Rural enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1924-1927, January 13, 1926, Page 4, Image 4

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    JAN. 13. 1*25
n v sn t.
t
RURAL ENTERPRISE
half of tbs wheat they harvested. Io
addition to farmers' holdings much
wheat Is held In the country by deal
ore and by mills against flour they
bave told.
Oa the basis of a 70,000,00-bushel
J1 a year io advance
crop
In Oregon. Washington and north
Arrearages 12*4c a montq
am Idaho, the supply in first hands
Advertising, 20c an inch ; no diacoun
Bow amounts to about 28,000,000
Iter tim e or apace ; no charge (or coni
bushels
Of this quantity probably
poaiUou orciatiges
13,000,000 bushels will be milled or re
la T a l d foi Paragraphs." ic a lta
Ma advartla ng disguised aa nawa
qulred (or seed, and It la estimated
that California will take 2,000.000
W M A R E A L L " F A L L G U Y S ’ bushels between now and the new
crop. This will leave some 13,000,000
bushels to be exponei r r shipped east
W e ere told th a t fed eral taxe
from
the northwest.
have been cut to the bone and
A * lr.de»«ndsnt—N o t n » ut»sl— nsws
paper, published eveiy Wednesday,
a»r Wm. H. *
th a t
moat of the excess burden i
th a t lin e ie laid on us by the slat
and counties. T h is is not true
e x tra v a g a n t as are th e state end
'< aom e'of the lesser governm ents.'
T h e Coolidge a d m in is tra tio n ha
b ro u g h t
some retrenchm ents,
ii
oo-operation w ith the young budget
burean, but the skin of the evi
h a t h a rd ly been p in -p ricke d .
T h e arm y and navy
eosts
mor»
th an all other tax -ea tin g lye te n
and is now , as sver, asking for
increased ap p ro priatio n s. Its sound
and fu ry ere vary little
needed in
tim e of peace, and by a cordia
co-operation w ith o ther nations ii
tbe league we m ight m ake perma
nen tpeace moré probable.
T h e num ber o f c iv ilia n s on
g overnm ent
pay
ro ll,
the
m atead ul
d eclin in g , has inoreased iu a yen
and a h a lf from 544,671 to 564,
718. th e c iy il service .commission
reports.
Senator
Davey
of
O hio
says
•* F o r Sevan years 1 Lavs observed
tbs departm ents
and
bureaus o
the governm ent at W ashington a
close range, having bad oflicia
business w ith nearly a ll of lham
I am sim p ly ap p alled at the loal
log , lndifferenoe
T h e re
and
inefficiency
are thousands
upon tbou
eaode of uanecesary employes and
endlsas
effort.
d uplication
Ih a r e
is
an
of
alleged
inexcusable
waste of h a lf a b illio n
y e a r.”
Senator
d o llars s
D avey has introduced
a b ill to empower the president ti
suepeud tbe o ivil service law , ooh
solídate or abolish departm ents,
bureaus and oommisyions aud fin
a ll needles personnel.
E v e ry dead-w eight hanger-on is
under
the
eenatqr
or
protection
of
some
some oogressmaa
and
strong pressure would be required
te
pees a law g ivin g the
president
power to kick tha lóafera out.
M r . Coolidge, a few years ago,
would have been just the m an
for
th e jo b , but a few years of im m e r.
slon m p rac tic al politics may have
spoiled h im for it.
T h e g ra ft
a tla c k td , am ou n tin g
to 15 t year for each of us, or $25
for
a fa m ily o f
five,
is
by
no
u isau i the heaviest of th e tribute»
taken from u i w ith o u t, re tu rn
by
preeeut-day p o litic a l methods.
The U s lssy S tu d y club does not
do much blow ing o f its own bora,
but it q u ie tly
accomplishes
more
io
towns
W ith o u t it we
have no p ublic
c irc u la tin g lib r a r y — an institu tion
tb a t does not m erely
furnieh
am ussm sut for otherwise idle hours
but
which
is o ften consulted
fe r useful and needed in fo rm atio n
— and
tha c lu b jre q u e n tly devotes
funds to w o rth y p u b lic or teiu i-
p ub lio needs, as instanced iu this
week's report.
" K eeping everlaeting ly at it
brings success." Read the story
of lbs T eas e g ir l, O pal Cade, ou
page 7, and
sail
In to
your
life
problem s w ith renewed vigor.
WHEAT
HOLDINGS
LARGE
Party Per Cent ef Northwest W tw il
Crop Io Untold.
6
Portland. Or.— Forty per cent of th<
wheat crop of the Paqlflc northwest
to stilt unselil, according to report»
received from the different section« '
la the Wasco and Morrow districts ol
Oregon aot over 10 per cent Is left
la farmers’ hands. Vmattlla county I
Oregon has about IS per rent of th» i
crop unsold.
In the W alla Walls
aountry It Is estimated that one third
of the crop Is left
Throughout the
Palonee, Camas Prairie and pacts ot
She Big Band farmers tllU own abont
W h e r e B read, M eat, C lo th in g , H e a lth a n d V ig o ro u s H u m a n ity a r e P r o d u c e d
Corn Belt Griefs
W ould Break
O n the Right Soil
T old to Solons
Strangle Hold
Potatoes W ill Pay
B u t N o t W ith o u t B ra in s
a n d G u m p tio n o n th©
P a r t o f G ro w e rs
Washington, D. C.— The corn belt
farmers brought their grievances to
Washington Monday and both the
Coolidge administration and 'he lead-
ers In congress bestirred themselves
to provide some method of farm relief.
Secretary Jardine of the agriculture
department, who recently Indorsed In
principle a surplus marketing bill
drafted by western members of con-
gress called into conference a group
of agricultural editors and others
prominent In farm organizations and
sought tbelr advice a t to details of
the troublesome surplus crop problem,
The house agriculture committee
was called together to hear the opin-
Ions of other westerners, and the sen-
ate agriculture committee, at its firet
meeting since congress convened, be­
gan to piece out the beginings of a re­
lief program of its own.
Before his conference with the farm
editors got under way. Secretary Jar
dine went to tbe capltol to appear as
the first witness before the house agri
culture committee. He gave his ap­
proval to the McNary-Haughen bill, to
establish a division of co-operative
marketing in the department of agri­
culture
C e rtifie d eeed potatoes in some
seclions of Or.-gon are b rin g in g a
4<>od profit to growers. C a lifo rn a
wants them a ll and is w illin g to
pav a good price.
Potatoes graded and lib e le d in
com pliance w ith law are also in
dem and and have already had a
favorable effect on tbe rep u tatio n
of Oregon spuds, w hich had fellen
from its form er pre-eminence to a
och
low level.
B u t o n ly in a sm all
p a rt of tbe state is the law being
W ill be at
obeyed. Ungraded and unlabeled
potatoes, p ra c tic a lly unsalable in
Portland, are m arketed in other
parts and have a depressing effect
Wednesday, Jan. 27
on the price. T h e law requires
Office hours 10 a. m. to 4 p. m.
tbe state m a rk et ageut to enforce
it.
I t has been euggf ated th a t a
few $50 fines or term s in ja il would
increase respect for the law and
the price of potatoes and leave
a lot of culls to be fed to farm er»’
pigs and chickens, instead of being
.th ro w n away and cursed about in
Dr. M ellettihin is a regular graduate
in medicine and surgery anil is licensed town,
THE M A R K E T * ,
B. F - D a n a of W ash ing to n State
by tlie slate of Oregon
(Ie does rot
iperate for chrouic appendicitis, gall college
says
Ona m ay not
stones, ulcers of stomach, tonsils or reasonably expect certified seed
Portland
adenoids.
Wheat— Big Bend bluestem, Hard
potatoes
to
be
e
n
tire
ly
disease
free
He bas to his credit wonderful results
white, BSt Baart. sort white and west
in diseases of the stomach, liver, bow- How ever, the am ou u t o f disease
■la, blood, skin, nerves, heart, kidneys, has been reduced aa far aa possible ern white, $1.60; hard winter and
.»ladder, bed wetting, catarrh, weak lungs, by frtq u e n t inspections and rm oval northern spring, 31.57; western red.
rheumatism, sciatica, leg ulcers and rec­
»1.5«.
of plants which are not norm al
tal ailments.
Hay—Alfalfa, 319.50@20 ton; valley
" V ary often a certain s tra in of
Below are the names o f a few of his
nany satisfied patients in Oregon
seed w ill be successfully grown timothy, 319@19.50; eastern Oregon
Rose J. A p lin , Carson, Wash., nervens under conditions of
ab u nd an t timothy. 321@22.
trouble.
Butterfat— 42c shippers’ track.
moisture and lower tem peratuae
Mrs. Otto W ill, Jefferson, varicose
Eggs—Ranch ,26@29c.
where tbe same seed w ill fa il when
ilcer, leg.
Cheese—Prices f. o. b. Tillamook;
M. Christianson, Albany,
bladder guiw n under tbe try in g conditions
rouble.
of tem perature
found in
tbe Triplets, 31c; loaf, 32c per lb.
Mrs. A. M. Ewan, Coquille, stomach w arm er parts of the co u n ttry,
Cattle— Steers, good 38.35®8.75.
trouble.
Hogs — Medium to choice, 312 00®
'
I
t
is
reasonable
to
expect
th
a
t
Koliert Ziglinski, bcio, stomach and
seed tb a t is grown w ith the care 13.25.
heart trouble,
John Roth, Albany, adenoids and uecessary to make it elig ib le for
Sheep— Lambs, medium to choice,
tonsils.
o ertifiid atio n w ill give superior |13@1«.
Mrs. M. L. Olsen, Portland, appendi-
results, T b e grower expects and
ilie.
Seattle.
ra re ly fails to harvest larger yields
Remember above date, tb a t con­
Wheat—Soft white. Big Bend blue-
from certified th an from olbet
sultation on thia trip w ill be free
stem, western white, 3160; western
seed.”
and tb a t bis treatm en t is different.
red, northern spring, 3156; hard win­
E
.
M
.
Summers
of
Ray
couuty,
I Married women must be accompanied
Mo. according to C ap p er’s F arm er, ter, 31 57.
by1 th eir husbands.
Hay— Alfalfa. 326; D. C., 328; tim­
Address; 211 Bradbury bldg., Los has ju s t sold bis 4U-acre petato
Angeles, Cal.
crop for $12,000.
H e bad 225 othy. 320; mixed hay, 324.
Butter—Creamery, 49c.
buahole.
Eggs— Ranch, 38®40c.
T b e crop was growu on sandy
Hogs— Prime, 313.00® 13.25.
loam shat bad been in clover the
two preceding years.
T h e ground
Cattle— Prime steers. 38.OO@S.SO.
Cheese— Oregon fancy, 28c; Oregon
was plowed last fa ll and doable
rid your system o f Catarrh or Deafness
disked in spring.
H e attributes standards 26c; Washington triplets
caused by Catarrh.
his y ie ld p a rtly to tbe use of the 28c.
drttgg ,* » fo t eoot 40 M r ,
P. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. Ohio beat certified northern-grow n eeed.
Spokane.
T h e seed was planted M arch 20
Hogs—Good to choice, 312.35®12.50.
and tbe crop given thorough c u lti­
vation u n til tbe m iddle o f June.
Cattle—Prime steerg, 37.60®8.00.
It
was dug tbe first week of
W e extend greetings to our pat­
Rev. C. T. Cook gave the
August.
rons and th a n k them for their
T h a t is tbs kin d of soil for Enterprise a call when he and
patronage.
potatoes.
. H ere iu Western Oregon
, . his wife and son Claude came
We shall be pleased to weloome
hem in our new Rtore and O ptical tf you have it you can grow a b-g to the Wesley funeral,
crop of feed between plow iug and _ _ _ _ _
Parlors at U ll W est First street
potato p la n tin g by sowing d w arf
(n e x t door to W estern U u io n ) on
Essex rape on tbe fa ll plow ing ,
Feb. 1, 1926.
Then ia a good tim e ,
too, to
ap p ly stable m anure, if you hav-
it.
I t w ill increase tbe rape yield I jjj,'
and w ill be so mellowed by s u m - ¡ 3 ?
Dr. Mellenthin
Specialist
in Internal Medicine for the
past twelve years
D
N o t O p e r a te
HOTEL ALBANY
ONE DAY ONLY
No Charge for Consultatiou
H a i r * C a ta r r h
Medicine
For 1926
j A p p ro p r ia tio n
j
r
$7.000.000
|
j
Bill,
Carrying
for Next Fiscal
Year is Approved.
Washington, D. C.— The reclamation
section of the Interior department ap
| proprtatlon bill, carrying approximate
1 ly J7.000.000 for reclamation work for
the next fiscal year, was approved by
the house.
Western members offered a number
of amendments, but the majority ol
them were rejected.
No serious conflict over the land set'
tlement and other restrictions written
Into the bill developed on the floor
This battle has been reserved for a
later dale, when the measure reaches
the senate.
Western senators have been consid­
ering the action they should take and
a movement is on foot to rewrite the
limiting provisions under which they
say it is hopeless to expect any nety
project to be built for a long time to
come.
The need for legislation which will
mean real development instead ol
locked up appropriations will he urged
on President Coolidge, and some of the
republican leaders of both senate and
house are said to be Inclined to believe
the time has come to do something
about the complaints that reclamation
is being strangled.
Revision Sought.
Undismayed by the heavy voting
odds against them, the democratic
members of the house are redoubling
their efforts to break down th * present
republican tariff.
Many tariff revision bills have been
Introduced and referred to commit
tees.
One by Representative Hull, demo­
crat, Tennessee, would repeal the 10
per cent levy on Imported rubber tires
A aeries by Representative Weller,
democrat. New York, would restore
the old democratic Underwood rates
on livestock, grain and poultry pro­
ducts.
1
A bill to permit manufacture and
sale of 2.75 per cent alcoholic bever­
ages was Introduced by Mrs. Florence
P. Kahn, republican representative ol
California.
Sesk Further Tax Cut.
Tax reduction of 3500,000,000 this
year, or approximately 3170,000.000
more than provided by the hyust
revenue bill, was proposed in a pro­
gram drafted by the democratic mem
bera of the senate finance committee
W hile accepting the reduction In
tbe maximum surtax rate from 40 tc
20 per cent, tbe plan announced by
Senator Simmons of North Carolina
ranking £ anocrat on the committee
would Increase the reductions voted
by the bouse for Incomes between
322.000 and 3100.000.
The senate finance committee, by a
Attractive prices are given on half-ton
mer tb a t it w ill n o t cause potato j
Y o u can get tw o crops of lush / | \ l o t s
several tim es the
size of H a ls ey .
p ro b a b ly should
The Great Outdoors
C om ing to Albany
good th an m any s im ila r o rg an is a­
tions
tit lu t i m m
rape to balance a bay ratio n for
stock, t hen plow in M a y , make
tb e soil fine and p la n t potatoes the
last week iu M ay o i the firat in
June
Ruu a lig h t spike-tooth
barrow over them w eekly u n til
they are seven inthes high anti
tbsra w ill be U tile need of figh ting
O ptom etrists and M snufscturing weeds.
Eno a c u ltiv a to r between
Opticians
the row* w eekly and after every
ALBANY
O R E G O N ra in , u n til tbe tops spread too
fa r , to keap'tbe surface loose and
a d m it a ir to tbe eoil.
There ia no
need of " h i l l i n g u p " potatoes
DELBERT STARR
S tan d ard varieties, lik e tbe B u r­
Funeral Director and Licensed b ank, treated aa above, w ill be
ripe in tim e for digging.
A ram
Embalmer
w ill not b arm them In such to il,
and if lead tnbers are selected from
B row n sville, Oregon
tbe beet h ills a 300-buehel yield
or better m ay be expected.
Tw o years of other products
hould come between crops ol
potatoes.
WRIGHT & CO
Funeral Directors
W . L . W rig h t, Harrisburg
Mrs. J. C. B ram w e ll, Halsey
Modern
Barber Shop
Lanndrv tent Tuesdays
Kgtncy Hub Cleaning Work«
A B ES PLACE
The retting and scutching capacity
of the state flax plant at the Oregon
state penitentiary will be doubled this
year, according to conclusions reach­
ed at a conference of persona inter-
rated In the success of the Industry
at Salem It was decided to continue
artificial drying experiments, add a
night crew to reclean seed and operate
state hullers during the present year !
Approximately 2300 acres of flax will i
bo contracted for in 1926.
m O fC
of
M»
I 2»
Meade & Albro
O f
KERR’S OR FISH ER ’S EGG PRODUCER
jp
A
Z |\
/|\
aaa
Molasses in barrel lots.
O. w . F R U M
strictly party vote of 10 to seven,
threw out the 3500.000.000 tax cat pro
poaals ot the democratic minority and
wrote Into the bill the complete repub
llcan schedule of normal and aurtai
rates as pasted by the house.
Senator Simmons announced h<
would make a fight on the senate flooi
for the boosting of the 20 per cent sur
tax minimum to 25 per cent becausi
the republicans turned down hia pro­
posal for increasing the rate In tha
320,000 to 3100,000 bracket.
Reclamation Loss
M ay Be Forgiven
Washington, D. C.— The w riting off
of 314,317.160 as a deficit on 19 reclam­
ation projects was recommended to
congress by tbe board ot adjustment
and survey of the interior department.
The board also recommended that 312.-
785.137 be estimated as a probable
loss.
The losses were attributod to the
construction of irrigation works on
land naturally infertile, to inadequate
water supply, and to other causes.
The largest estimated loss was on
the Newlanda project In Nevada,
where It was recommended that 34,-
536,396 be charged off as not recover­
able and 3813,264 be estimated as a
possible loss. The M ilk river project
in Montana was second on tha list
with a definite loss of 31.946,189 and a
probable loss of 31,878,656 more. On
the North Platte project in Nebraska,
Wyo., the probable loss was fixed at
32,837,864. of which 3237,877 was defin­
ite.
The fourth was the Uncompahgre
project In Colorado, where the definite
loss was estimated at 31.365.427 and
31,436,155 more was given aa probable.
Other combined definite and prob­
able losses given were: Boise project,
Idaho, 3496.369; King H ill project,
Idaho, 3618,982; Klamath project, Ore­
gon and California. 3233,395; M ini­
doka.
Idaho, 3141,959; Okanogan.
Wash., 3820,173; Umatilla, Ore., 3L-
539.028; Yakima. Wash., 3381.192.
G. W. Ross of Albany has
sold the “Golden Glow” con­
fectionery store, lunch count­
er and soft drink department
to Miss Jenne Freerksen. He
is still making candy.
IN T U B C lR C U ll COURT of the St te
of Oregon, in nnd for tbe
County of Linn
In the matter of the applies-1
tion of
Seth S. Haves. Daniel J. Hayes.
Frank Hayes and Gertruds
Kentland to register the title
tethe followiag described land,
to w i t ;
The east half of tbe south­
east quarter of section twelve Notice
(12, in township fourteen (14)
south of range four (4, west of
the Willamette meridian, con­
taining 80 acres, more or lees,
situated ia Linn county, state
of Oregon,
Against Otis F. Neal and all
whom it may concern,
Defendants.
To Otis P. Neal aud all whom it may
concern, defendants:
Take uotice that oa the 4th dav of
December, 1925, an application waa filed
by laid Seth S. Hayes, Daniel J. Hayes,
Frank Havel and Gertrude Kentland, ia
the circnit eourt of tbe state ef Oregon ia
and for Linn county, for initial registra­
tion of the title to the land shoe» de­
scribed. Now unless you appear en
or before the 6th day of February, 1914.
and show cause why such application
| shall not be granted, the tame will be
| taken as confessed and a decree will be
entered according to the prayer of the
application and you will be forever
burred from disputing the same.
Witness mv hand and the seal of
said circuit court this 2nd day ef Janu-
uary, 1926.
R M Russell,
■— —
County Clerk snd ea-oScto
| Seal | Clerk of the Circnit Court ef
—■» —
the State of Oregon for Linn
County.
Hill, Marks A McMahan,
P O. address Albany. Oregon,
Attorneys for Applicant.
A m e ric a n E a g le
Fire Insurance Co.
I la y is w o rth j u s t a s m u c h in s to r a g e as
y o u m ig h t g e t fo r it in c a s e o f fire. T h ?
A iiie ii ¡oi E l g i e Firt* I n s u r a n c e r o m p a n
will p a y y o u
of t h e c a s h v a lu e in M iftl
o f lo s s b y fire.
C. P. STAFFORD, Agent
NOTICK
of Hearing of Final Account
Notice ia hereby given that the final
account of Alwilda Wilton as sdiniatra-
trix of the »state of Bert M. Wilton,
deceased, has been filed ia the Cenaty
Court of Linn County, Stata of Oregon
anil that the 8th day ef February, 1926,
at the hour of I * o'clock a. m., has been
duly appointed by said Court for the
bearing of objections to said final
account and the settlement thereof, nt
which time any person interested ia
said estate may appear and file objec­
tion! thereto in writing and coateat the
same
Dated and firat published January 6,
1626.
Alwilda Wilson.
Administratrix of the Estate.
TustinS ATnssmg. Attva. for Adtnrs,
TUSSING & TUSSING
LAW YERS
Halaey and Brownivilla
Oregon