Rural enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1924-1927, April 28, 1926, Page 4, Image 4

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    FACE «
KLRAL ENTERPRISE
An
APRIL 2»
RURAL ENTERPRISE
Independent—Nut
neutral—n ew s­
paper, published eveiy Wednesday,
The Great Outdoors
they will <•» here that dewauded
referendum, and they will gat
in the neck.
Where Bread, Meat, Clothing, Health and Vigorous Humanity are Produced
«r Wn. M. UUttlCLtM
Jan. 1 last stats and local gov
eminent« owad 111,630,000,000, an
11 a year in advance
Arrearages. 12XC ■ monti' iocraase of over ona-tbird io tbres
Advertising, 20c an inch; nodiacoun years and a charge against homes
Sor time ur space ; no charge for coin
and farms.
position or c.iatiges.
l a " P a id -fo r P aragrap hs." le a lina
sr* a d v e rtis in g disguised as news.
GOOD BY
This M tba last issue of the
Bnterprise to ha published by me
1 have been with it four years and
nine mouths, which is loDger tbsu
it remained in tbs bands of any i f
its previous publishers.
The Halsey community bas my
aim era thanks for the way it bah
stood by me in adversity and in
prosperity in my effort to produce
the beet weekly iu the smallest
newspaper town in Linn county
1 bave enjoyed tba experience,
but failirig eight compels me to
seek a sphere less trying on thc
eyes.
Hugh L. Almon, the new pro
prletor, bas bad experience in th>
newspaper pnbliabing business am
is a good printer and man of good
character. I bespeak for him th>
same loyal patronage I havi
enjoyed and am aura he will g i'e
satisfaction to readers and adver
isers.
Accounts due for subscriptions
are payable to Mr. Almon and t<
to tboae who have paid in advance
ha will send the paper until theii
subscriptions expire. All dues foi
advertising up to May 1 are pay
able to ma or to him on my
account.
Wm. H. Wheeler.
9CATTERGUN SHOTS
'lemperanoe people do not want
• boozer representing them in the
senate, even if he does promise to
support prohibition measures.
Read, on this page, what Suusi i
says of “ the new farmer of th«
west.” Are you one of these new
farmers? They are coming frou
schools a ad colleges, and they an
not waitiug for congress to pull
them out of a hole.
Theodore Roosevelt says the
prohibition law canuot be enforced
unless it is made milder. That
sounds not much like the Thsedore
Roosevelt of the big stick.
In the republican sanatoria1
campaign in Oregon tbe wets have
let loose a Sandblast that the)
hope will so erode the prohibition
wall that more kick will get
trough into wine ami beer. Thus
U tility
Investments
are
Protected
by
I K err’s
Chick Starting Milk Mash
Halsey is on tba longest super
Baby Chick Scratch
power line in Ilia world, told
Egg Producer
about on page 1 in an article from
Sunset. Halsey is also ou tba
Triangle Egg Maah
longest paved highway in the
world. Halsey is in the state that
Attractive prices on Shell, Bone Meal
Aral taxed gaaoline to build roads
and Fine and Coarse Grit
Neealy every other state is follaw
ing our lead iu this. Oregou is ■
live state and bag taken the lead
iu many other moves that are grow
iag popular elsewhere. Halsey is
the happy medium betweeh tbe
dissolute big city and the humdrum
oackwoods. It is the center of i
prosperous farming community, Notice tbe steady growth of the
on the main lioea of rail and auto
373,000 FARMERS HELPED
Albany
travel and electric light aud power
Federal Loan Official Dtllvera 8peech
wires, with grade and high schools Creamery
Association
at Spokane.
and within ferty msnutes of tbe Number of pounds ol butter nianufac
Spokane, W ash.—More than 373,000
tnred in tba last five years:
state agricultural college.
farmers In tba United States have
O. w . F R I M
Your Home Paper
A professor in the college
^^^school of journalism writes:
” The cititens of Halsey have
reason to feel pride in their com*
munity paper and I trust it may
thrive and become increasing! v
able to give them the service t h'-l
will belp them in tbeir work of
upbuilding tbe district.”
Are you giving loyal support to
your home paper?
Halsey
Rural Enterprise
8 pages weekly
T year for"! dollar
1931........... 414,205
1922 ...........520,902
1923 ........... »26,402
1924........... 627,107
19z5........... 706,7S2 borrowed money through the federal
farm Ioan banke etnee their establish­
During Mereb this year we man* ment la farms. Many of the larger
ufaotured 9500 pounds more than the federal farm Ioan board at Wash­
ington, D. C., told representatives of
in March last year.
farm loan organisations In Washing
ton. Oregon, Idaho and Montana serv­
ed by the 9pokane bank. In a meeting
here. More than »1.000.000,000 has
been loaned to them, at rates of 5
(Sunset for May)
and 6H per cent. In addition, he said
The other day the treasurer < f the federal hanks hare standardized
the Californf* Prune and Apricot farm mortgage loans, which In some
escalation signed 11,000,000 wi rth sections formerly drew as high as
10 per cent.
ot checks, payable mostly to
Delegates from the four Northwest­
farmers ef the Santa Clara valley. ern states also reported home move­
The association bad already paid ments In farms. Many of the larger
members ever $6,000,000 on farms are being divided and sold to
neighbors and In other instances farms
the 1925 crop.
are being blocked together and then
The interesting thiug about it is sold In advantageous units
The Successfni Farmer is
a Business Man
Th* management of most large, we)l-wstablisbed publie utility
companies is in the hands of executives and engineers with long
etpsristice in servieg the publio.
Sound management means high.class service, reasonable rates,
pleasant relatoins with the public.
The Mountain States Power company is in the hands of men
who are well known as earnest, conscientious executives whose
first thought is “ the best possible service at the lowest possible
rates.”
I nder their guidance the i-per-cent preferred shares have
established a long reaord of uninterrupted dividends.
I.et us give you eomplete details of your
opportunity tor sound investment in this
company.
Mountain States Power Securities Company
Office
Mountain States Power (©
Albany
Corvallis
C ltU fa O r e v ,
Independence Junotion City ueu. nan
Dallas
Springfield
Eugene
Stayton
Complete line of
Albers Brothers’and Brewster's
C H IC K E N F E E D
Fleece Twine and Wool Sacks
T. J. Skirvin Seed (°
More Farm Relief
Piffle to Corne
Washington, D. C. — The house
agriculture committee voted to amend
the Haughen farm relief bin by de­
ferring for two years the imposition
of an equalization fee on basic agricul­
tural commodities to be used to stabil­
ize prices.
Chairman Haughen announced that
It also had been agreed to in crease
a revolving fund proposed In his bill
from »250,000.000 to $350,000.000.
Under the measure as amended,
agricultural prices would be maintain­
ed at the world market quotations
plus the import tariff on each pro­
duct. This would be accomplished the
first two years by the revolving fund,
which would come out of the treasury.
At the end of two years the equaliza­
tion fee would be levied automatically
on the first sales of wheat, cotton,
corn, cattle and swine.
The Haugen bill Is dne of three
measures the committee has ordered
reported. The others are the Curtlss-
Aswell commodity marketing bill and
the Tlncher bill, supported by Secre­
tary Jardine, which would afford gov­
ernment credits to co-operatives.
The amendment was accepted by
the middle western farm organizations
supporting the corn belt plan, the
main features of which Were embodied
in the Haugen bill. In a statement
sent to the committee their repre­
sentatives explained they had not
sought the change, but if the com­
m ittee considered it desirable, they
would not oppose it.
tbe way the new farmer of the
west does business. He has made
THE MARKETS
farming a business He buys bis
farm or orchard fertilizer, liis
Portland
insecticides and his cultivators,
Wheat—Big Bend bluestem, »1.48;
invests in his business just as does
any other business man. He joins hard white. »1.47; soft white and west­
with bis neighbors in marketing, ern white, »149; hard winter and
and bas his selling dene by the northern spring. »1.49; western red,
»1.42.
best experts he oan hire. Farm*
Hay—Alfalfa, »18.50019 ton; valley
ing with him is business, big busi­
ness, scientifically msneged. Tbe timothy, »190 19.50; eastern Oregon
The proverbial "goose chase" has
facts indicate that the new farmer* timothy, »21 50022,
become a reality on Blalock wheat
ef the west is a mighty successful' BUtterfat—41c shippers' track.
Eggs—Ranch. 24®20c.
ranches near Arlington. The geese
business man.
Stops when time expires.
Send in names of friends who
io not take the paper. Be sure
and give postoftices and rura
routes correctly.
Twenty*Ave weeks is long enough
time in wbicr* to get acquainted.
A week or two is not. Therefor
we offer the Enterprise 25 week»
for 26 cente to any person within
fifteen miles of Halvey who is not
George Shims, Japanese potato
acquainted with it.
king, recently died in California,
A friend of the Enterprise worth $3,000,000, *11 mads iu
and of Halsey oilers to stand giowing potatoes, largely on leased
tfie cost of fifty such subscriptions. lends. He knew bow to grow
Send in names and addresses of potatoes end “ relief ” laws didn’t
friends within 15 miles of Halsey worry hies.
who ilo not know the Enterprise.
A cow belonging to Henry Keizer
If we receive the names before tbe
list Is filled your friends will git of Gates died tba other day after
the paper
ailing for a year and in her atom-
ash was found a gopher snake IS
inches long, while attached to her
25 weeks F R E E
liver were four blood leeches five
inches long, one .( them still alive.
Dishonest oom mission merchants
are not tba only scoundrels who
rob farmers. Beccuse of alleged
excessive damage from tbe sugar*
moth borar ia 1925 the factory
buying cane from a Louisiana
planter insisted on paying its.
than th« regular price. It waa
shown by tbs records of tbe gov­
ernment bureau of eotomologv
that the damage dons by tbi<
High Standards of Executive
Management
We want
your
Nsect on
the p lantation
in quts*
tion during the period specified
was no worse than usual, and (hat
the cane of this particular plantar
waa not unuaually damagad, to be
received the fnli price (or geod
cane.
" » :« ( ia now running in atl canals
of the Warm Springs Irrigation sys­
tem. Warm weather has mada the
water needed.
Attempt to collect 3» rents from
James Jackson, a farmer, for a tuber
ruler test of his row, resulted In a law
suit for Washington county. Jarkaon
and his wife filed suit to enjoin the
county from enforcing a Ilea against
hia property for the amount Involved
They rharge that the law enacted by
the last legislature purporting to
authorize counties to levy thia rharge.
unconstitutional.
Sheep Shearing
Hava am clipped. See Charles
Kutsch, 31 miles southwest of
ialsay, route 1, or phons Albany
10F31.
Cheese—Prices f. o. b. Tillamook;
Triplets, 27H e; loaf. 28He per lb.
Cattle—Steers, good. »898.75.
Hogs — Medium to choice, »12®
13 90
Sheep—Lambs, medium to choice.
»11012
Seattle.
W heat—Soft white, »1.50; western
white. »1.49; hard winter, western red.
»14»; northern spring. ,142; Btg
Bend bluestem »1.47.
Hay—Alfalfa. »2« timothy. ,23
timothy P 8., »20; do. mlaed. »26
Batter—Creamery. 39® 41c.
Eggs— Ranch. 28®31e.
H ogs—Prime. »13 85® 14 10
Cattle— Prime steers. »8 2608.7».
Cheese—Oregon triplets, 24c; Wash­
ington triplets. 22023c.
Spekana.
Hoga- -Prime mixed, 111.7».
Cattle -P r im e steers. »7 50 08 ,6
Dr. Mellenthin
D o e s N o t O p e r a te
Hill & Co.
HALSEY
SHOP
First-class Work
Will be at
J . W. S T E P H E N S O N ,
HOTEL ALBANY
TU88ING & TOSSING
Thursday, May 6
LAWYERS
Halsey and Brownsville
Oregon
Office hours 10 a. m. to 4 p. m.
Remember above data, thateon-
Good Work Team | sultatioa
on thia trip will bo free
and that hia treatment is different.
women must be secom panieri
2 loads Clover Hay i bv Married
their hnshends
• J, jag« i
■v. We Mll th. |
in Internal Medicine for the R A R R F R
I
past e fifteen years
, . ONE DAY ONLY
1
K J n f p • There It onlv on« le e e in e
i V O l C , R om. Quvlitv D< Lttx. u u t
h It made only bv T h . R o m . C o »
Specialist
Th» I .ane county fair board has
authorized the drafting of plans for a
proposed building program on the No Charge for Consultation
county fair grounds at Eugene
a merger ot tne Mameur county
Dr. Mettethhin is a regular graduate
farm bureau and the Malheur Pro- in medicine and surgery and is licensed
ducera' association waa the result of by the stste of Oregon He does not
a meeting of the two bodies held re­ operate for chronic appendicitis, gall
stones, ulcers of stomach, tonsil« or
cently.
adenoids.
The state engineer hat been f ^ T - « '
He has to his credit wonderful results
ed to investigate the condition of the in diseases of the stomach, liver, bow­
els, blood, skin, nerves, heart, kidney«
Whited reservoir on Burnt river In bladder, bed wetting, catarrh, weak lung«
Raker county to determine whether | rheumatism, sciatica, leg ulcers and rec­
tal «llments.
It Is safe.
Below are the names of a few of his
Salaries hare not been paid for two many satisfied patients in Oregon
months by tbe state hoard of horti­
Mrs. L. L. Peetz. Moro, heart trouble
culture and the board has derided to
Mrs P P. Hsgtr (daughter Mane).
ask for relief from the state's em ir Walton, tonsils snd sdcnmds
Mrs. E. C. Mullor, Hiltboro, ulcer of
gency fund.
the leg
Mrs. Nets Peterson, Skamokawa.
Tentative organization of the Lane
couaty row testing association waa Wash colitis.
«rover C. Coathier Coquille, colitis
effected at a meeting of a number snd
nlcers of stomach.
of dairymen at the Eugene chamber
Mrs. Carl Johnson Mirth field, ear
Of COW’n®*«'«
trouble,
J W. Tnmtr. Dalles stomach trouble.
E- A. Russell, Klamath Pells, appen­
dicitis.
FOR SALE
F. 0- Salmon
What a glorious feeling
it is to escape from the
deadening effects of a
sag g in g b e d s p rin g .
When you sleep with
your spine straight—
when you eliminate the
pressure on delicate
nerves—when the whole
system clears itself of
fatig u e poisons and
every muscle and nerve
feels refreshed—then
you’ll appreciate the
benefits which we offer
you in Rome Quality
De Luxe, The Bed-
springLuxurious. There
isonlyonegenuineRome
De Luxe—let us show
it to you. All sizes car­
ried in stock. For wood
or metal beds.
THE BEDSPRING LUXURIOUS
are wild and the chasers are the farm­
ers. Thus far they have been unable
to keep the big birds off their fields.
Com ing to Albany
“Rome De Luxe”
Sleep Sold Here
Address. 211
Angeles Col.
Bradbury
bldg. Los
NOTICE
of Appointment of Administratrix.
Notice is hereby given that the un­
dersigned by an order of the Connty
Court of Linn County, Ortgoa, hat
been appointed administratrix of the
estate of C. P Stafford, deceased. AU
persons having claims against said
estate »re required to present them
within six months from the date of thia
notice, with the proper vouchers, to the
undersigned at her residence in Haltey
in men County, Oregon.
Dated and first published this 21st
day of April, » 2 6
Pranklyn D. Stafford,
Administratrix Aforesaid
Tuasing A Tuasing, Attys. for Admx
NOTICE
of Hearing of Piaal Account
Notice it hereby given that the final
account of g p Isom as administrator
’* bonl» Bon » ' ‘h the will annexed of
the estate of David I. Isom
de­
ceased,
hat been
filed
ia the
County Court of Linn County. State
of
Oregon, end that the
24th
day of May. »26. at the hoot of »
o clock A M , hat been duly appointed
by said Court for the hearing oi obiee-
tions to said final account snd the
settlement thereof, »t which time any
person interested in said estate mar
appear and file objections thereto in
writing and Contest the same
Dated sad first published April 21.
1926.
E D. Isom.
Administrator Ac Aforesaid.
T uning fc T uning Attys. fot Admr,