HALSEY ENTERPRISE, HALSEY, OREGON, JULY ~». H>2H SMITH NOMINATED BY THE DEMOCRATS A sawmill on Comer creek three miles north of Marquam in Marlon SENATOR ROBINSON county was burned down last week with a loss estimated at $5000. Cannery shipments of strawberries In Clackamas county was finished last United S tates S en ato r Robin B rief Resume of Happenings of week. The season, according to the growers, proved fair. The raspberry son of A rkansas Nam ed tfie W eek Collected for and loganberry picking has been start­ fo r Vice P resident. ed and the various canneries of the Our Readers. county will continue their activities for some time. Houston, Texas. —- Allred E. Smith, The first vacation Bible school ever Hundreds of Medford children par­ lour times governor ol New York, wag held in Baker opened last week at the ticipated in the city’s first doll buggy nominated tor the presidency by the Calvary Baptist church with about 76 pa^de’^H ced by' Boy Scouts.’ bdd democratic national convention and pupils in the several departments. recently. Many girls and boys be­ Senator Joseph T. Robinson of Arkan Harvesting of Bing and Tartarian tween the ages of 7 and 10 wheeled aas was named for vice president. cherries is now under way in the their flower-decorated buggies con­ A single ballot was sufficient to Freewater section and producers ex­ taining all kinds of dolls and some break through the last resistance of pect to ship about 125 cars this year. buggies with cats and dogs. the group of candidates opposing Central Oregon’s first motorcycle Smith. Although at the conclusion A district meeting of county agents traffic officer began work this week. was held in Pendleton last week, with of the roll call of the states he was a He is Herbert Hamilton, formerly of agents from Umatilla, IVasco, Union, handful of votes short of the two- PrlneVIlle, and will work out of Red­ Wallowa, Malheur, Bakr? and Morrow thirds needed to nominate, he was so Governor Alfred E. Smith of New mond. Senator Robinson of Arkansas, dem­ near the mark that state after state counties present. Problems of mutual York, who recel ved the democratio broke away from the favorite sons Reports received from the rural dis­ interest were discussed with the state ocratic choice for vice-president of nomination for president of the United they had been supporting and voiced tricts around Salem Indicated that Iasi county agent leader and specialists the United States. States. in a noisy bandwagon rush the desire week's rain proved detrimental to the from Oregon State college. to be the first to lay their support at cherries, which have been ripening for According to R. G. Fowler, Jackson his feet. the past week. county agent, the grain crops in the , Official Tabulation 849 2-3 Strawberry picking for commercial Central Point district are coming on * The official tabulation after all purposes came to an end in the La- fine with the recent cool weather to chances of votes in favor of the lead­ bish Center district last week. Most assist in the filling of the grain. er had been recorded gave the New of the growers are doing much better : Fall-sown wheat that was downed by Yorker 849 2-3 of the 1100 votes in than they expected. recent storms, by careful harvesting Washington, D. C.—American cane Salem, Or. — Whether the West the convention. He needed only may be reclaimed with light losses. sugar growers revealed that they not A trainload of 24 cars of lambs Coast Bancorporation and the Oregon 733 1-3 to nominate. moved out of Douglas county last During the month of May there were only are collaborating with domestic The nomination of the Arkansas Bancorporation, with headquarters in week for San Francisco. Fourteen 40 herds, with an enrollment of 652 beet producers to obtain limitation of Portland, are conducting a banking leader, like that of Smith, was never of the cars were loaded at Roseburg cows, tested, according to the report duty-free admission of Philippine In doubt from the moment the roll business and therefore are subject to and 10 at Oakland. of the Columbia County Cow Test­ sugar, but that they seek a 300,000 the supervision of the state banking call of states was started. ing association. The production was ton maximum Instead of the 500,000 Curtis Payton, graduate in sanitary The first ballot gave Robinson the department, largely is a question of engineering at Stanford university, 491,185 pounds of milk and 19,429 ton maximum asked of congress. fact rather than law, according to an Imposing total of 1032 1-« votes, some Meanwhile both republican and has been employed as sanitary in­ pounds of fat, an average of 753 states switching their original votes opinion handed down by the attorney- spector by the Marlon county child pounds of milk and 29.79 pounds of democratic conventions have conclud­ after Robinson had piled up more than general. fat. ed without any platform reference to If the corporations are attempting health demonstration. 900 votes on the first reading of the the permanence or abandonment of The Oregon Electric Railway com­ Construction work on the new bridge to conduct a banking business, then roll. the present free trade relationship be­ pany has sought permission from the over Sutherlin creek at Sutherlin was they are in violation of the state bank­ Announcement of Smith’s nomina­ completed last week and the bridge, public service commission to discon­ tween the Philippines and the United tion was followed by a loud and color­ ing law, be holds. If, however, they are merely hold­ which is a most substantial affair, is tinue its bus service between Wood­ States mainland, although representa­ ful demonstration on the convention burn and West Woodburn. Trains on tions were made to the platform com­ floor, with the Smith people about the ing companies, owning stock in bank­ now open for traffic. the Woodburn-West Woodburn line mittees in behalf of both courses. ing institutions, then they are not vio­ Baker’s city commission has unani­ hall shouting to the skies their hap­ The situation leaves the domestic were discontinued more than two lating the state law, his opinion states. mously passed an ordinance taxing piness at their victory. In some parts sugar men with an unobstructed po­ years ago, because of Insufficient pa- It also was held by the attorney- the telephone company 25 cents per of the hall the bitterness of the con litical field in which to agitate for a test was carried along by heated argu­ general that the name "Bancorpora­ month for each pole which stands on | tronase. I Several California puncture vines change in this relationship, which may ments among divided southern dele­ tion” used by the holding companies public property in Baker. The cherry crop now being harvest- i have been found last week in the stock become a big issue in the next con­ gations, but, for the most part, the de­ under consideration is not a violation gress. feat of the anti-Smith group, forecast of the prohibition in section 54 of ed in Tho Dalles district is said to Tkrda at Ashland by county Agent chapter 205, laws of 1925, against the be the biggest in the history of the | Fowler. Burrs of this vine get to be for days, was accepted philosophically. use of the words "bank,” "bankers,” Industry. Irrigated orchards are now i extremely hard and the sharp pro- R IN EH A R T S E T S NEW MARK No Platform Fight The long discussion over prohibi­ etc., as the part of any business name. yielding six to eight tons to the acre. jections tvill puncture car tires or Portland Youth in Flight More Than tion in the platform committee ended Packing of strawberries is practical­ cows’ stomachs. This is the first Hours. time that the pest have been reported in a report pledging the party to strict BRIEF GENERAL NEW S ly at an end in Salem’s canneries, al­ Seaside, Or. — Jimmy Rinehart, In southern Oregon. ' enforcement of the prohibition amend­ though some hill berries are still com­ Directors of the Pierce Arrow Motor North Benu and Marshfield, through young Portland aviator, brought his ment and laws, along with all others. Car company have approved a merger ing in and barreling of the product is their councils, have agreed to a 20 plane down on the beach here wth a Both wets and drys took the speakers proceeding at tbe rate of 100 barrels per cent increase in water rates for world’s record to his credit and ten stand to ask the convention to accept with the Studebaker corporation. Robert B. Mantel!, Shakespearean a day. gallons of gasoline left. The official the plank as submitted, and for the Tbe 16th annual Southern Wasco the Oregon-Washington Water com­ first time in years a democratic plat­ actor, died at his ¿ountry home, County fair opens at Tygh Valley on pany, which a few months ago pur­ time of the flight was 16 hours 34 form was approved without a floor Brucewood,” in Atlantic Highlands, Thursday, August 30. and continues chased the Coos Bay Water company minutes 25 2-10 seconds. N. J. Rinehart’s feat Is the first officially fight. system and asked tbe state public l4ie new democratic national com­ for three days. It Is expected to be service commission for an advance of reoognized endurance record for a Besides declaring the enforcement the biggest fair ever staged in Wasco plane of the OX-5 class, the only mark 4» per cent in rates. of the 18th amendment, the prohibi­ mittee met immediately after the close county. of the convention und decided to form­ which he had to beat being an un­ tion plank sharply assails the repub­ The three camps of the Oregon- The flying field of the Valley Air official flight of 12% hours. lican administration for what is de­ ally organize at a meeting in the American Lumber company near Ver­ Rinehart said that his motor was scribed as a failure to enforce the dry Democratic club, New York city, on Service, northwest of Forest Grove, nonia closed for a period of six weeks on the Gales Creek road, has been working perfectly and that he could laws, and also for placing “political July 11. or more, depending on the fire hazard. John Thomas, of Gooding, Idaho, leased by the chamber of commerce have stayed in the air longer, but came hirelings'* In enforcement positions, banker and business man, was ap­ of Forest Grove for a municipal land­ The sawmill has a sufficient number down with the last of the daylight be­ thus making of prohibition a political of logs on hand to last until the camps pointed United States senator by Gov­ ing field. fbotball. reopen but will shut down for 10 days cause, on account of the great crowd ernor Baldridge of Idaho. He will fill The Coos county chamber of com­ for repairs. The planing mill will gathered on the beach, he feared that Farm Relief Pledged. he might hit someone if he landed in A pledge to establish a farm relief the recess vacancy caused by the merce will co-operate with the Oregon close only July 4 and 5. the dark. state chamber of commerce in Its pro­ policy modeled upon the federal re­ death of Senator Gooding. At a meeting of the state highway Japan will nominate Charles Evans gram to bring settlers to Oregon, it serve system is contained In the demo­ Hughes to world court of international was announced at a meeting held at commission in Portland Tuesday, Big Coast Trust Company is Planned. cratic farm plank. July 10, bids will Be opened on the San Francisco — Financial leaders Two nub paragraphs on the farm Justice if the nation is assured that Coquille recently. grading of approximately 1.06 miles Mr. Hughes will accept the position, remedy are: Work was rushed on the new avia­ of surface on the Reedsport section here awaited with Interest expected developments of a reported plan of "Creation of a federal farm board succeeding Dr. John Bassett Moore, tion field at Swim and was completed of the Roosevelt Coast highway in to assist the farmer and stock raiser says a Geneva announcement. July 1. This is the first airport in Douglas county and 11 miles on the Herbert Flelshhacker, San Francisco "Two of the largest grain and eleva­ Clackamas county and much interest banking power, for the formation of in the marketing of their products as the federal reserve board has done for tor firms in Minneapolis consolidated la taken in the project, which is for Anna Springs-Hunter hill section of a huge investment trust company to Fremont highway in Lake county. hen negotiations were completed for forest protection. operate on the Pacific coast. Fleish- the banker and business mau. Clackamas county court will be ask­ hacker’s idea, according to persons "Credit aid by loans to co-opera­ the purchase of the controlling in­ The haying season at Sweet Home tives on at least as favorable a basis terest in the Van Dusen Harrington is open. It commenced the last part ed to appropriate funds for building who conferred with him, is to estab­ cribbing in the Sandy river at Bright­ as government aid to the merchant company by F. H. Peavey & Co. of the week here. Many of the wood, it is said, as the river is cutting lish the new Investment trust com­ marine.” pany as the holder of large blocks of farmers are confronted with a problem A ringing declaration about alleged Fight at Louvain Ended by Hoover. for tbe winter's bay supply, as tbe the banks away from three to four stock In San Francisco, Los Angeles, feet a month and is endangering sum­ Seattle, Portland. Sacramento, Fresno corruption In government under re­ Louvain, Belgium.—A message from crop is turning out light. mer homes. During the winter freshets and San Jose banks. publican administration also is em­ Herbert Hoover apparently has pre­ According to F. F. Wilcox, Jackson the river washed out nearly all the bodied In the party's 1928 platform vented an inscription with the Latin county fruit agent. Rogue river val­ cribbing put in by property owners. and many other subjects, including equivalent of "destroyed by Teutonic Pennsylvania Movie Ruling Drastic. ley's fruit crop for 1928 is coming Twelve thousand acres of land in tariff, taxation, veterans, flood relief, fury” from appearing on the Louvain Philadelphia. — The spoken words along in fine shape, with tbe insect Lake county, Lakeview land district, foreign relations and conservation snd library. Whitney Warren, American produced by a motion picture film dur­ pest and tree well in hand with the Oregon, will be opened to homestead ing a public exhibition first must reclamation architect, had argued that the inscrip­ usual annual remedies applied. and desert land entry by qualified ex- meet with the approval of the Penn- tion should remain as provided in tho Loganberry picking is on in mucb service men July 13, and to general sylvana state board of censors, accord­ Dry Law Repeal Petition Checked. library plans, and Monsignor Ladeuxe, Salem, Or.—Petitions for an initia­ rector of the university, urged it be earnestness in the Dayton locality. entry October 12. The tract Is near ing to a decision handed down by tive measure seeking repeal of all pro­ eliminated. As chairman of the com­ Many women and children are being the town of Paisley and the nearest Judge Martin in the court of common hibition provisions In the state con­ mission for relief in Belgium Mr. employed in the various fields. 1'he railroad towns are Kirk and Klamath pleas. stitution, and all laws In Oregon hav­ Hoover granted the university full Jur­ weather has been ideal for tbe de­ Falls. The lands are suitable for graz­ THE MARKETS ing to do with the enforcement of the isdiction as to the inscription to be velopment of large, well matured fruit. ing, but precipitation is not sufficient With an unexpectedly late crop of in average years for production of Portland prohibition statutes, were being check­ placed on the memorial. strawberries. Jude shows brisk buying grain crops. Wheat—Big Bend bluestem, hard ed In the county clerk's office here. According to F. P. Wilcox, county white, *149; soft white, *1.40; west­ It was satd thnt the petitions contain­ Southern Pacific to Build New Line. at Forest Grove. One authority has ed approximately 1000 signatures. The San Francisco.—Construction of 97 estimated that strawberry growers in fruit agent, the Talent district fruit ern white, *1.40; hard winter, north­ work of checking petitions also is in miles of track to connect Klamath that vicinity have netted from *60,000 crop is coming along in fine shape, ern spring and western red, *1.31. progress in other counties In the state, Falls, Ur., and Alturas, Cal , and Ore­ to *80,000 and a good part of this re­ with insect pest and tree blight well Hay — Alfalfa, »17 50018; valley officials said. under control. Witb the coddling timothy *17.50018; eastern Oregon gon and northern California, a new turn was banked and spent there. The strawberry season will close In moth taken care of through regular timothy, »21 ©21.50. line, was announced here by William Postmasters' Age Limit Raised. Butterfat—46c. Sproule, president of the Southern tbe Banks yards this week. Three applications of spray and the few Eggs—Ranch, 26 0 31c. Washington, I). C. — An executive Pacific. Construction of the project tons daily have been marketed from evidences of blight stamped out, the these yards from ?0 days and about season's fruit crop, especially pears, Cattle— Steers, good, *11012. order raising the age limit for first, w»,l begin a. or-e. 300 pickers have been quartered In is rounding into form in a manner second and third class postmasters Hogs — Medium to choice, *9.250 from 65 to 68 years has been issued Good Western Campaign Manager. tbe town on a payroll of *1000 a day. that looks very promising. Pear pick­ 11.25. by President Coolidge, the civil serv­ Washington, I). C.—Chairman Work The average yield was about 300 tons ing will begin about August 1 from ! Lambs—Good to choice, *11.500 13. present indications. Seattle. ice commission announced. Postmaster of the republican national committee per acre. * General New recommended the announced that James W. Good of Wheat—Soft white, western white, Miss Edith Dodge of Ashland has Extension ot time for perfecting an change, contending that many post Chicago, preconvention campaign man­ been declared winner of tbe Gerllngei organization ot the prune growers oi i *1.40; hard winter, *1.29; western red, masters are still efficient after reach­ ager for Secretary Hoover, had been - up, presented annually to the woman the state until July 1, 1929, was auth *1.31; northern spring »1.30; blue- ing the age of 65. selected as manager of the western student of the Junior class at the Uni jrized at Roseburg recently at a reprv i stem. *1.48; dark northern spring, division of the party's campaign. verslty of Oregon who has shown the ' -tentative meeting of prune growers »1 46; dark hard winter, »1.46. Another Million Paid by Vanderbilt. Hay — Alfalfa, *26; timothy, tJO: ,-reatest development in her collegi affiliated with the Douglas County P. S . *24. Chicago Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jr. Ptace Pact Wins Polish Praise. work. Prune Growers' association. Signed a document relinquishing more Butterfat—4*c. Steady though light rains tell last There are a tew heading crews at Warsaw —The International Peace than *1,000,000 of his Inheritance In congress ended Its sessions by strong­ seek in the Grande ltonde valley, and work in the North Ione country. The : Eggs—Ranch. 23 0 27c. another step toward repaying stock ly emphasising the conferees' appre­ farmers rejoiced at the cessation ot recent hot weather has ripened *th» Cattle—Prime steers, »11012. holders In his bankrupt publishing en ciation of the Kellogg proposal to out­ « long, arid drought. Agriculturists grain rapidly and it is expected that , Hogs—Prime, *11.35 01150. terprtses. This is in addition to al law war. The pact was declared to said, however, that the moisture to ; harvest will be in full swing by July Lambs—Choice, 111 50 0 13. most another ,1.000.000 he previousl) mark great progress toward the pactfi be of help would have to be more 5. The yield will be below normal Spokane. had given up to meet his obligations. Hogs—Good, and choice, *10.50. cation of the world. than a day's talL owing to the late and dry spring Cattle—Steers, good, *10.500 IL GOV. A LFR ED S M IT H OPINION GIVEN ON BANCORPORATION OREGON STATE NEWS OF GENERAL INTEREST SUGAR MEN SEEK TO LIMIT IMPORTATION IMMIGRATION LAW CHANGES EFFECTIVE F a m ilie s N ow S ep a ra te d May be R eunited U nder the N ew Plan. Washington, D. C.— Four years of clamor in behalf of thousands of alien families now separated because of restrictions in the 1924 immigration act was answered when an amend­ ment passed during the last aes:-: a of congress to modify the preference and non-quota provisions of the law became effective. Beginning July 1, under the ne w enactments, one-half ot each ot tbe quotas now allotted to the various countries is to be reserved tor the parents of American citizens, hus­ bands of American citizens where the marriages took place after May 31 last, and farmers. The second half of each quota will be reserved for the wives and unmarried children under 21 years of age of lawfully-admitted aliens. • The new preference provision serves a double purpose in that it not only hastens the reunion ot long divided families by materially shortening the waiting time of persons entitled to preference, but it also serves to de­ fer, in many cases indefinitely, the im­ migration of those whose admission to the United States would mean the planting of new seed in the country. Brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles, cousins, nieces, nephews and aliens of no relationship whatever are defi­ nitely set aside in (avor of the wives and minor children of those already here who have become naturalized citizens or |av e signified their inten­ tion of becoming citizens at the earli­ est possible opportunty. Under the original law, exemption, or nonquota status, was available only to the wives and unmarried chil­ dren under 18 years of age of citizens of the United States, while the new law will give non-quota status to American-born women who lost their citizenship by marriage to an alien prior to September 22, 1922, and who have since been widowed, as well as to husbands of American women citi­ zens if married before June 1, 1928, and to the wives and unmarried chil­ dren under 21 years of age of Amer­ ican citizens. TREASURY SURPLUS IS $400,000,000 Washington, D. C. — Uncle Sam closed the 1928 fiscal year Saturday with more than *400,000,000 to spare, the treasury department announced. Despite a material reduction in revenue during the year, Secretary Mellon will reduce the public debt substantially *1,000,000,000. Income tax collections during June amounted to approximately the *475,- 000,000 figure of last June, and for the year will be well over the *2,000,- 000,000 mark. Mellon characterized government finances as in "excellent condition" as the new fiscal year is about to start. HOOVER W IL L RESIG N Speech Accepting Party Standard W ill Be Made in August. Washington, D. C.—Secretary Hoov­ er has determined to resign his cab­ inet post in order to be unhampered in his campaign as republican candi­ date for president. He will present his resignation before July 15 per­ sonally to President Coolidge at the summer White House in Wisconsin and then will go to his home in Cali­ fornia. Hoover's speech of acceptance will be delivered during the first week of August nt Stanford university, Palo Alto, Cal., where his home is located. The republican campaign will pro­ duce two vacancies In the cabinet for the president to fill during his vaca­ tion. Secretary Work of the interior department, the new republican na­ tional committee chairman, will pre- Bent his resignation to Mr. Coolidge when he visits the president in Wis­ consin. New Cabinet Approved by Hlndenburg Berlin.—President von Hlndenburg gave his final approval to the new cabtnet list submitted by the socialist chancellor, Herman Mueller. Dr. Gus­ tave Stresemann holds the portfolio of foreign affairs in the new cabine*. The cabinet includes four socialists and a scattering of members of the centrists, democrats, people's party and Bavar­ ian people's party. Obregon W ill Rule Mexico One* More. Mexico City.—General Alvaro Obre­ gon was Sunday elected president ot Mexico for a six-year term commenc­ ing December 1 and during which he has indicated he Intends to continue substantially the policies of the pres­ ent president, General Plutarco Ellas Calles. General Obregon was the unly candidate for the presidency.