Halsey enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1927-1929, December 29, 1927, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Build Garage Large
Enough for Big Car
SOCIETY NEWS
From O ur Rcfular Correipenden»
Many family reunions and din ­
ners were held in Halsey on Christ,
mas day and numerous parties
were given. Most of the young
people attending the different col­
leges came home to spend the holl-
days, many of them bringing with
ti.em a college friend ,o enjoy the
pleasures of the yule time season.
On Saturday evening a C hrist­
is is program wrs given at both
the Methodist and the Christian
churches by the Sunday school
pupils. Prettily trimmed Christ­
mas trees added to the attractive­
ness of the other church decora­
tions.
•
*
*
The home of Mayor and Mrs
Bert Clark was the scene of a gay
family party Sunday with a Christ­
mas dinner served at noon. Those
present were Mr. and Mrs Henry
Broc> aud daughter and Mr. and
Mrs. Ellsworth C uitis and five
children.
*
*
Automobile owners find frequently
when they dispose of their first carl
and secure new and larger one« that
the garage space available Is Inade­
quate; iu such case either an addition
must be built to the old garage or an
«“ tlrely new building erected at con-
siuerable expense.
For a single-ear garage a minimum
insde width of 12 feet Is desirable
and a two-car garage 20 or 22 feet For
garages of the multi car or community
types, u width of not less than 10 feet
should be allowed for each car. If
permanent partitions are erected be­
tween stalls, a width of 12 feet Is rec­
ommended.
A length of less than 20 feet Is
seldom advisable, and for larger cars
22 to 24 feet Is not too much. These
dimensions allow plenty of working
sptce around the car and provide e
room for a small workbench, closets
and shelves for car accessories. The
convenience of the extra space Is
worth many times the slight addi­
tional cost of bulldiDg the garage 2
or 4 feet longer.
The overall length of various types
and makes of automobiles varies
greatly from the Ford, which meas­
ures about 12 feet 3 inches with front
aud rear bumpers, to the Fierce-Arrow
seven-passenger touring model, which
measures 17 feet 4 inches, and the
Cadillac
seven-passenger
touring
model with an extreme length of 17
feet 0 Inches, bumper-equipped.
*
Saturday evening M r. and Mrs
W. C, Sickels and family and M r.
Mrs. Charles Ham er and family of
Halsey drove to the home of Mr
Sickels and Mrs. H am er’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Chancy Sickels, a few
miles soutuwestof the city, to spend
Christmas. The younger members
of the party enjoyed a tree on
which Santa had hung many gifts
overnight, early Sunday morning
and at noon a sumptuous dinner
was served.
About Floors
Flooring of Imperfect manufacture
is likely to warp or develop cracks; it
Joes not give the dependable service
you expect from your floor and the
very best workman cannot make Its
appearance all that Is desired by the
builder. Home builders should be sure
that the lumber they buy will require
a minimum of carpenter work of plan
lng, sawing and sorting.
Oregon,December 29.
Outside paint work, subjected to the
iard wear of the elements, should be
renewed at least every three to five
jears, depending on its condition and
•rpearance. If one's purse Is suited
to stand the strain, a building should
be painted every two years. Two-coats
«re necessary. For the first coat the
paint is generally reduced with tur
pontine or oil. while the finishing coat
is seldom reduced with anything ex
copt linseed oil.
A prepared paint containing the
maximum qualities of carbonate of
leud, oxide of zinc and pure linseed
is best.
-Many persons make the mistake of
using house paint on Inside floors,
th is will not do, as the house palm
will never dry hard enough and the
floor will always be a bit sticky. Deck
paint Is prepared for porches.
Rough Surfaced Brick
Vogue of Exteriors
brickwork Is rapidly undergoing _ a
radical change at the hands of the
leading architects of the country, who
are fast getting uway from the old
idea that in order to supply the verj
last touch in artistry it must present a
surface as smoothly even and correct
ns If it had been molded. No longer Is
this the fashion, nor Is it acceptable to
the men who dictate architectural
vogues.
Today the brickwork which catches
quickest the public eye and the popu
lur fancy must be very rough. And
the brick themselves must be of tin
same order. The rougher the better
Clinker brick, which only a few years
ago had no market at ail, are now ii.
high favor.
Choose Furnace With Care
if You Would Save Fuel
Money Is Wasted
on Many Farms
Basic Materials for Hun­
dreds of Products Are
Not Being Utilized.
Big Industry Is ready to form an
alliance with farmers whereby crops
as known at present w ill become mere
ly by products and what Is now con
sidered waste w ill yield fortunes to
growers, according to Dr. George E
Burgess, director of the Vulted Stales
bureau of standards.
Invisible Fortunes.
Giving an example of the invisible
fortunes on farms. Doctor Burgess
points out in Farm and Fireside that
the present crop of 250,000 tons of
cornstalks thrown away annually are
even now estimated to be worth $.’
per ton to manufacturers for the pro
duction of wall board, paper and s
number of other commodities. Pea
nut shells are listed ns another im|H>r
tant waste product, from which Insec
tlcldes nnd carbon black, used In man
ufacturing tires, nre obtained. Fur
fural, a synthetic resin, is being made
from oat hulls and can be made from
corncobs.
The advance of synthetic chemistry
is calling for basic materials for bun
dreds of products. Vegetable oils are
rapidly replacing mineral lubricants
All of these can lie obtained from farm
products. Last year 17,400,000 bushels
of corn went Into the production ol
corn sugar. Thus one process became
an npprecluble factor In the price of
corn.
Big Industrie] Interested.
“ Big Industries," says Doctor Bur
ge-s, "are Interested In getting elie:i|ier
The home owner who would enjoy raw materials and there Is a great de
Unit greatest of home comforts, per­ sirnbllity in having these materials
fect warmth, whenever he needs It, grown in the United States. At pres
and In Just the right degree, must se­ ent they nre being Imported In hag.
lect his l>iiler with care and discrim­ quantities. A war any plnce on earth
ination.
ami a shift in a nation's trade policy
Built-In Garage
It is seldom realized that the u«ual Is hound to affect Industry seriously
A built-in gar.ige should have a floor
boiler consumes, during each heating
or perhaps cut them off altogether
of concrete. Nothing in the way of
season an amount of coni which from raw materials.
i substitute should be considered and
equals or exceeds the initial cost of
"The agricultural depression of the
*
*
*
It should be so laid that every portion
the boiler.
»
past few years has decreased the
will drain readily. This will prevent
Without a supply of air, combustion ability of the farmer to buy the prod
The editors of the Enterprise had tlie accumulation of oil deposits which
cannot take place. That Is evidenced nets of factories. If manufacture can
as their guests Saturday night and might catch fire. Walls and ceiling by the simple experiment of placing a
provide a new source of farm incomes
Sunday Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Gol. should be of materials which will glass over a lighted candle nnd they w ill have more nnd belter cits
»¡and the “ one-hour fire test."
watching the quick extinction of the turners In the best market of all, the
t.a, Mr. and Mrs Charles Goltra
flame when the supply of oxygen is domestic market."
aud children, Coenia and Bob, all Bedroom Requires Good
cut off. Tlie rate of combustion of any
fire may be controlled through Its air
of Albany, and Jess Ison and W hit­
Light for Proper Effect supply. Stored up lu a candle, for In­ Haul and Spread Manure
ney Dubey of Raym ond, Wash
Bedrooms of the past have been stance, Is a definite heating power. As
on Clover or Grass Sod
Lighted red tapers in green holders overlooked loo often from the stand- the candle burns, the heat units are
Manure loses something of its value
formed the dinner table decorutior s point of lighting. As a result th« liberated. Obviously, the more slow­ e.ery day It is kept. It is never bet­
spent to embellish and beautify
ly the candle hums the longer It will ter than the day It Is made. Losses
and clever little cut-outs of Santa labor
lids room was lost In the evening be­ last, for Its total heat energy does
tliut occur in the barnyard may be
Clause were used for place cards.
cause ti e light was either too garish
not change. Control Is the vital fac­ partly saved if the manure Is hauled
or too dim to bring out the beamy of
tor.
out at once nnd spread on a clover or
the furnishing».
It Is so w ith the burning of a pound grass sod. There may be some loss
The home of Mr. and Mrs. E-A.
For the well-lighted bedroom of the
of any given grade of coal. Within from washing or leaching, hut most ol
Staines of Shedd was the scene of present, n central overhead lighting It lies a definite heating value, nnd In this w ill he deposited somewhere In
a pretty wedding Sunday when fixture Is, perhaps, the best for gen­ order that Its heating value may be the Held. The Ohio station bus dem
eral Illustration.
To this may be
their daughter Esther became the added wall brackets near (he dressing utilized to the maximum hy any boil­ onstrated that. It has shown that
er, it Is Urst necessary that the coal
tons of manure hauled fresh
bride of Earle F. Albertson of table and standing lamps of appro­ be burned at controlled rates In ac­ eight
from the stable and spread on clovei
priate
color
tone
or
boudoir
lamps
cordance
with
weather
conditions.
An
Halsey. The ceremony was per­
sod In Decehiber and January gives
formed by C. Adrian Sias, pastor of near the bed for those who like Io Imperfectly controlled lire means the a crop increase of $-12. An equal
read themselves to sleep.
loss of immeasurable quaulities of amount of manure piled In the burn
the Christian church of Halsey, at
( if course, the style and color will
heat.
yard and spread on the sod In April
two o’clock Sunday afternoon in differ In the rooms for the feminine
It is the function of a boiler to burn or May gave an Increase of $35,
user
from
those
in
a
man's
room.
the presence of a num ber of rela­
its coal supply, to absorb as much us
possible of (he heat thus generated, House Can Be Made Ugly
tives aud intim ate fiiends.
Oak Floor Needs Wax
and to deliver this heat la the form of
The wedding party entered to
by Use of Wrong Paint
steam vapor, or hot water for heating
Dressing Once a Year purposes. The efficiency of any boiler A house
th e s tia in s o f Mendohsohn's wed­
is lived iu too long and un
The occasional use of a weighted
ding march played by Mrs. Sias. floor brush will assist In keeping the is measured by the ratio between the der too many conditions of weather
total amount of potential heat con­ and season, to suy uothlng of other
aud took their places befo e a finish of your oak floor In the be t tained In the fuel supplied to it and circumstances, to be extreme lu any­
beautiful floral bank of fir houghs, condition. At least once a year the the amount which that boiler actually way.
floor should be given a dressing of
It need not be so neutral us to fore­
above which weresuspe. d el Chr st­ wax, well rubbed. Do not neglect absorbs and utilizes. Consequently, the
home owner should carefully consider go all individuality, hut It should, on
mts bells. The beautiful ring cee your floors until the Hnsh Is worn this aspect of the boiler he considers the whole, be rather conservative than
err on the other side. The exterior
mony was used and the biide was down to the wood. A little attention Installing.
at the right time maintains "the per­
should he neutral enough to serve as
given in m arriage by her father.
fect floor” Indefinitely.
a peaceful transitiou between the sur­
Small Home Not Built
The bride wore a beautiful drese
roundings nnd the interior furnish­
Use
of
Short-Length
by Rule of Thumb Plan ings, and to sit harmoniously and
of powder blue silk crepe and car­
Lumber Is Advocated
Most persona suppose that the plun quietly lu Its own grounds.
ried an arm bouquet of white
I f the house is finished with smooth
Important savings to the home build
of a small home Is simply the result
chrysanthemums aud l'erur. She ers would result If quantity surveyors, of following a few "rules of thumb.” siding, such as wide boards or clap
is the oldest daughter of Mr. and architects, englnters aud other apect- and that by a few trials and shuf­ hoards, it takes paint, but i f It is cov­
Mrs. Starnes and is a graduate of fying consumers would take advantage flings of mere spaces for rooms, with ered with rough lumber, or shingles,
of the recommendations of the na­ walls on four sides and some kind a stain should be used. Stain is a
the Shedd high school.
tional committee on wood utilization, of a cheap roof, a house cun be com­ thin material and w ill not successfully
tin t smooth woodwork, hut It peue
Mr. Albertson is the only eon of said Axel II. Oxholm, director of the piled.
trates deeply into the surface of rough
committee,
at
the
anuual
convention
The
sorry
truth
is
that
many
so-
Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Albertson tf
wood. These are technically kuowu as
of the National Association of Quan­ called houses emerge from this meth
near Halsey and has spent nearly tity Surveyors in Washington.
od, but certainly no correct solution shingle stains, although they may be
his whole life in this vicinty where
These professional groups, Mr. Ox
of a borne builder's problem Is thus applied Just as well to any wood of a
rough surface. Faint should be used
he has a host of friends. He is holm said, should carry into practice achieved.
on suioutlf siding and trim, where It
the use of short lengths of lumber less
Each
room
must
have
Its
appropri­
also a graduate of the Halsey high than eight feet, now offered at a dis­
ate size, shape, aspect and relation to will produce a film of weather resist
school.
count of from 10 to 40 per cent com­ other purts of the house. Proper re­ lug material on the outside of the
boards, penetrating only slightly into
Mr. and Mrs. Albertson are at­ pared with the cost of longer lengths lation of rooms means no waste of the
wood liber.
and may be used In many Instances time of the occupants when going
tending the state normal at Mon­ without sacrificing good construction.
Faint (or exterior purposes Is usual
from one part of the house to another.
ly made of mineral pigments and lln
mouth this year and will make
The committee, of which Secretary
A saving In steps Is a real comfort seed oil. The oil is the agent which
Hoover is chairman. Is composed of
their home in th at city.
holds the pigments together and binds
100 leading producers, distributors and to the busy housewife.
Following the ceremony a sum p­ consumers of forest products. A
All parts of the house must be the film structure to the surface. Be
tuous wedding luncheon was served. series of reports in regard to efficient properly lighted with sufficient win­ lag a vegetable product, It is natural
dow area, and doors must be properly that It should decay. Therefore, the
Those present for the wedding utilization of wood has been published placed so ns to leave suitable spaces natural
and proper procedure lu the
were Mr. and Mrs. H-L. Wallace of by the committee for the purpose of for the furniture.
"wearing away" process of pulnt 1*
enabling a closer utilization of the
An architect never studies plans for that the oil should decay from the
Corvallis, Rev, end Mrs. Adrian standing timber. At present, Mr. Ox-
a home without placing properly the
Sias of Eugene, Mr. and Mrs. A. holm explained, only about one-third necessary pieces of furniture, and be­ surface inward.
When the oil has decayed the pig
F. Albertson of Halsey, and Mr. of the tree Is converted Into market­ ing sure that there is room encugb rnents on the surface are no longer
able product’ . This low utilization
bound together and ure easily blown
*nd M n. E. A. Starnes, Henrietta, liercentnge la the greatest obstacle to for them.
Now, all this may seem simple
washed away. Painters call this
Hattie, K athryn and Aaron Starnes the perpetuation of our forest re­ enough, and it Is, were not the Inevit­ or
"chalking," and when it la not too
sources
on
a
commercial
scale.
of Shedd.
able factor of coat ever present to de­ rupid Is the Ideal wearing away proc­
termine the lim it of what can be done. ess. The surface Is thus left fit for re
In order to preserve the necessary
This most Important Item can be con­ painting. Loose paint should he re
Mrs. Florence Leeper was host­ 1 balance things must be produced In trolled most properly by the architect, moved hy scrap.ng. A torch w ill he
ess at a Christmas dinner Saturday their proportionate, needful quanti­ who makes -omplete preliminary draw­ necessary i f there Is an abundance ot
ings for his client and obtains pre­ loose paint
evening, at her home in this city ties.
• • •
liminary bids before final construction
It the old paint holds fast In spite
The table decorations were carried
Keep after weeds and bugs. N’ow Is is begun. The plans made by an archi­
of the scraper or torch, experienced
out iu a color scheme of red and the time to win the battle with them tect, complete In detail, show the con­ painters generally soften It up a Bit
for the season. Spray everything that
tractor exactly what la expected of
with benzol. At any rate, when they
green. Plac»s were marked for Mr- shows a sign of Insect Ufa
him.
repaint they put a pint of benzol or
• • •
and Mrs. Frank Leeper, Sydnev
Tlie architect eliminates "the et- solvent naphtha to each gallon of th»
Field entomologists In the employ of
Leeper, Mr. aud Mrs. J. A. Miller,
tras." so often Incurred hy the unen­ new paint This w ill soften what re
Harry I.eeper ( Eugene). Miss Lena the federal horticultural board found lightened using poor iilsns or possibly mains of the old paint and allow the
that the corn borer attacks 224 differ­
Bass, Frar.cis Leeper anti the host­ ent kinds of plants. Including crops, no plans al all except "their builder s'* new coat to bond with I t II also pre
vests “ crawling " or eventual aculing.
sketches.
Hooray! It’s Here
‘Two Black Crows’
Parts 5 & 6.
I ompleting the three funniest records ever made-
A bplendid Gift — Columbia Records.
Newest Hits Old Melo lies Christmas Tones
The Music Shop
’hone 168
weeds and fluwera._
_
Albany, Oregon
Halsey Agent—Morris Pha.macy.
luniiiouiiu iiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiit laiiniiiiiii a n iiiiiiiiiiu n iiu iiiiiio iiiiiiiiiiito iiim iiiiiio u iiiiiiiiiio iu iH iiiiiio iiiiu iiiiiiitt
McCormick-Deering No. 8 exactly
meets the average farm er’s
combine needs!
If you will telephone us, or come to
our store, we will see that you get one
of our new catalogues showing the
McCormick-Deering No. 8, as it is now
being built for the 1928 harvest season.
Study the catalogue and talk with McCormick-Deering
owners; then you will understand why the McCorinick-Deer-
ing is the outstanding harvester-thresher success.
Schultz Brothers Warehouse Co.
I’hcne Shedd. 8F23 or write for delivery prices.
Warehouse at Fayetteville.
Postortiee Shedd, Oregon
.................................................................................................................. .
I
A d d itio n a l
T rain S e r v ic e to
P ortland
every Tuesday, Thursday, Friday,
Saturday and Sunday -
«D uxuig D e ce m b e r)
L e a v e H a l s e y 1 2 : 1 4 p . n t.
A r r iv e
P o r tla n d
3 :3 0 p .m .
In addition to the regular dally train and Motor Coach service.
• * «
ess.
Everything Musical
B u y R o u n d trip T ic k e ts
$g.9O
Week-end fare to
Portland and return
Use the train or motor coach or both. Rail tickets are also
good on the Southern Pacific (Silver Oray) Motor Coaches.
Ask a g e n t tor c o m b in e d tim e
tables a n d o th e r in fo rm a tio n .
Southern Pacific
C. I*. Moody, agtnt
Phone 226
-.a...« «a,a B B B B B a a a a a a a ■ ■
BBBMB
a a
9
:
For the later peak of Egg Production,
Feed Triangle Egg Mash
To your Pullet F lock.
The properly prepared mash for the Pullet.
Attractive prices in ton lots on whole or
Cracked Corn, Mill Feed and Mashes.
O. W . F R U M
Hay
iiwan a
MBBMBa
Grain
a a a a
■I
Feed
a a i a a. a
B B B B B B a B B B 'B B B a
3
a
a
Lang Ranges:
Will pay for th em selv es in fuel saved.*
Are fully g uaranteed.
New reduced prices now in effect. Y our old
ran g e taken in exchange. Ask about the Lang
range to he given away free.
a
■
■
a
n
■
-i
o
M
IJ
Bartcher Furniture Co.
u
Albany, Oregon
■
u
a a a
a a a
a a
a a a
n