Rural enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1924-1927, September 01, 1926, Image 3

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COMMANDER RODGERS
BRIEF GENERAL NEWS
I
Chicago mall order houses have
agreed to discontinue the sale at tire-
I arm s.
Twenty-five persons are dead as the
. resu lt of the hurricane which hit
I Houma. La.
The United S tates shipping board,
at a special m eeting, authorised ad
vertisem en ts for bids for the sale of
th e 11 great ocean liners of th e Uni
ted S tates lines.
A Ibany Floral Co. C ut flower
A p ro test against th e m ilitary ac­
and plants. Floral art for every
tivities o f German fascist organiza­
and all occasions.
tions and a dem and for th eir suppres­
Blower phone 458-f.
sion has been served on G erpiany by
th e council of allied am bassadors.
(C E N T R A L T IR E SHOP
The to tal proposed expenditures by
T ire Vulcamziug- Battery re­
OS». lularnaiiuiuvv.4
the governm ent In the fiscal year 192S
charging. 221 W. Second.
Com m ander John Rodgers, hero of will be considerably below the actual
E d Falk, Pi op.
the San Francisco-H aw aiian flight expenditures for 1927. perhaps by $2
avenport M usic H ouse.
who was killed when hie plane drop­ 500,000, according to Chairm an Mad­
409 West 1st Street
ped Into th e w ater n ear Philadelphia. den of th e house appropriations com
“ Pianos, O rgans and ail musical in stru ­
m lttee.
m ents of the very best makes. Drop in
and look over our stock, we sell on terms Ireland and D enmark to A ttend Parley
that will please you.
Geneva.—Ireland and Denm ark have German Mine Found Near U. 8. Coast
A tlantic City, N. J. — A German
notified the se cretariat of the league
astburn 3 r o s.— Two big grocery
stores, 212 W. F irst and 225 South of nations th a t they have accepted floating m ine was destroyed by
Mam, Good m erchandise at the right the invitation to particip ate In the coast guard patrol boat 15 miles
prices.
conference on A m erican reservations southw est of Cape May, Comm ander
to th e p erm anent court at in tern a E. S. Addison of base No. 9 reported.
An Incoming fishing sm ack sailed
p i i t e Cafeteria and confectionery tional justice.
w ithin a few feet of it before the ere
Home cooking. Pleasant surround
ings.
Courteous, efficient serviee. W ashington to Buy $250,000 In Bonds. suspected the n atu re of the floating
We make our own candies.
Olympia, W ash. — W arran t was object.
W . S. D uncan .
draw n Monday by S tate A uditor
Clausen for th e paym ent of $250,000 Italy to Govern Towne From Rome.
P O R D S A L E S AND SE R V IC E of S eattle school d istrict No. 1 bonds,
R o m e—E very city, town and vil­
*
T ires and accessories
purchased by the state finance board lage in Italy will be governed by a
Repairs
at 4*>4 per cent, for inv estm en t of the rep resen tativ e appointed by the na
K ir k -P oll ak M otor Co.
p erm anent school funds. T his is a tional fascist governm ent under the
'EYirtmiller F urniture C o., futni- second installm ent of a block of $750,- term s of a new decree adopted by the
A ture, rugs, linoleum, stoves rances 000 bid in by the state. T here still council of m inisters, according to
Funeral directors. 427-433 west First rem ains unsold $500.000 of th e total
well-informed political circles.
street, A lbany, Oregon.
authorised issue of 11.250,000 voted
by the people for new school buildings
Queen Marie to Dedicato Museum.
D O L M A N & JA C K S O N
and equipm ent.
P aris.—P rem ier Averescu. in behalf
AA
G rocery—Bakery
E verything in the line of eats
of Queen Marie, has accepted th e In­
Maine Is Rocked by Quakes.
Opposite Postoffice
vitation to h er to dedicate the Rou­
Portland, Me.—An earth q u ak e of
m anian room of M aryhill museum,
considerable Intensity, although not
Maryhill, W ashington, the home of
IM P E R IA L C A F E , 209 'V. Firs'
so severe as th at of a year ago, when
•A -
H arold G. M urphy Prop.
Samuel Hill, while on her coming
virtually
all
New
England
was
affect­
Phone 665
visit to th e United States.
ed, shook p art of th e sta te of Maine
W e nev er close
T h u is good advice; ’ If y JU live
ill Albany, trade in Albany ; if you live
in some other town, trade in that tow n."
But in these automobile days many re­
siding elsewhere find it advisable to do
at least p art of th eir buying in the
larger town. T hose who go to Albany
to transact business will find the firms
nam ed below ready to fill th eir require­
m ents with courtesy an t fairness.
Modem Home Aided Byrd Pole Dash;
Sugar Cane Fought Cold of North
D
The
PH ILCO B A TTER IES
with th e fatuous Diamond-Grid p late
Priced to suit the consum er. 423 \V Firs'
lV Ien and m oney are best w het
w’ A busy. Make your dollars work n
our savings departm ent. A lbany S ta T i
H ank . U nder governm ent supervision
l t f A R IN E L L O PARLO RS
^’ A
(A beauty aid for every need
St. F rancis Hotel
W inifred Rose Prop
R O SCO E
AM ES
HARDW ARI
The W inchester Store
’T H E M A R TIN L U D W IG SHCH
Geo. L. H urley, Pr iprietor and
Manager. W arm air furnaces, plnuibini
aud sheet metal work, tin an 1 grave
roofing, general jobbing in tin and gal
vsnized iron work, metal skylights am
cornices, pum ps of all kinds.
136 F erry street, Albany.
Phone 127J |
T H E H U B CO N FEC TIO NERY
A
Make it your m eeting place
Lunches. Ice cream. Ices, Home Made
Candy. Special rvoon Lunch.
R. C. Phillips. Manager
FARM LOANS
at lowest rate of interest.
Real Estate
Insurance
Prompt service, courteous treatm ent
W w B a in , Room 5, First Savings Bank
builning, Albany
W hy suffer from headache?
H ave your eyes exam ined
Dr. Seth T. French
W’fb
F.
M.
Frencn & Son
O ptom etrists
Jew elers
Albany
1 The Most Wonderful J
j
Book in the World
M
ORE than nine million Bibles w ere sold or
*
distributed in 191 y.
W ould you not love to have companion volumes to
help you discover the treasures in th a t W onderful
Book?
S wedenborg
[1688-1771]
explained the Bible’s practical application to dally life; how it
describes the life hi reafter; what nst Bible parables mean when
spiritually interpreted.
theological
His theological
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have been pub-
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him—
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—
ed by the Houghton
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ltshed
Mifflin Co.
in _ most
modem _______
transla-
tion from the original
Latin, in the Rotoh Edition of 33 volumes.
□riginal Lath
The first twenty give the spiritual sense of Genesis and
Exodus as understood in Heaven; and volumes 16 , 3 7 , 1 8 give
likewise the spiritual sense o f the Book ofRevelation.
Volume 30, Marriage Love, views from the union of the Divine
Love and the Divine Wisdom the Law o f Sex throughout all crea­
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the union of one with one only. Price $3.00.
Volumes 30, 31, 3 3 , contain a full statement of the True
Christian Religxm as revealed from Heaven.
the set.
The whole 33 volumes in halfrmorocco a t
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in buckram, I40.
The following are the best introductory books to the Revela­
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ram, and contain from ado to 487 pages.
PRICE
titles
H E A V E N A N D H E L L fromthfogafcaTil and teen $ 1 .2 5
A n g elic W isdom O oôcernin g—
T * H
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first puhUdied in Latin at Aowterdam 17d5i sionii with thuia the
''IntercourseBetween the Soul and the Body first p. fcdtahed in Latin
at London 1769.
________
$ 1 .2 5
Price of all then at oot ttne. Including poscaqe
$ 2 .7 5
- Highway Garage
Waldo Anderson and Son, Props
C h ry s le r C ars
A tw a te r K e n t Radios
Accessories and Supplies
• D ay and N ig h t S torage
Who Was Swedenborg?
sen of a I wkup, kcj tht greet Sugduh inmtiit, philo-
Ewvmael
_ _ J
e / y e d Bmarson to W n s him the mdKuden
f* *$CF —
- .... - |
' '
the Llmterial (yeetui
, scholars. Dr.
M
ÿ
KkML
P *4*
•nduetn
OfcoB, ooms---- - .
__ ’« of kit «me, and « - to the mo« uw/ul
of Su-Men, ha wosseesd
books on wianUhwp, mhaarala. gsrJ o osmnMny, and tht
Hta»$r assrch to t fit dwhumz . tcstl. Hou h i aOHSuol amaea wave oprnso,
1st and Baker Sts,
ALBANY
OREGON
Sekd order« or tutjutrtet to
Rural Enterprise
1 year f o r ^ dollar
B. A. W HITTEMORE, Agent
135 B ov / doin S treet , Beaton 9, Mas$.
- ir r s
o ur
Loading
Skip fo r
T rip,
E
M agneto electric co .
H
In
th e A rc tic .
1— To provo th at a ir navi­
gation In the A rctic Is feas­
ible and th a t freight and m es­
senger travel over the top of
I
the world Is certain to come.
2— To hunt for new land
In the unexplored areas of
MODERN home built In the A rctic
the Arctic.
defied the death-dealing cold of the
8—To conquer the N orth
Polar Regions and proved an In­
Pole from the a ir as a sport-
valuable aid to L ieutenant Commander
lug adventure and as a dem­
Richard E. B yrd In his successful flight to
onstration of w hat a plana
the N orth Pole, which he circled three
can do—not a geographical
times In a record breaking flight of 1,500
study, ns the Pole w as bagged
miles In 15 hours and 30 m inutes a t an
for all tim e by Admiral Peary.
average speed of 98.75 miles an hour.
Probably no one knows more about
It was a t th e Spltzbergen base, King’s
A rctic flying thnn Commander Byrd. From
Bay, w here th is first modern house was
the G reenland base of the MacMillan ex­
pedition a t E tah la st year he flew 3,000
constructed am id the snow and Ice of the
Arctic Im mediately upon th e arrival of
tulles over the Arctic, studying the bo-
Lieutenant B yrd and his companions, as
havlor of oil, motors, compasses, and
other navigation Instrum ents at g reat
a perm anent home and observation sta ­
altitudes over the P olar sea.
tion for th é explorers. The house, which
W ith him th is time Commander B yrd took a noted fuel
n a « to the I k Î o ^ om T
’ frlghl D or , h in
<”“ '
expert, who Is Flying Commander G, O. Noble, as It
plete radîo o. X î h . r
“ ’ ’" W * “ » " » h a com ­
requires great skill and pnlns to prevent the freezing
plete radio outfit th a t those who rem ained at the base
of lubricating oil aud stlffoued action of the motors, If
while L ieutenant Byrd m ade his thrill,ng dash to the
forced to w ork on the plane In the open at g reat
ft. ,
m ? " P r 51“* F okker n"« bt
In touch with
altitudes w ith the therm om eter a t tJO to 70 below zero.
their chief and th e outside world, which they kept in-
The points which favored the month of May w ere th a t
formed as to the progress and success of the flight
the Arctic fog had not begun pi rise and heavy snows still
It w as to this sam e home th a t he returned a fter his
covered th e land and ufforded many good landing places.
hazardous trip and from which some of the first mas
A factor of safety pointed out by Comm ander Byrd In
™ge9 i T T ,Sent t0 the W“ lt,D« '"*»< ’• telling them
connection with the use of the Fokker machlno Is th a t It
th o u g h the lanes of th e a ir th a t Byrd had circled the
carries a reserve engine. It has three engines. W ith a
Pole three tim es and had returned to his Spltzbergen
light load one Is expected to be sufficient to m aintain thw
t „ ° X hi’ ? y' r d? ‘ng ° “ e Of
moat c r i b l e pageS
plane In flight. With a normal load, two engines will do
to the history of A rctic exploration.
k
the work. If two engines break down at one time, when
S u g a r C a n e F i g h t . P o la r N o r th .
th e plane Is not too heavily loaded, It may fly w ith th a
W hen L ieutenant Byrd left the Brooklyn Navy Y ard on
use of one engine. The F okker machine has a wing-
th© sliip C hantier he declared he had the best and most
spread of slightly more than 64 feet. I t is said to bo
scientifically equipped expedition th a t ever had started
a marvel of airship construction.
fo r th e N orth Pole. Special plans w ere made for the
The other nlrplune—the C urtis O riole—w as to have
erection of his A rctic home. Boards of celotex Insulating
been used chiefly In finding landing Helds so th a t If
lum ber m ade from bagasse (sugar cane fiber a fte r all
the tilers found th eir niuin landing place covered with a
su g a r Juices have been extracted) w ere carried along
fog they might go elsewhere.
w ith the la te st inventions to aid In polar exploration.
The C hantler was equipped w ith a powerful radio tra n s ­
T his building m aterial Is very light uud Is filled with
m itter to send back the news of the expedition. The
millions of a ir cells, which give It g reat Insulation value
Fokker also Is equipped with a receiving aud tra n s­
and resistance to change In tem perature, especially the
m itting set. Commander Byrd not only kept the world
severe cold. One odd circum stance In connection with
luformed of the progress of the expedition, but received
the use of th is m aterial Is th a t the sugar cane of the
through the C hantler w eather w arnings to guide him In
south w as utilized to fight th e cold of the north.
his flight.
Celotex w as selected instead of lum ber because te sts
How E xpedition W as E q u ip p e d .
m ade by th e United States B ureau of S tandards and
Forty-five hundred pounds of whole beef w ere Included
Its universal use In building construction all over the
In the rations of the Byrd crew of forty-seven fliers,
world, had dem onstrated th a t this insula,lug lumber
seamen and technicians. Also four hundred pounds of
would keep the quarters of the explorers w arm er and
pemmlcan (m eat fats and raisins), huge quantities of
protect th e ir living conditions more securely than ordi­
bacon, dried milk, erbsw urst (pea soup) and other su|>-
n ary building m aterial.
plles In proportion were carried along. Cod liver oil w as
It w as only a fte r careful investigation by the scientific
Included for Its healthful properties. H erbert Griggs,
men In the expedition th a t celotex was selected. These
who hud charge of provisioning P eary's expedition In his
au th o rities pointed out th a t the protection afforded by
famous dash to the Pole, worked out the rations for the
Its insulation eflScIency w as three times as greut as ordi­
Byrd explorers. Two pounds per mnn per day was the
n ary lum ber and nearly tw elve tim es as g reat as that
allowance to tak e care of all emergencies.
o f brick and other masonry m aterial. The ship C hantier
No am ount of clothing Is really sufficient when flying
also w as lined w ith celotex aa an added precaution to
1,000 or more feet In the a ir In tho 1’olHr regions, hut
keep the ship w arm while th e explorers used it In the
every possible precaution was taken by Commander Byrd
prelim inary stages of th e expedition.
against exposure. The men wero equipped with the
w arm est aud lightest of reindeer suits and with fu r
In practically every other way thia expedition w as
m ore scientifically prepared than any of Its predeces­
parkas, a garm ent th at reaches to the knees and has a
sors.
These Included Inventions of Commander Ityrd
hood covering the head. Plenty of goggles w ere,found
him self. A simple sun compass conceived by Byrd and
to tie un absolute necessity to protect them against tha
glare of the snow.
developed by Mr. Bumstead of the N ational Geographic
Society, superseded the complicated German device, d e ­
In spite of all the precautions th e undertaking w as
veloped three years ago for Amundsen. The drift in­
full of unsw u danger. None of this equipm ent would lie
dicator also w as Byrd's Invention. The bubble sextant
of the slightest avail against some unexpected and un­
by which the navigator ob tains his bearings while In
precedented situation which might arise. T here Is alw ays
flight w as another one of his Inventions. Still another
the danger of stuiwbllndnegs, exhaustion, freezing, soino
s d e n tlc development was a quick method of telling when
mishap to the engine. L ieutenant Byrd and his com­
one Is a t the North Pole. This has been w orked out
panions, however, were particularly fortunate In escnplng
b y O. W. L lttlehales, the navy's hydrographic engineer
with practically no 111 effects except tha exhaustion dua
to such a perilous trip.
D a v ie , L o c a te , t h , P o l,.
Pick Up lea Pilot.
B yrd and others contributed to a ch art of the mag­
The ship Chantler*« first stop was a t Tromso, Norway,
netic lines flowing tow ard the m agnetic N orth Pole,
w here un Ice skipper w as taken on to pilot the C hsntler
which Is In B olthla Land. l,2t)0 miles south of the Pole.
and Its crew through (he Ice-tilled w aters around Spits­
B etw een Bolthla Land and the Pole the enw pass points
bergen to King's Buy, w here preparations for the first
south Instead of north and over much o f the A rctic
flight to the Pole were made. The planes, the Instrum ents
It la badly disturbed by the discrepancy of position be­
and the various oil mixture« used in connection with tha
tw een the geographical N orth Pole and the m agnetic
airship tests, w ere carefully examined and tested. Lieu­
N orth Pole.
tenant Byrd’s original plans called for six flights ns follows •
Thia ch art of the m agnetic lines, flowing trf the mag­
1— A 4tSMulle flight Irom Spitsbergen to P eary Land
netic N orth Pole, although It w as far from complete, wus
to unload oil, provision» and equipm ent a t a place tliut
such as to enable the navigator to tell In w hat direction
looks prom ising for a landing
th e compass should point from any spot In the Arctic.
2— A 460-mlle flight back to Spltzbergen.
W ith this knowledge, the erratic behavior of the com­
8—A second 400-mlle flight from Rpltzbergeu to Peary
pass becomes orderly and It Is once again a useful Instru­
I .and base with fu rth er food, fuel and equipm ent
ment.
4— An 850-mile flight to apd around the Pole and back
A th ird type of compass used was a device of Infinite
to the P eary base.
sensitiveness—a revolving electrical coll, w hich Is ad­
5— An 800-mIle round trip flight to the northw est over
ju sted to a given relation w ith the m agnetism of the
unexplorod ureas in seurch of new lands.
earth. This, the sun compass, and the m agnetic com­
6— A 400-mile flight from the Peary Ijm d base back to
pass w ere each used to correct the other
Spltzbergen.
L ieutenant Byrd In his flight used a quick method of
It was bis plan In bis second flight to attem pt to dis­
telling when he w as actually a t the Pole. T his was the
cover new land, but when he received the report of the
invention worked out by Mr. Llttlehales, the U. S.
flight of Amundsen In his dirigible. In which 1t w as stated
Navy hydrographic engineer. It shows the sun's posi­
th a t the Norge had failed to find any trace of new
tion from the N orth Pole a t every hour of the day and
land, L ieutenant Byrd decided to abandon fu rth er flights
every day of the year. When the flyer Is n ear the Pole
und the trip over land on »led« he had planned In hl«
be can. by ascertaining the exact position of the sun,
search for new land In unexplored areas. Now he ha«
prove th a t he Is n ear the Pole.
decided to try to accomplish by airship a t the Month
F l ie . 3 ,0 0 0 M il e . O v e r A rc tic .
Pole w hat he did at the North. As he left the Spits­
The expedition, backed by such men as John D.
bergen base he stated th a t he would have Just as well
Rockefeller. Jr., and Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., had three
an equipped expedition for bis southern flight as he had
B v r d In
A irs h ip
and
Doughnut
B o a t.
A
main objecta
In hl« recent adventure In the North.