•
I In t'
fetiSI
aii
IS BIS SISTER
Industrial Woman's Service Club
Brings Home to Girls in New
Factory Community.
• BLUE TRIANGLE MEANS CHEER
Club Stands for Hot Lunches, Clean
Towels, Comfortable Cots, Parties,
Games and Recreation to
Girl Workers.
Katherine Holland Brown.
Y name is May Isabel Carna
han. I am eighteen years
old, and I work in a big fac
tory in Michigan. More than four
hundred other girls work there too.
I don't aim to tell you about our jobs.
You can read about our work in the
i.
M
But I do
labor department reports,
aim to tell you about our Big Sister
and of the things she has done for us.
To begin with, our factory town
Isn't a town at all. It's a huge barn
.
of buildings stuck down in the country
nineteen miles from nowhere. There
Is a railroad siding, a station the size
of a dry goods box. seven farmhouses
and one general store and postoffice
combined—it's pretty near as big as a
hot tamale stand. And that's all.
No
Main street, no banks nor stores, no
ice-cream parlors, not one solltarv
movie show,
miles. Lonesome?
edge of desolation, that's what it is.
"I was one of the first carload of
in all those nineteen
It's the ragged
forty girls that was shipped up from
Chicago. Tiie factory was swarming
with workmen putting in the machin
ery, and wo girls couldn't begin work
for a day or so. so we began hunting
places to eat and sleep. That was a
trifle t liât the employment folks hadn't
thought of. The workmen were sleep
ing and eating in the cars that had
brought them there, hacked on the
siding. Our only chance for beds and
food was with those seven farmhouses,
so we marched straight to the farmers'
wives and asked for hoard and room.
Farmers' Wives Hospitable.
"I will say that thosewomen werekind
They fixed it up be
and hospitable,
tween them to feed us forty girls, and
But for
they- gave us good food too.
rooms, that was the question,
could each spare one room,
meant sleep five or six in a room. But
right then along came the boss of the
factory and told us the machinery was
ready and he'd expect us girls to work
double shifts, night and day.
"He wanted lo make use of every
But that gave us our
We fixed it up
They
That
minute, you see.
chance as to sleeping.
with the farm folks that we'd work
double shifts and sleep double shifts
too.
Three girls
"So we planned it
would use a room from eight at night
till six the next morning. Then they'd
hustle over to the factory, and the
three girls vvho'd been working all
night would take the room and sleep
till afternoon. It wasn't any luxuri
ous slumber, believe me. The farm
women had so few sheets and pillow
cases that most of us went without.
And towels were scarce as diamonds
As to soap—
•
on blackberry hushes,
well, the general store kept yellow bar
soup, that kind that Is so full of rosin
you could use it to calk a ship. But
we made out till the next three car
loads of girls came roiling In. Then
we went 'most distracted. Those poor
girls had to sleep in tents and in the
cars that the workmen had abandoned
by this time, and they were lucky if
they got a straw tick and a blanket.
By this time Ic had turned raw cold,
and maybe you know what late an
turan rights In Michigan feel like. To
cap the climax the farm folks cut
down on food, and for a week it was
potatoes and beans and mighty few
beans at that
Along Came a Miracle.
"But, right when we were about
ready to quit our jobs and beat it for
home, along came a miracle,
quiet, businesslike women climbed
down from the eastbound train one
Two
morning. With them came eight work
men, a carload of scantling and tar
paper, another carload of cots and
blankets and pillows and sheets and
tdweis—brand new blankets and beds
—think of the glory of that !—and
bushels of dishes and rolls of oilcloth
and enough burlap to carpet the coun
try. You won't believe me when I tell
that in ten days their workmen
you
had a scantling-and-tar-paper shack
put up and burlap tacked over the
walls, and the Y. W. C. A. secretary
and her helper had set up board tables
nnd coffee kettles and were serving us
the grandest hot lunches every day.
And hack behind the burlap screens
were set those rows of clean cots, with
enough c«aer to keep you wann the
coldest night that ever blew, and a
towel apiece for every single girl. Do
yon Wonder that we all felt,,as one
girl put it, 'I'll wager the Fritz-Carle
l'bj\
ton 1ms nothing on this V
"Who were tt 'se women?
rd
Y. W. C. A. secretaries, of course,
think you'd know that without l>eing
All over the country wherever
told.
we girls have pitched in to make aero
plane cloth or overalls or munitions or
canned goods you'll find a Y. W. C. A.
secretary working harder than any
body else to make the girls comfort
able and to keep them happy and well.
Sometimes they haven't money enough
to get all that we really need. But al
ways (hey stretch every cent to make
it do its level best for us. Do you won
der that we girl workers l-uvo learned
to call the Y. W. A. on; - Big Sister
—the rery best Big Sister of all?
Notko is li-r.-by given that an a t -
Q r .
NOTICE
■
plication has in n made .o the
phans' Couit cl' Anams County for
an order to taitr a decree that th"i
presumption cf death of William El
mer E. Cline ate of l ayette, Ida.:o
has b c en esta 1 si ed and that his es
in the eas' of
tale shall devove at
at tuai death end that t. e i erso s en
titled und r the lutes ate Caws
o' Pennsylvan a may enter and tak
possession, in which the following ai
legations appear:
In the Orphan»' Court of Adams
County, Pennsylvania."
In re:
Estate of William Elmer 'E.
Cline, late of Payette, Idaho,
To th» Honorable, the Judges of
jthe Orphans' Court of Adams County
Pennsylvania:
The petition of Martin L. Cline of
Wakefield, Kansas, respectfu ly rep
late ot the hO.Ou e ti of utn-i-.s. it.t
I'-sents:
First.
'That his father, William F.
Ciine
bounty of Auauis ana
U of i-enu
tu uay of
Sta
bj
syivauia, cueu on the
March, 1514, testât-, having first
made his Last Will and T-atameut
of
in writing dated the 4ch uay
June, 1510, and which was duly
probated in tue Regis.e.s Ofitce of
Adams
March, 1514, of wuich ths
m i [ s a complete and correct copy,
County on tue 23ru day of
foliOtt
I HIS IS THE EAST WIuL AND
i ES l AMniNT UF me, Wli-iain
l■ iLe, ui tvenueibviilt., in ihe louii
1
01 Adams anu ùtaie et remuy.
vlimit, maue t-is mh uay ol June iu
Lue year ot uur r-oid on« tuOuSaiHl
u.itu aunured lea.
1 utreoy i evoke ail Uils maue
ae.eicuorc. 1
L >' may be alter my eeueuae.
Martin L. Lime, the sum of *2o.i k,
pu.m my wilt, -uat.iua sans (June,
to b my executor and uiri.ct tnat
ah my ueoia and mural expenses
small be paia as soon as con>enieuL
"i give anu b-queath un.o my son
to my sun Widiam Eùutr E. vlin c
tue sum ot ta.uu. 1 gi.e anu bcqU-aiu
ail tue h&ia&te of my estate, lauds
money, of whatever kind 1 am t.,en
possessed of land that s-e he n,
required to give bond) to my wife,
the said aforesaid Mat.lda Jane
Cline.''
cue petitioner and his bio h^r, Wii
Iiam Elmer E. Cline, are the
Second.
1
That Matilda Jane L.ine, the w.fe
of the said testatur, died otiore the
tusiator and your petit.oner is
vised and believes t. at the bequest
to her teen.fere lapsed and
au
th-t
children, or the offsgiing of
dren to survive the testator as his
on }
chi -
beirs at law and ntx; of k n.
Thud
That letters of Administration
t. z. were on the 22rd day of March,
iyn > duly issuvd and gianLd by the
t -' mk day ot June. 1915. showing a
balance in band for distribution to
Register of Wil s of Adams County
to your petitioner, who feed
F,rst and hinal Account
his
in
your
Court, which was duly confirmed on
and among the heirs at law and nex
of kin of said William F.
deceasfd, amouming to $5470.91.
CUne
Fourth.
That your petiticner is
und belie vt6 that, under the
slid Will ab
advis:
tern
Wi
liam F. CliEc, the father (the mot
. r's death having preceded the dea'u
the testator) til d intesta t as lo
his estate, he having faded to mak*
aa; other dispositif n of it then, is
SG ^ forth in the Will, as abo'e quo
e< ^ an( j your petitioner and lia
brothf!r william Ehrer E ciim
I . ' , .... , .
1 were the only children of the de
cedent and were all of his heirs at
law and next of kin and therpfo-e
entitled, if living, to the balance as
shown on the account in equal shares
Fifth.
That William Elmer E. Cline W3S
and left to
never
vive hini no children or heirs
i aw other than your petiticner
married
sur
at
as
his next of kin.
Sixth.
That, in the settlement of the
estate of the father, William F.
C ine, deceas d, your peti ioner re
amounted
ceived his. share, which
to Two Thousand Seven
Thirty Fivt an d ($2.735.45) 45-100
Dollars. That the share of his brotb
hundred
has
er, William Elmer E. Cline,
not been paid to him because
has not been able to locate him any
he
where.
to the West about thirty years ago
and has not been In this jurisdic
tion since. That his last place
residence was Payette, Idaho. That^
Payette, i
Seventh.
That William Elmer E. Cline went
of
he has been absent from
Idaho, the place of his last domicil
for more than eleven yeare
past. That your petitioner has made
every effort known to him at Pay
ette, Idaho, and elsewhere, to dis
cover the whereabouts of his broth
er been unable to obtain
last
relative
That
a*-y information whatever
to his present whereabouts,
your petitioner alleges that he
dead and that he has been advised,!
under the law, the failure of any-^
one to have heard from him or to
is h
have any knowledge of him either
Erectly or Indirectly within seven
wars last past at the place o l his
las' known residence, raises the
[, fesumpticn of his death.
Eighth.
8< B8e d no estate other
share in the estate of his father,
William F. Cline, late of the Bor
ough of Bendersville, County of
Adams and State of Pennsylvania,
which remains in the hands of your
petitioner as administrator c. t. a.
amounting to the sum of Two Thou
That William Elmer E. C'ine pos
than his
sand Seven Hundred Thirty five and
1 12,735.45) 45-100 Dollars, and there
fore "tjie greater part of his prop
erty is situated within the County
of Adams and Slate of Pennsylvania
Wherefore your petitioner pray
that letters of administration b
granted by the Register of Wills
of Adams County to Harry W. Rout
song, of Bendeisvil.e, Adams Coun
ty, Pennsylvania, in place and stead
ot your petitioner, who is heir at
law and next of kin of William El
mer E. Cline and entitled to letters
on the estate of said WliUam El
mer E. Cline.
(Signed) Martin L. CUne.
The undersigned Master was ap
pointed by the Orphans' Court of
Adams County on the 11th day of
November, 1918, to hear evidence
concerning the alleged absence of
William Elmer E. Cline, the
alleged presumed decedent and the
circumstances and duration thereof
Any person or persons in any wise
interested therein will please take
notice that the said Master will sit
for the discharge of the duties of
his appointment on the 4th day of
March, 1919, at his office in the
Borough of Gettysburg, County of
Adams and State of Pennsylvania.
Wm. Arch McC'ean
Master,
Gettesburg, Penn.
Dated Dec. 23, 1918.
Jan. 2, Jan. 23, 1919.
Estate of U'ysses S. Davis, Deceased.
Notice is hereby given by the un
dersigned Edna K. McWilliams, Exè
eutrix of the Estate of Ulysses S.
Davis, deceased, to the creditors
and all persons having claims against'
the said deceased, to exhibit them
with the necessary vouchèrs, within
four months after the first publica
tion of this notice, to the said Edna
K. McWilliams, Executrix, in the
City of Payette, County of Payette,
State of Idaho, ^his being the place
fixed for the transaction of the busi
ness of said estate.
r.fl
Dated Dec. 23, 1918.
Edna McWiliiams,
Executrix.
Warhir^ton Fiag Etiquette.
The United States flag always is 1
misted over the senate or house of !
presentatives when in session. The
:tg floats from the .flagstaff of the ;
hit" House while ihe president is in i
'■'ashington. and its absence indicates
- ;e absence of the president frr: i the
1 -I'ri. It is dirp :.red over the d 'part
ldagton from 9
lock a. in. to 4:; J p. m. every week
■
in
Thought for Today.
The great man !.- he vvno doer, not
ose his child - heart.—Mencius
FOR S/-LE
Six-room bunga ow, three lä ge por
ches (two screened) good out build
ings, shade and lawn, one an i one
half acre of grot nd consist ng of
large garden, chk ken yard an 1 cow
pasture. All watered wi h iip° sys
tern. Drilled weil at back coor. 100
feeit, soft water. No nicer suburban
home in Payette. Price Î3250.C0. Good
terms if desired.
Also seven roomed house,, al; mod
ern; furnace, large tathro m all
equipped, good barn and other out
buildings. Two lots 50 by 150 feet.
pasture for one cow. Sidewalk and
curb on three sides paid for. Price
$3250.00. Terms if desired. For fur
ther information on either of the
above properties, cail at this office. '
•iay.
VULCANIZING !
A new Vulcanizing Plant; Inde
pendent of any Garage
Equipped with up=to-date Machinery
We repair any si^e tire from the
Largest Auto to the Bicycle Tire
All work positively guaranteed
If its rubber we can fix it
Give Us a Chance to Prove It
We also recharge batteries
FIRST BLOCK NORTH OF POSTOFFICE
GEM VULCANIZING WORKS
Payette, Idaho
Stove-Heated Garden.
The garden of James Swartz 01
/loiter Dam, Mont., ta heated by a
stove from the Inaide, and Is protected
on the outside by n curtain which is
lowered about it on a frame. The
garden is seven feet square and con
sists of a series of terruces built
around a hollow center to n height of
ten feet. Mr. Swartz believes this
arrangement will permit a longe'
growing season.
Clear; the Head.
Many colds in the head are relieved,
particularly that heavy, dull, feeling,
when breathing through the nose Is im
possible, by employing as a throat and
nasal douche half a ten spoonful of hail
ing soda to a glass of warm water,
Fill the passages with as much of the
liquid as possible; fids will clear the
passages of obstruction and in a littie
while breathing through the none is
possible.
O'd Idea of the "Far Wcct."
The citizens of Albany. Y.. ex
-rienced a thrill on February
.'05. when 500 emi
i'3s:ed through that ci
) the distant and little-known Gene
•t countiy of western New York. Tht
ienesee valley was then considered
he "far West."
2S,
inc.s' sleighs
on their way
Optimistic Thought.
A skeptic is one who knows • to
rn ucli for a fool and too littie for :
wise man.
Read or rr./,iits.
In rhe central part of China there is
very strange road, which leads tc
he famous Ming tombs. On each
ide of the avenue are huge figures of
iephants, car..-is and giraffes, lions
te. Each animal is carved out of a
olid piece of stone. They are prob
.ly more than 500 years old.
t
A ++ + + + + + + + + + ++ * + + •* +++ +
C. B. HOLMES
Dertlvt
*ftc« over Stanton Bros. Store.
» +♦++♦♦+* + ♦ + -.- i + + * + + + 4- -r + *
J H NORRIS
Attorney and. Counsellor
at Law
Over First Xat'i Bunk
♦+++t+++++* + + 'H'r
Dr. J. W. EASTER
Dentist
ROOMS 8 and Û
Off leer Upstair« in Thurston
Building
i'AYETTE,
F H. LYON
Attorney-at-î aw
Office in Lyon Block
IDAHO'
I)
Walter Watts
rp r
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A.ÎI Kinds of Light
. _ _ _ - ..
SHU llCUVy llclUling
O..* „ D* Lf
l fIC6S «Xlglll
#
213tlOïî
.
OUctT à Flt0CQ
», I *1 T I
AUlOIflODllC I TUCKS
House Phone 88-j
Olliclv SfTVlCt
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r'ffo
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hS-ib
E. W. DUNN
I
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The Iowa Man
General Farm
and
Livestock
Auctioneer
Try Me and See
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Tel. 226-20 Payette
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'♦U
FOYERS IN FRANCE.
Four departments of the Frencli
Government have asked the American
Y. W. C. A. to open soeial and recrea
tion centers for girls employed by
i them—Finance, Commerce, War and
Lql>or.
Lieutenant Poncet of the Ministry
i of Labor recently requested that this
Y. W. C. A. work be begun for girls in
; his oTices after seeing the social and
hieb had been
j récréa ribn centers
opened at the request of the Ministry
of War. Sixteen centers of this kind
! are operated in six cities in France.
: Three of them are in Paris,
j The last of these Foyers des Alliées
is for gills who are working in the De
pnrtment of Labor. It is far down the
.■Seine, under the shadow of the Eiffel
Tower, and overlooks the Quai d'Orsay.
The rooms are bright and cheerful,
; with chintz hangings and cushions, !
I comfortable chairs, reading and writ- •
j ing tables and a fireplace. A kitchen
lms equipment so that girls can pre
They go i
pare meals for themselves,
to the foyer for their two hour lunch- ■
eon time, for social evenings and for
j classes in English.
400,000 YANKS ARE
Y. W. C. A. VISITORS
Four hundred thousand persons aDd '
more served in the cafeteria in one i
year is the record of the Y. W. C. A. ;
Hostess House at Camp Lewis. Amer
ican Lake, Wash.
Tiie majority of the 400.000 diners
were mothers, wives, sweethearts and
friends who went to the camp to visit
their soldiers. The remainder were ;
soldiers themselves who broke the mo- ;
notony of "cliovv" with home cooked 1
meals. In addition to all these guests,
25.000 little children were cared for in
the nursery and the rest mom served
70.000 tired wives and mothers.
The workers at tiie information
desk' recefvod arid ariswefed 07.000
question* varying from how to get the
best connections to a destination clear
across the continent, tiie rates of sol- j
diers' insurance and the kind of ere
tonne a girl bride should have in her j
living room now that Private John is
coming home from France. Eleven i
thousand of these queries required tel
eplione conversations with various
company /-onmmtiders relative to hunt- j
ing up a soldier whose parents bad ar
rived unexpectedly.
l
!
Y. W. C. A. CAFETERIA
IN PORTO RICO
Porto Rico has a cafeteria. It is the
first one established on tiie island, and
when it was opened in the Y. W. C. A.
Hostess House at Camp Las Casas the
natives crowded around much amused
at the Innovation. They insisted upon
having American dishes.
The house became very well known
in a short time, and a group of women i
from San Han volunteered to go out j
every week to mend soi ks and sew on j
huilons for the soldiers.
I
Very Much Out of Place.
Among the guests at a reception was
1 distinguished man of letters. One of
die ladies present suggested to the
hostess that he seemed to be out of
"Yes," replied
place at such a party.
_he hostess, with a bright smile, "you
tee, he can't talk anything but sense."
Where Reality Is Found.
Listen to words and you will flea)
words'; listen to voices and you will
hear reality.—Haroid Goddard, in At
lantic.
•Ï3JI
:.rjSBt£ZJsraammi
Come Now "Wise Up
on this Good Coal .
E R D E E N
Best in the West
Sold by
A
£5
VÂNPEÏTEN LBR. CÖ.
NEW PLYMOUTH
ONTARIO
PAYETTE
£5»
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I he Rush is On.
People are Buying
Cars Everv l)av Xow.
Will You be Xext?
*
Gloom mid
ever see a du
auto ride can't live together. Did y< u
run; ed countenance iti a motor party?
Only happine>~ radiates from the
motorist —man, woman or child.
an
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The Thrift Car
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Th^re are five things to consider when
you buy a motor cai
Dr. 1
A pp^rzrance
Pf<fomancB
Comfort
'
!
!! I
Price
■
Owners who have bought the Overland
Mode! 90 have not been worried about any
of these things.
Remember this when you decide to buy
your car
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Lift* Four Unéti 90 Tour
t-uOT* - • - •
Car. 9950
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NOTICE OF INTENTION
TO MAKE PROOF.
Department of the Interior.
U. S. Land Office at Boise. Idaho
Dec. 16, 1918.
:
I, Alfred H. Rainey, of Payette
Idaho, who, on March 1st, 1894, made
Settlement ' for Lo's 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,
Section 28. Township S, Range 5 W
Boise Meridian, h-.reby give notice
of my intention to make five-year
Proof, to establish my claim to the
land above described, before Frank
W. Heer, Register, at Boise, Idaho
on the Twenty-fifth day of January
1919, by two of the following wit
I
nesses:
Branthoover, Alva A. of Payette,
Idaho
Draper, Charles F., Payette, Ida
Dorathy, Eugene B., of Payette, Ida
Dorathy, Lawerance P., of Payette
Idaho.
ALFRED H. RAMEY.
Fruitland, Idaho, Dec. 16, 1918.
Notice of the above intention
to
malco proof will be published in the
Enterprise, Payette, Idaho, for a
of six consecutive week»
period
which I hereby designate
newspaper published nearest the land
above described.
»he
as
H. G. GAICUIER,
Notary Public.
Dec. 19, Jan. 23. 1919.
Food Value of Fish.
Tiie high worth of fish us a food la
strongly upheld by the Journal of the
American Medical Association, noting
that fish must be better cared for than
some other forms of animal food, but
concluding "it is no just criticism of
fish to say that they may be harmful
unless properly cared for."
"English a* She la Bpeka.*
The wife of a workingman ln t
Midlands (England) was describlofe
quarrel between two other women, ß
her final comment was as followp». 1
'er'd said to 'er what 'er said te '
'er'd 'ave v">e<l >r o^'er 'erf*
r ■
*
L