Halsey enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1927-1929, June 07, 1928, Image 4

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    1H28
Hn I soy Enterprise, Halsey. <
H A L S E Y E N T E R P R IS E
Published Thursday at Halsey, Oregon
H. P. and A. A. l.oKE
Publishers
Entered at the postofflte at Halsey
Oregon, as second class matter.
milting a felony, to life imprison-
mem. N sturally, there have been
objections to this law because it
has ‘ teeth’, in it, but if crime is
to he reduced the number of crim i­
nals and potential criminals must
also be reduced. There is no excuse
for a man committing four crimes
of a character to involve a peni­
tentiary sentence. Why should the
public be subjected to the danger
of meeting Fiahitual criminals.
$1 a year In advance Arrearages 13Mac
a month. Stops when time expires
unless continuance Is ordered.
Advertising 25c an Inch; no discount
for time or space; no charge for
composition or changes. Announce­
ments of entertainments, food sales
etc . whose object Is to raise money Growth of West Aim of S. P. Road
charged at regular advertising rates
Planning constructive aid in
Announcements of religious meetings,
not exceeding four Inches, free If the development of agriculture
throughout territories served by
copy Is received before Tuesday
Among the many schemes which
have bee i projected in the past
few years by politicians and others
in real or pretended efforts to aid
the farmers ol the country, very
few have been of any practical
benefit. In fact some of them have
bien productive of more harm than
good. But there ie one species ol
government aid, at least, which
hie on the whole been really help­
ful. It ie the agricultural extension
service, whereby farm and home
demonstration ageDts, trained for
their i n p o rtin t duties, have gone
among the farmers, their wives
an 1 daughters, and taught them
hew to help themselves
The various fiel 1 and home pio
jects *and demonstrations curled
on by these faithful works:*, often
under the in >st discouraging cir­
cumstances, hive m ite m lly raised
th e efficiency of farming au I rural
homemaking.
Especially effective worn h is been
done with the hoys’ and girls’clubs
work which will exert a tremendous
inlicence upon the rura. life of the
future. This ttaiuing of farm boys
and girls for community leader­
ship is perhaps the most import­
a n t aotivity for the betterment of
ag.iculturi today.
The editor of a Texas paper ac
seed Col. Lindbergh of having a
¡vere case of swel tiead. He was
sked to recant and refused. That
ruly, wae a case of the tualady.
ite Pacific line«, Southern Pacific
t >day completed the organization
of a new departm ent which is to
be known as the departm ent of de­
velopment and colonization.
R E . Kelly of San Francisco baa
burn appointed manager of the de
paitmeut, with Edward II. Sharpe
and F. Q. Treadway as assistant
managers, George W. Barr as agri­
cultural agent and Erich F.Stuewe
as agricultural editor.
' ‘It is the plan of the depart
ment of develoment and coloniia-
tion, Kelly eaid, “ to work with,
and through existing agencies such
as the national, state and county
farm bureaus, the grange, farm er,
union, agricultural colleges and
civic organization», to promote the
welfare of agriculture generally in
the status covereJ by the Pac lie
line«.
“ We will work with such agen­
cies and others to meet the m arket­
ing problems of the farmers, stand
ardizaliou ot tlieir products, a'd the
(
irrigation
districts in galling a
sound policy for development, and
constantly preach the go»pel of
honest representation to new comeis
of the kinds of lands and their
possibilities on which they will
settle.
“ Wo will also aid in the ad­
vancement of such projects alocg
our lines as we have confidence in
th ro u g h editorial and photograplrc
cooperation in the preparation of
pamphlets and folders.’’
Boys anil Girls
...hut w h a t
q A
NEW SERVICE
That Im proves Home Lighting
W e unii now deliver
X ew Type Edison M azda Lamps to your home.
OUR OFFER
The H ousbhold K it — contains 2-40
watt, j-60 watt aAd 1-100 watt lampa
The Baumes Law
,'ew York State leads the way
taking definite action to reduce
lie. Instead ol passing new laws
I regulations to encroach upon
rights and privileges of law-
ding citizens it pasted the
¡lmes law in 1920, which auto-
tically sentences a tr.au coo­
led for the fourth time ol com-
ALL NEW TYPE EDISON MAZDA LAMPS
a t n e w l o w price® !
Fra: Delivery. . . Keep Spüre Lampt on Hand
C um m ings- A h ls k o g
E le c tric Co., In c.
234 South Second St. Phone 297 Corvallis, Ore.
ON READING BOOKS
By Thomas A R K LE C LA R K . Dean o f Men, University Illinois
I T WAS under a curtoon that I saw
• the query.
“ Hows that?" the owner of the 11
brary said to Ids friend In a boastful
and self satisfied tone, as he showed
Idin Ids collection of books. “ Every
one of them a priceless first edition.'
“ What’s tills one alone over here?'
(lie friend Inquired as his eye catches
II lonesome thin volume standing by
itself upon an otherwise empty shelf.
“ Oli t” the owner explains, “ That's
the one I’ve reud."
It Is one tiling to have hooks; tt Is
quite another tiling to have read them
A good many people who have shelves
full of hooks In (heir libraries mlglil
as well have only the false covers
without the contents, such as we see
III the stage setting of ttieaters or In
furniture stores where they sell book
cusps .
My friend Chesley Is a collector ot
books—rare books, beautiful books
unusual books, books which ure dltll
cult to oblaln, and yet lie could hard
ly be called a regular reader of books
In fact he reuds only moderately. It
you u would take tils precious books
from the shelves to g iie them a more
careful examluaiion, you would be
likely to see how clean and white the
pages ure, us If they had never had
close contact with working hands
You would no doubt discover, as I
did, that the pages of many of them
had never been cut, and so the book
find much pleasure tn the reading ol
books, und he soys so quite naively
His pleasure Is In having something
unusual, eonietlilng that Ids friends
cannot ufford, cannot get tlieir hands
on. tits Is ouly the pleasure of a co!
lector.
Lincoln, for Instance, had read few
books comparatively, for books were
not common when und where he was
u boy, but be had read ttiese few
carefully, thoroughly, uno had ah
sorbed the contents and been liiflu
eneed by the style. The books which
he had about him meant much to bim
—each one of them.
Public and educational libraries
must contain many books which ure
seldom, If ever read, and many more
which are only skimmed through foi
etruy fucts, Isolated information, 01
for tbe point of view of a recognized
uutliority. Scholars engaged In re
search might go quickly through u
hundred books in order to get out-
fact, and these books may not be
used again for a decade.
Not so with the libraries which you
mid 1 have In our tiouses. Our books
we should be fam iliar w ith ; they
should be like old friends. As we
stand In front of the shelves and took
them over, each should recall old
memories, old pleasures, forgotten ex
pertences. The books that we have
we should have read, they should
have been a part of our lives, they
should have had their part lu the de
velopment of our characters.
How many of the hooks that you
own have you read?
Mrs. Henry Abraham and her
daughters, Iris and Bernice, of
Mrs.Jessie McLaren helped Mis.
Totter station, were visiting IrienJe
Dorsey can strawberries Monday.
in Peoria Monday evening.
Several from here attended tt c
The M artin Cumm'ngs, Thomas
Pine Grove community meetii g
Ardry
and Clarauce Williams
Friday evening.
fan n ies and others from Lake
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Lamar of
Creek attenJcJ the supper Satur
Corvallis visited with his parents
day night.
Saturday night.
L'w rence Frady of Eugene visit­
Mary Gibbs of Albany attended
ed
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R
the supper at tho school house Sat­
Frady
a while Sunday. He says
urday night.
his daughter, Svlvea, is no teller
Bridge Wooliidge and fan ily of
and little hopes is entertained (or
her recovery.
(By Special Correspondent)
The supper given by the mission­
ary society at the school house Sat­
urday night was a sucress. A good
attendance and excellent program
rendered brought in a neat sum
which will be used on the pledge
and the piano.
Without a Tire Care
Make it a habit to buy S eiberling T ires here
regularly. With Seiberlings and our thorough
inspection your tire troubles are over and you
can drive with freedom for we guarantee no
trouble except that of puncture.
Buy Seiberlings and Be Happy.
A r r o w G arage,
«s? time“
? ”
S *« ® 1
The C arton — contains 6-6c watt lamps $ 1 .Ç O
Now that the farm relief bill has
Charles P. Cole of Kurxton, Me ,
en vitally wounded, its hackers who fur four years has walked 12
e almost as scarce as the prover­ miles a day to and from school,
ai ‘‘ben’s teeth.”
has just graduated from high
school at the head of Ins class,
line yet to have Its first reading.
The spread of the divorce evil
Chesley would have no sense ol
John Lefker, 12 year old school
duty neglected If you would call his
nlarming. Particularly to old
boy of Chicago who recently built uttemlou to these facts, lie doesn't
»id», bachelors and persons h ap ­
an airplane that stayed in the air
ly married.
five minutes and 87 seconds, estab­ Alpine visited with his aunt, Mrs
lished anew worlds junior duration M. M. F ruitt Saturday.
B O B B IN G
[t is said more people gi crazy record for outdoor medal (light.
B A R B E R IN G
Mr.
and
Mrs.
W.
D.
Porter
of
j
June. Anyway, more get mar-
BATHS AND
Mary Lee of St. Louis, aged 15, Shedd visited at her mother's Mrs.
S H A M P O O IN G
d tn June
recently won a harmonica-playing Alice Dunu Monday evening.
Agent
Hub Cleaning Woiks
contest against '250 competitors,
Mrs. J. W. Lamar and daugh­
A successful leader is one who
Albany Laundry Every Tuesday
before * great crowd in the city hall. ter, Helen, attended graduating
i guess which wav the crowd
exercises at Corvallis high school
É. C . M I L L E R
nts to go.
MouJay night.
Peoria News
Phe last winter's fuel bill has
t teen paid and here it il vaca­
li lime.
will it cost m e
tobuy that car
Rev.and Mrs.Metcali and child­
ren spent the dav with Mr. and
Mrs Charles Reagan at Corvallis
Tuesday, Mr. Reagan had just re­
ceived his degree tbe dav before
from 0 . S. C. aud 1» leaving for
Washington to take a position.
The Reaga ns and Metcalfs are old
schoolmates
Miss Mar» Miller, 78 years old
ol low * City, low *, maaqueradsd
for fill years *# * man and has
worked as farm hand, circus trap­
eze performer, and at
various
other occupations.
w,
/HEN you buy a car for cash, you pay
the factory price plus freight, war tax and
delivery charges. W hen you buy on time,
you pay an additional charge which in­
cludes fire and theft in su ran ce. T his
additional amount is known as a "finance
charge.”
The finance charges on General Motors cars are
low because the General Motors Acceptance Cor­
poration was organized to assure sound credit
practice and low rates to those of its customers who
prefer to purchase on time. The Acceptance
Corporation operates the GMAC Plan of payment.
The Plan is simple, fair and economical. Its large
volume of business reduces costs. It is conducted
to give you satisfaction and to keep your goodwill.
W hen yo u buy a General M otors car on the
GMAC Plan, you pay the cash delivered price
—p lu s only the low G M A C financing charge
— no th in g more!
The plan is available only through General
Motors dealers. Another reason for buying your
next car—whether new or used—from a General
Motors dealer.
Buy your next car on
the GMAC Plan 4
The General Motors cars are Chevrolet, Pontiac,
Oidsmobile, Oakland, Buick, LaSalle and Cadillac.
Together they make up a line of 86 models, ranging
in price-at-the-factory from $495 to $5500. They are
the quality cars of the various car price classes.
Whatever make and model you choose—whether
it be of the highest price, or the lowest—you will get
a beautiful body (the closed bodies are by Fisher),
4-wheel brakes, a powerful engine, and a quality of
design, materials and performance that only General
Motors, by reason of its resources and its policy of
continuous improvement, is in a position to give. *
And the final touch in your satisfaction will come
when you buy it on the GMAC Plan. The trans­
action will be in your interest. The rates will be low.
And the dealer will not lose interest in you after the
down payment is made.
CLIP THE COUPON
**
Use the coupon below to send for full information
about the General Motors product or products in
which you are interested, together with a booklet
describing the GMAC Plan of purchase. It applies
also for the purchase of Frigidaire Automatic Re­
frigerators and Delco-Light equipment.
GENERAL
MOTORS
M akes
old fu rn itu re
look new ag ain !
LOWE BROTHERS N F P T V N IT E
VARM sIl STAIN flo w s in to a ll the
old c u ts »cratches and m arks
and renews the beauty o f old
pieces. I t stains and * arnishes
at one stroke o f the bni.»h.
And it dries overnight. Just
the thing for floors aud wood­
w ork, too.
Anyone can apply N ep tun ite
Narnish Stain and be sure o f
good results. F u ll directions
w ith every can. Stop in and
get a color card.
- - - - - - - - C L IP TH E C O U P O N - - - - - - - - -
G eneral M otors i Dept. A ),
CHEVROLET i j
PONTIAC
Before you point, see us.
• bou* tSe GMAC Plan
OAKLAND
N a m e __
I a SALLE
CADILLAC
Halsey, Oregon
L -
Pleaaeaend, without obligation to me. illustrated
literature describing each General Motor» product
I have checked — together with your booklet
OLDSMOBILB Q
CU1CK
Hill & C o m p a n y
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0
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Detroit, Mich.
Address _____
______ __ _________________________
Re/rt,rea..r □
D E L C O -L IQ H T Electric Pie»«a □