2 ntuininr rr.r.y, otonftw.M. jw "Perhaps You Don't Know" says the Good Judge How long a little of the Real Tobacco Chew will last. Nor how much gen uine chewing satisfac tion the full, rich real tobacco taste will give. Ask any man who uses theReal Tobacco Chew. He will tell you that this class of tobacco will give more satisfac tion and at less cost than the ordinary kind. Put up in two ij A'j W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco RIGHT CUT is a short-c-j Official Republican Statement By Douglas Count Republican Central Committee. government Independent amon ne- M Hon, ioreie.nu --,, To us ana Zt leaves in. rvi"' , . im us alone the common people of tue j leaves the people tree. HUPl'BLICAX TICKET. (ouacco HER DAUGHTER AND HIS SON. - BY IDAH McGLONE GIBSON An ruxltMiiit Adventure "I liav no frlciulH hre. I am ell alone in the city," I Haiti In a voice that was trembling an the man aalil could teh-gruph my friuiula. Th man lookod me over again, appraittliiKly. "I will take you to the manager," he aald. I noticed that as we walked thru the dining room to the office, that it watt not until I fart-d the nuiniiKvr and reallred that 1 had been follow ing a detective attached to the reH- t u rant that I undHrHtood why It wan that everyone turned to look at nut. Clement Johnson, an 1 learned watt hln naiiin later wiih the type of man whom I have met many time Hince In my IiuhIiihh life. He thought that a loung unprolerted woman waa a legitimate ot)Jert of hln attentions. 1 waan't aa capa le of taking care of mynelf then an I am now, and I know I trembled and turned alternately red and white before lit narrowed eyes. "So, you've linen trying to beat thu restaurant?" were bin find, fordtt. "I heg pour pardon." "Well, you came In here and. or dered an expensive dinner for which they tell me you cannot pay." "No ulr, I cannot," I anttwered. 'but I thought I hail a thoiiKiuid dol lara In hills when I came in only to dincover their Uwn a moment ago." "Where did you have It?" "In my Blocking." "How did It gel out. It'H a likely ntory that a young woman of your appearance would be carrying a thousand dollars In her stocking. Where did you get it?" "You have no right to nnk me how I got It," 1 anKwered spiritedly, "hut I lost it through a rip In my wtnek- ;lng," I added with a blush. . "Lets uee the bole. " "I showed It to the girl In the re tiring room. You can take her word for it." "You siiy you have no friends In the city. Where are you going to night ?" "I hid at the Hex Antlers hotel." "Why didn't you dine there?" i "lleratise It tteomed too expensive. i "What! With a thousand dollars In your stocking?" "Hut I had come here to hunt lor work, and did not know how ex pensive the hotel was until I got there." "Oh. thats It You want work." Again he looked me over in a way that brought the color to my face. "Wh'ti kind of work are you look ing for?" "I was going to take up a steno graphic courwe and meantime find temporary employment if possible." 1 wan getting more and more ner vous and It seemed as if he ques tioned me any more I Bhould have to "creHIH. "Will you let meo now? I shall try to get work in the morning and ! promfKe I shnl) pay you. I had no thought of stealing from anyone." I started for tho door. My only deHlre was to pet away from thone boldly prying eyes. "Here, voting lady, not so fast," said the detective. He grasped my arm no roughly that It hurt and I gave an involuntary little scream. "Don't do that Sellers," said the manager. 1 "Then you don't want to keep the dame?" aaked the detective in sur pifHe. "Not against her will,' he said more suavely than he had before spoken, and he gave me a smile that made my flesh creep. "Young woman, your Btory does not Hoem plausible to me, but I'm going lo give you a chunce. You tell too you have no training in business. Yet you look to me like a girl who has plenty of nerve and pep. Besides you must know that you're easy to look at. You're In luck; wo need a check girl right now. You can stay here and check for your supper to night, and if yon suit, you're on." Tomorrow Ann UiimIh a Job, Harley-DavidHon Puttees, 3.50 to $ ru. Th rpubltcan I' kot to b ?! ted at the snvrul el-tlon, Nov. 2, Ifr.'O; W.UIHKV O. IIAKIHNO, Pr.flnl CALM C. tOOI.IIK.4i, Vle-Jrea4riit Vol fur Ihesti II vo lilm't i', who nlll cast their vote for Haiti tug and (.'oulidy t : Z (X) M. C. Ueorge , 13 X Ciarm It Hotchklsa 14 X) JoMpn (hunt lb (A Joiin v. tticriuravon 16 (X Walter U. Hobb 40 X Kobt-rt . HtanAeld. United Mitti-a senator 42 (X W. C. Hawlt-y, United 8tate Ktfpreaentativt) 44 (X Hum A. Kozur, Secretary of JSiate 47 (X Henry J. 1',tnn 4K Xj Henry U HfiiMon A'J (X) Idiwrence T. llurrls (X) Thoniua McUl lUe (X) leotge M. Brown For J UMtb e o f the Mupretne Court, Oorge M. lirown'i nsine will have to he written in. 51 (X r. I Hawley, iJalry and Food Coiiinilmtloner 54 X) Fred U. lluihtul. Public Service ('uiiimlanioinT &t (X U 1- Ikddy, Senator from Loua laa County 55 (X Arthur II. Marsh, Itepresenta tlv from Iiouaclaa County Z9 (X) A. K. Shlila. lUpruu.-niatlve from lmiKlits County 62 (X) Charles K. ltupkln. Joint Jt' P reentatlve 63 (X) George Neuner, District Attor ney 4 (X) l. J. Htewari, County Judge 61 (X) A. F. Stearns, County Coimni-alotier iH (X Sam W. Htarmer, County Sheriff 70 (Xl Ira If. iUiltlle. county ciera 71 (X Jitines K. Suwyvn, County Tre-asurt-r 72 (Xj Frank U Calkins, County As set. nor 74 (X) F. C. Frear. County Surveyor 76 (X) M. K. Kilter, County Coroner 77 (X) i. C. Ilrowti, County School fcU PvrlntenUent The (Jmit Political Iwue at (From the address by Moniaville Klowers), This Is the exact Issue of the cam paign of 192U. Shall we preserve our national soul, mother of our govern ment, source of our character, strength of our success, life of all our American institutions? That it the question. Ail the platforms and issues of this campaign align them selves on this proposition: Collecti vism, Classism, Paternalism, Govern mental Ownership, Internationalism, the League of Nations all of which are successive steps in the same di rection down the road the demo cratic party Is taking all of these are arrayed under this issue. The line of cleavage In 1920 la clear; it Is between a constructive nationalism and Americanism, for which the re publican party stands, and a disin tegrating internationalism and Kuro peaniHin to which, under the leader ship of Mr. Wilson, the democratic party has been so rapidly plunging, to which, under James M. Cox of Ohio, Its nominee, the democratic party is now committed. Under these banners, Construction, Nationalism, Americanism, the republican party pushes into the campaign. The basis of the support of the league of nations by the democratic party Is now perfectly clear. The league of nut ions represents precisely the nut u re of the democratic party and continues Its history. It is so cialism applied to nations; It Is prac tical internationalism; it Is super government. It is quite necessary that the American people shall un derstand t hat socialism. Internation alism and super-government are three steps In a straight line. I'atie a SiiMr-4i4verniiieiit, The league of nations is a super- WARREN C HARDING a? "State-Wide" Telephone Service Our otrnrts are constantly directed to the extension and improve ment of ".state-wide" telephone service. Iirge and small communities are dependent upon each other, commercially and socially. Good tele phone equipment in the cities and towns of Oregon, with y;ood construc tion and well maintained "long distance" pole lines and wires between, mean their mutual convenience and profit. The value of any telephone is proportionate to the number of other telephones which may be connected with it. In Oregon there are approxi mately 1SS.000 telephones connected with our system. Ideal telephone service means the prompt connection of any one of these with any other and the least possible loss in strength and distinctness in the conversa tions that follow. Our entire plant is engineered and constructed with the object of rendering a satisfactory "state-wide" service sullicient in facilities avail able and with these facilities efficiently maintained. Fortius purpose the telephone equipment must be better, local and trunk wires must be of proper size and type, and central ollices and switchboards must have ad ditional apparatus to accommodate and care for the long distance circuits. liefore the troubled period of the war we always aimed to maintain "spare" or reserve plant that is, plant ahead of immediate needs, thus ensuring prompt and more satisfactory compliance with demands for service as they arose. During the war this reserve was exhausted as the materials we use were required and proerly taken by the Government and those industries given priority consideration. With the reconstruction period, as is the case with all other lines of business, our problems have continued to an unexpected degree. We are still hampered by shortage of materials and delayed deliveries." We realize the requirements of our long distance patrons. We have a comprehensive and well defined program designed to provide additional toll circuits sullicient to meet the present and constantly growing de mands. The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company vl if 1 t7nvAi-nmrnt because It has all the powers and functions of any govern ment: It provides a legislature with full nnwer lo enact laws, rubs aud regu lations which all members of the league must obey. It has the power of a supreme Judiciary 'o Judge a nation innocent or guiiiy, from which there is no ap peal and no escape. It has the power or the highest executive to enforce all Its decrees. It has the sovereign power to col lect money and expend it, to declare war. to make levies of men and ma terials, to fly one flag above all, to conclude peace, to make treaties and to execute the terms thereor. These are all the sovereign powers of any government and as the league of nations exercises tneni over an u member governments, it is a super-government. The liiie of Nations a Monarchy. And while in power und domain It Is a super-government, in form it is modeled after the monurchial forms of Europe and Asia. It has a House of Lords (the coun cil), self-constituted and perpetuated by Us own members, lo which only nln nations can be admitted, except by its own consent. This is the house of power. It has a House of Commons (the assembly); with entrance to it alone other nations must be satisfied. In it the nine Lords duplicate their rep resentation; this is the House of Words; for Mr. Wilson and Mr. Cox (and Franklin D. Koosevelt too) say, "Tho assembly is merely a debating society." In principle It Is neither a repre sentative repuldic nor a democracy A republic or a democracy Is built upon the principle that every humnn being possesses inherently the right of equal voice and equal representa lion with every other human being Hut the league of nations sets arbi trary representation for the nations, and destroys the principal of democ racy by making new, small, half- civilized Htates, such us the Kingdom of lledjaz, have equal representation with larger states like Greece and Hrazil. It raises Guatemala to the level of the I'nited States and puts the t lifted States on a par with Kgypt. It gives a negro in Liberia 240 times the voting power of negro in the United States and two thousand times the voting power ol a white man in the United States, The laMiKiie and American IndejH'ii donee. The league of nations affects the independence and the love of inde pendence of no people as it does of our people. European aud Asiatic states may enter a super-governme nt without a new surrender of sover eignty, or any change of form, or any twinge of feeling, because they have never been sovereign or free. Let us see: Tho third grade nations, Austria, Hungary, Greece, Serbia, Uoumanla, Hulgaria. Turkey, and other Balkan states have always lived and moved within spheres marked out for them by the greater powers. The second grade nations, Belgium, Holland -and Denmark, have newr been free. .Their nationalities have been guaranteed conditionally by greater powers to whom they have had to yield, living before them in tutelage and fear. IVnmnrk Is an in stance of this. Since 1864, England has required Denmark to keep standing army of 84,000 men in or der to guarantee her support; in 1!0! England raised the requiremen i to 1 30.000 men, out of a total popu laibtii of about two and one-half millions, a ruinous burden; mean time France holds a mortgage over Denmark equal to the value of one- half of the entire kingdom. This kind of pressure now forces these smaller nations to enter the super- w. f ii nit-II l III I lit" It-HRUr, H9 I U F chance nothing and lose nothing by f doing so. 4 I Europe Ii Xot Free. A Nor have the greatest nations o "A Europe, England, Franco and Italy jjiever been either independent or free. WA These nations have nlwnv h.en bound by a criss-cross of seer i rem u s which, standing supreme above their national constitutions ami laws, have displaced their sor ereigiwies and have required one nllv to fight at the call of another, and ineir respective people to die In nynnstic and territorial wars a K I lambs led to the slaughter. Thi has been the age-long status of these nations and the league of nations merely extends It and establishes it as international law. But the United States have been sovereign; its people hars been free and we alone have attained to that nne balance between vnrorn ment and liberty which makes the 4' 2 world have looked In tiope, whenever they have dared to hope that they. . ,,h, riu into this blessed es tate of independent government, and individual freedom, tiui n e surrender. If we go unuer mis su per-government, men uie goui . which all political history has aimed will be lost and the hope of liberty will die In the heart of the world. Hie lulled States on the Keiensiic Whether or not we Join the lengue of nations, our nation and whole so cial order are at this moment on the defensive. Civilization is on the de fensive. It was foollsn tor us to say In 1917 that we entered the war for humanity's suke. We entered the wr n sheer national defense, touay wt still are flghiing a derensive Dauie n.ilnl all the evil forces let loose by the war which are now undermin ing the luw ana oruer 01 uie wunu. After all, Germany has almost de stroyed Civilization. seil-l-unuui. Ideals of Justice, mercy, nonor uuu honesty these are all shivering from hell-shock. r I uroiiejiii Ihilslievbiiii lollies to America. The effective overturn of lnw and order and tho brutality of Germany limine the wur and of bolshevisin in Russia since are quivering in trie proletariat of all nations. Today socialistic forces are dictating to the governments of Denmark and Swe den. Kneland Is shaken and afraid. The next premier of Kneland may be socialist, and It Is almost certain that he will be a leader of the radl cal side. The mldille-class people of KiiEland are now wondering whether If that country goes radical the pro fessions of the ministry, of law, o i aching and other intellectual and clerical pursuits can live. Krnnce and Germany are trembling tn the verge of upheaval. The United States alone so far Is steady, but should radical tendencies bring down the temple of civilization in Europe, de stroy property rights and re-distribute wealth there, the vibrnllons of ihat earthquake will be felt thru out (he world and America will tremble. These things are In sight f the republican party is not put Into power on November 2nd, these forces of unrest and overthrow will have received such moral endorse ment that you may expect within the next four years a social condition, a buslenss condition, which up to nov have been Inconceivable in this coun try. If the republican party Is piit Into power on tho 2nd of Novem ber wllh but a a small mm cm, we are doomed to an Interim of most astonishing developments. Woodrow Wilson will figure as the second James Ruchanan, and the forces of disintegration and upheaval will play between this election and Ihe inaugural in March Just as they tlid after the election of Abraham Lin coln. I dare not tell you what I have heard may become the program. Hut strikes and demands beginning with some essentinl' industry of living and communication may be followed by others more and more inclusive, and if the nation does not comply with their terms, a general strike may be called. A general strike is a form of revolution. When private citizens are obliged to take the places of constituted authority to preserve life and save properly, revolution is on. and no man knoweth tho end thereof. To Iti-store Our Soul. What then will count all this ma terial accumulation held by by those who are able to give now to preserve civilization. Governor Cox is mak ing his campaign on the assertion that the republicans are to spend $15.on..nno in this campaign. .Should that be true, and should it be done In teaching the people the meaning of the enmpangn. It will be but an infinitesimal price to pay to preserve law and order, protect prop erty, sustain civilization, restore the soul of the nation, establish indepen dence aud freedom for ourselves and re-awaken the hope of liberty and peace In the world. There Is only one war to prevent Ihe fierce stone-age ffelings of the forces of disorder from coming Into -JVW HOOVER I Vaccum Cleaners UHLIffS ELECTRIC STORE Everything Electrical. PHONE 123 Millions for a New Stomach One of the greatest American millira sires ssid to his pliyniciau, "A million dollars, Poctor, spot cash and no grum bling, for a new stomach," and then the sick mn 1 groaned and turned away. An his wealth culd not make him happy or contented, for happiness large ly depends Uion digestion. Witkou health where does happiness cume inf After all the stoniaci, plays a great part in everyday hfe. Without a liaalthy stomach and good digestion our blood is thin, watery and poor, our hsart action is weak, our liver does not do its duty, and mn is miserable and unhappy. Trevent disease by putting th house in order and atrengtheuing the system against the germs disease. Pr. I'ierce, of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, nt Buffalo, -V. Y.t years ago understood disrases ami t'jeir prevention, and he discovered certain roots and herhs which were nature's remedies, and succeeded in putting tbim op in a form that could be easily pro cured at the drug store (liquid or tablets). This he ailed Dr. l'icxces Golden Medical Discovery. This lia. eorery gives so false stimulation be taute it contains no alcohol or any nar cotic. It helps digestion and the as similation of such elements in the food are required for the Mood. It gives to the blood the food elements the tis sues require. For over fifty years it has enjoyed the confidence of the Anemia pablia, Trjr it nul 4 j ANNOUNCEMENT Before Buying Elsewhere GET OUR PRICES . ABRAHAM Dry Goods Store. pluy after November 2nd; that is to elect the republican ticket presi dent and congress with an over whelming majority that will discour age und scatter the plotters of up heaval and soothe the spirit of un certainty und unrest. That will de mand the time, money and consecra li'in of the whole republican party. This Is the purpose for which you btnud. There never has been a great er cause. God speed you to tho task! ANNOUNCEMENT. Ed. Bryant wishes to annouot in poultrymen of Douglas cosntj that he has the agency for the Jubllw b cuhalors. Anyone wishing trim a literature on the same, phone F!S, or drop me a card at Rostburj, Rt. j" Harley-Davldson lamb-lined cor duroy vests and other lealber cta i $!).0() to 14 6t. Pi $400,000 Exposition Buildings. $75,000. in Premiums. 2,500 Head ol Live stock. Dairy Products Show in connection. Daily Auction Sales. Nationally Known Judges. Student Judging Con tests. Horse Show" Each Night. Promoting and Perpetuating the Live Stock Industry Not a farmer lives In the West ho hasn't a vital Interest in Ihe welfare and further developim-nt of the lire stock Industry. The Pacific International Livestock Exposition is a clearing house for bigger and better livestock production, brinjir.r together breeders an I feeders from all parts of the country for exhibit ing and demonstrating the melbois of raising pure br-d dairy and hw' cattle, hogs, sheep, goats and lories. Portland, Ore. NOVEMBER 13 TO 20 Reduced Railroad Hales JUST UNLOADED ( American Steel Wiie 5 A We can save you some money on fence while this lot uit- J. F. BARKER & CO., 4 ROflEflFIUl, ORFXJOX xRACWtf r. AgenU for Oliver Mows and Implements. t A Carload o I FENCE VVE SELL Edison MAZDA LAMPS Douglas County LightlandWattffc