. Otto W ill, Jefferson, varicose
ulcer, leg.
M. Christianson, Albany.
bladder * m u * " ’
"Save the forests. Use sub­
stitutes for wood," say the e« Before or After Christmas
ment man and the maker of
paper cartons. “Save the saw­ K rydtoks are a deligh t to the eye
mill business. Use more wood 365 daye in the year.
and less substitutes,” say the
Ihe in v is ib le bifocals for peer
lumbermen. That is, “Every and fa r.
man for himself snd the devil
take the hindmost.”
.An automobile driver in
Portland ran down a couple of
girls and complained : "They
saw me coming and didn’t
jump." A few days ago an­
other, whose car was wrecked
by a railroad locomotive, said :
“ I blew my horn and the en­
gineer paid no attention." It
is unfortunate that such driv­
ers sometimes take worth-while
people to death with them.
W here Bread, Meat, Clothing, Health and Vigorous Humanity are Produced
INEFFICIENCY, MY BOY
Uncle Sam and Johnny Bull
Specialist
have got into a rubber game
for enough to begin to talk in Internal Medicine for the
saucily to each other about it.
past twelve years
JAN. to* 1925
In the matter of the applies- )
tion of
Seth S. Haves. Daniel J. Hayes,
Frank Hayes and Gertrude
Kentland to regiiter the title
to the following described land,
to w it .
The cast half of the south­
east quarter of section twelve Notice
(12) in township fourteen (14)
aouth of range four (4, weet of
the Willamette meridian, con­
taining 80 acres, more or lea-,
tituated in Linn county, state
of Oregon,
Against Otia F. Neal and all
whom it may concern,
Defendants. )
To Otia P. Neal aud all whom it may
concern, defendants:
Take uotice that on the 4th dav of
December, 1925, an application waa filed
by Mid Seth S. Hayas, Daniel J, Hayes,
Prank Haves and Gertrude reutland, in
the circmt eourt of the «tateof Oregon in
and for Linn county, for initial registra­
tion of the title to the land above de­
scribed. Now unless you appear on
or before the 6th day of Pebruary, 192»,
ami show cause why such application
«hall not be granted, the same will be
taken at confessed and a decree will be
entered according to the prayer of the
application and you w ill ba forerer
barred from disputing the Same.
Witness my hand and the leal of
Mid circuit court this 2nd day of Jsau-
nary. 1926.
R M Russell,
—-*—
County Clerk and ea-officlo
| Seal | ( lerk of the Circait Court of
“ '•
the State of Oregon for Lina
Couaty
Hill, Marks A McMahan,
P. O. addrest Albany. Oregon,
Attorney« lor Applicant.
NO TIC E
of Hearing of Final Acsoant
Notice ia hereby given that the final
aceount of Alwilda Wilaoa as adiniatra-
trix ol the estate of Bert M. Wilson,
lecsassd, has been filed ia the County
jurt of Linn Couaty, Stats of Oregon
and that tha 8th day of February, 1926,
at the hour of 1* o'clock a. m., has been
duly appointed by said Coart for the
hearing of objections to said final
account and the settlement thereef, at
which time any person interested ia
«aid estate may appear ard fils objec­
tions thereto in writing and contest the
same
Dated sad first published January 6,
1626-
Alwilda Wilson,
Administratrix of ths Estate.
TuaaiaS ATaaaing, Attya for Admrx,
«