Hupplementlag this decaiuenrary H ave Home Orchestra. proof, M r C lark produced photograph- Mrs Cudldge In ut medium height, Ic copies of headl'i » f -em Canto«, CL, W 'V /l ( I **/ I r l L O l * will bp Invoked man', time« In many with brown hair, hazel eyea that hold A n Independent New spaper , *** newspaper, of conrurrenr- data, which places In behalf of many things. But a good deal of m errim ent and a very re a d : “ State troeps rnebtllglng fo r d aty fpw In all th«» great army of those quick sense of humor. A t home »he here. A ll available companies are or PU B L IS H E D EVERY TH U R SD A Y I ho ft»* lowed Roosevelt will be de- >nd her children have a little orchea- dered e n t" And, “G overaor order» el ved They know abo ♦» all othei rra. Mrs. Coolidge plays the piano troops for duty here, Ohio soldiers r». CUAS. BALLARD, E d ito r kings that the safety and Integrity John the violin and Calvin, a fte r eon porting to arm ories follow ing trouble." he Cnlted States lay closest to «ideriible discussion, In which he fa T ru th Should Ba Known. E n tered as second-class m a tte r Oc Theodore Roosevelt’s heart, and with cored a basa drum, compromised on a The surprising thing about It all le to b er 3, 1912, a t the postoffice a t H al them Ids doctrine of stalw art Atnerl- In n ! mandolin They play hynina and that Governor Cox In hla W heel'ng sey, O regon, under the A ct of .March o One V/KI Be Deceived |y7 can Ism w ill prevail «gainst any preach w a r sones usually— the hymns they speech should have made so flat an as ment of pi ogresai veisirt which seeks h u n t In the Congregational church and 3, li.79. Democratic Attempt to U s i to lure them from the path of p a tri f i.day School of Northampton. They sertion when all of the facts w ith re otic duty. Devoted to the m a te ria l upbuilding < , avoid difficult and u nfam iliar music gard to his m obilization of the guard Great President’s Name. hecntise the object of the orchestra la were still fresh In the public mind, a t Halsey and surrounding country and »■otlrely recreational and not educa least In Ohio. O.' course It Is not to ta L in n County generally. Subscription tional. T h a t Is a part o f Mrs. Cool expected that workingmen elsewhere ra te $1.59 per y ear in advance. THE PEOPLE KNEW ROOSEVELT id g e's educational policy— that chil in the United States would be fa m ilia r dren rhould work when they work and wtth the circumstances, and It was for p'ny when they play and keep the two that reason that State Chairm an C la rk Statem ent of the Ownership, Death of Foremost American Has separate. T h a t was why she sent her Is hla speech stressed the necessity for Management, etc of the the people all over the country to b * ’ j oys to the public schools of North Net Dimmed His Deeds in Informed that Governor Cox's assertion Halaey Enterprise, amnion when they were five years old the Minds of Patriots. ¡ Every morning when she Is In North j that he “never pressed a soldier Into as required by the Act of Aug. j nmpton, Mrs. Coolidge takes her Bos an In d W r ls I controversy” was ahso- 24, 1912. -CJ ton hag and goes to m arket. I f the I lutely at vartence w tth the truth. Publication of these official facta I By W illiam Hoctsr neighbor next door Is going Mrs. Cool ' utterly Mrs. Calvin Coolidge, Wife of confounded the advocatea of Published weekly a t H a lsey ,! May one who whs m ore o r ,e«s inti- I blge ¡mes w ith her In the car. O ther Republican Nominee, Praises wise she walks. She has no domestic : Governor Cox’s election, who have been ! tin ilely u s s o e ia lc d w ith T h e o d o r* Oregon. w hat 7h* 1 raaklnF ■ »pedal plea to the w orking. "ollcv. She buys, she says, Utxisevelt in die lest fifteen y e a rs of Managing Editor, Charles Bul ' men on the bask o f his West V irg in ia Her Sex. fam ily need and can afford.' 'iis life >ay a v o id in r e g a r d to th e speech. The revelations as ta M r. lard, Halsey, Oregon. : d e \« d o p in g te n d e n c ie s of th e p ending Cox’s mobilization of the troops are p n 's i d c n d u l c a m p u ig n ? Publisher, Charles Ballard, being compared w ith the sworn state < j <> :<>r Hi. es M. Cox, th e D em o DISCUSSES HIGH LIVING COSTS Halsey, Oregon. ments of liquor league contributions to c ra tic eund d ate. w ith in cre asin g fre his gubernatorial campaign fund In Owner, Charles Ballard, Hal quency is using the nam e of Colonel refutation of his statement that “the R o o se v e lt In his speeches, as of one Declares in an Interview That sey, Oregon. wets have never contributed one dollar I from whom th e G overnor ¿ a s derived Present High Prices Can Be Known bondholders, tnortga bis in sp iratio n for th is m om en to u s to any of my campaigns.” In both . cases the point Is made that the lasua gees, and other so uuty holders cn m p .ii.ti, am i w hose -n p p o rt o f Mr. Reduced by Votes. Is not as to the m erit o f his mobillza- holding one per cent or more of « "-n ili' d policies would be forth- I tlon of the troops, on the one band, or (’(»tiling w ere R oosevelt «live. At leant, as to the status of the wet and dry total amount of bonds, m ortga i G overnor Cox is nt p a in s to m ak e It By Estelline Bennett. Claim He Had “ Never Pressed a question, on the other hand, but th a t ges, or o her securities, I>. H. a p p e a r th a t It Is in to his h a n d s th a t Mrs. Coolidge sat In a day coach on the real Issue Is as to the degree of Soldier Into an Industrial Talmadge, 193 Oommerc al ’be torch horn«» b.v Colonel R oosevelt ■ slow local train between Boston and j truth and accuracy absolutely neces w as e n tru s te d when The la tte r p a sse d Northam pton and talked about her sary In one who seeks to ba president Street, Salem, Oregon. Controversy” Not True. i on. of th : U nited States. husband, her children, the high cost of Charles Ballard, Business A ddressing th e Ohio D e m o cra tic living and the domestic problem. The , S la te C onvention at C olum bus on Manager. OHIO MILITIA TWICE cox slogane I A ugust 17th, am ong o th e r th in g s conductor and the hrakemnn stopped USED Sworn to and subscribed be 'G o v e rn o r Cox s a id : as they went through the car to talk Washington. — T h e follow ing Inter, •Weed I rem ind you th a t It w as In to her. She hnd made friends with fore ire this 1st day of October, Question Not About Merits of eating Interview w ith Governor Jamea th is S ta te th a t T h eo d o re R oosevelt, them In her frequent Journeys bark 1920. M. Cox o f Ohio was published In the th a t g reat A m erican, m ade his speech and forth to keep In touch with her Strike or Need for Military, hotel column of the Washington Post [Seal] B. M. Bond, p roclaim ing his creed, not th a t th e children In school In Northam pton and four years ago— viz, on July 29, 1918: but as to Truthfulness. Notary Public. ju d g es «lone should he recalled, hut her husband at his duties In the state "Ohio Is not the only state where th e Judicial p ro c ed u re Itse lf should cnpltol. She knitted diligently as she the people are shsutlng the praises of My commission expires Sep (hat be su b je ct to re ca ll.” talked. D u rin g those trips she knits By W IL L IA M H 0 8 T E R . the President fo r having preserved tember 1st, 1923. all the w inter stockings and sweaters Arknow led'’ cd Error. Columbus, O.— Governor James M. peace In the United States. O nr honor for her two boys— John, aged four F irst a n d forem ost, no m an w ho Cox's boasted labor record has been has remained unsnllled. T he slogan teen. and Calvin, twelve. knew Th<od«.i, Roos*velt well, a n d ‘H e Kept Us Out o f W a r1 w ill be the shattered by his own official a c t "Too many people are afraid of w as proud to follow his lead erah lp , most effective argument the Democrat» Claim ing that he had "never pressed needs to he told th a t he lived to realize w ork," she thinks Is the fundamental can use In the campaign. Americanism Stock Farm, Registered. a soldier Into an Industrial controver the e r ro r of th a t specific d o c trin e w hich reason fo r the high cost o f living and has been pre-empted by the President, sy,” the record of his action as gov G overnor Cox now d ra g s from th e the much discussed domestic problem. and every other problem of national " I think the only thing the women ernor of Ohio In mobilizing the N a political lim bo of d ead things. Im port has been met squarely and sat B ut a sid e from this, th e one o u t of the country can do now,” she said, tional Guard of this state for service isfactorily." with the quiet conviction of one who In the steel strike of 1019 has been sta n d in g note in R oosevelt's g re a t ca This tends to show the caliber a f In Hut contradiction o f his Governor Cox. W ith him It la any Write, or call when at Albany. re e r w as his uncom prom ising, trie d lias thought It all out, "Is to vote for produced a n d tru e A m ericanism . H e w as an the men whom they thin k w ill make the assertion. thing ta win, any sort o f a catch phrase, Farm adjoins city. Some bulls A m erican above and beyond e v e ry r gilt laws and see that they are en Not once, hut on two occasions was slogan or anything to deceive s r fool of serviceable age at prices you thing else. H is A m ericanism «rose forced. They have done all they cun the Ohio guard, at an expense o f $23,- the people. In the home. I think the reason there 000 to the people o f Ohio, called Into »«hove all p a rty c o n sid eratio n s. He can afford to pay. w as | alous of his c o u n try 's honor, is so much sugar on hand now Is be- service and sent to Akron and held In H A R D IN G T O T H E F A R M E R S . C. C. Bryant, Prop. imse people are doing without It In readiness for action in nearby Canton. proud of Its tra d itio n s, ^«»alous In th e th e ir liomcR. Senator Harding's speech to tbs The question is not as to the merits m ain ten an ce o f its In teg rity and Inde J. M. Wagner, Sup’t. of the strike or us to the necessity for farm ers of the country, delivered at pendence He labored in cessan tly to Women Have Done T h e ir Share. the Minnesota State F a ir, Is commend p rom ote th at n a tio n a l unity w hich be “ American women have done, and the presence o f the guard w ithin s trik believed to 1» • m e of th e s a fe g u a rd s • t i ll are doing, their full share. They ing distance of Cunton, hut concerns able not only for the subject m atter f the IP puiili. ' I Ic's fa ith in have RHcrlfleed and saved and substi wholly tlie truthfulness of Governor and the constructive statesmanship W ash . 1 • ci! A<h’r a n d in tuted and made over. But that Isn't Cox's statement, obviously made to win which It contains, but for the calm and ’he M« nr.»»> D octrine w as such th a t enough. T hey'll have to vote the high fav o r among the workingmen. The dignified tone which prevails through facts as brought out In the speech of out the entire address. Nothing could he re g ard e d s tric t ndlierenee to th e In- «•ost of living down in» <»t«s o f both, as th e tw o g re at lull« ' ■'HerP III New England, where It Is F'-piihlictin State Chairm an George H. more thoroughly Impress Intelligent v a rk s of o u r n a tio n a l ex iste n ce If it a little hard for us t» give up pie,” slip Chirk, forinally opening the campaign- people w ith the difference In the sena tor and hla opponent and th e ir qualifi ' ere !'. >•»-sary io prove the* » a s s e r Innghed a; the tradition that has be At Columbus, are us follow s: cations for the presidency than Senator tions, 'ii;, 4 (o lid he quoted from • tne a Joke. ‘ we have learned to us»' Ordered Guard Out Twice. H ard ing ’s comprehensive discussion of his w ritin g s and speeches» In snptm rt sil kinds of cheaper substitutes for A fte r the steel strike had progressed tl»ereof. Rut o n e has only to m ention h o tte r and lard, mid In my own house- fo r some days, with more or less disor the agricultural problems o f the na lhe m in e of T h eo d o re R oosevelt to loltl we have experimented .w ith d if der. Governor Cox on September 28, tion and the solution which must be k - ---- — ------- b rin g b efore th«» inind a* p ictu re o f a ferent fru it coi.iblnfftlons to And some 31119. suddenly ordered the mobilization applied to them and the political ha C nlted S ta te s stro n g , se lf-re liu n t a n d thing we like mol that w ill take the of the guard at Akron. A period of rangue delivered at the tam e place by You may be crit cised by your Independent. least sugar. Apples must he ta rt to quiet followed, and the troops were Governor Cox.— 8loux C ity (la .) Jour teacher for not at tv nding to your h ake good pies, hut we have found w ithdraw n. And then again suddeuly nal. Roosevelt’s Position Clear. One does not ha\h» f« p o n d e r long to that blueberries take less sugar and on October 25 the guard was once more work properly, whereas you are reach a conclusion, th e re fo re , when» the combination o f apples and blue- and sent to Akron, and while “ P A R T Y FA CES D I8 A 6 T E R " — G O RE trvlng to do the best you can, R oosevelt would sta n d If happily lie berries, h alf ami half. Is delicious, re mobilized It lay there at that strategic point but you are not feeling just w -re iiirnng u tod. y T h e m an w ho «1 ires less sweetening than apples and aw aiting a summons Into action staff Senator Thomas Gore, Democrat, of 1D1G avow ed th a t th e suprpti .in- has more character than the blueber officers representing Governor Cox kept Oklahoma, who was defeated for re- right Nine out of ten case- Iti onal need wns overthrow of WII- ries alone." , close watch on the situation In Can nomlnatlon through the Influence of such as yours comes from the nnism nn<’ nil ,o » y onlstn repre- ton. the W hite House because of bis oppo Knows No Domestic Problems. 1 . I ' W»'11-defined eyes, and if it’s not from the In his speech at W heeling, W. T a , sition to the League of Nations, plain The domestic problem which Is clos 'I. tig ng todny If he ing homes all over the country and In- on the night of August 14 Governor ly indicates that he proposes te con eves we will truthfully tell you, ns, i I c would not ho eieaslna the hotel population Is some Cox s a id : tinue bis fight upon the le ^ a e . The and yon can seek relief else, lie «dde of G overnor Cox. "F o r six years I have been In execu- blind senator says: tl ng of which Mrs. Coolidge thinks \ ho, 'h ough age wns creep- si e Inn no personal, practical knowl j tlve authority In the great Industrial where. . “T h e paramount Issue ts te svett in. dem nnded hr his right edge She never keeps hut one maid. -ta te of Ohio. During all thia tim e I disaster: nobody favors the league '•’if :i< ross to face w ith the 1 »’ d she never lias been without one. have never pressed a soldier into an In that understands It. I thon-uoid m en Hint clnnt* I l the dfit'en years of her m arried life dustrial controversy." "The women of M aine have read I t ipan> him . the G erm an she has hail onlv two. T he tlrst one i he question Is, did Governor Cox I t Is no wender about the women. I t : . ' t d> In ,| down the s ' nl er'ted w ith the fu rn lilie d house tell the truth? Answering this ques Is no marvel about the mothers. They Ma i :nt on the Held o f Into which she and Mr. Coolidge tion, Chnlrman C lark In his Columbus are not w illing to mortgage the pound n>oping m orale of th e en- moved when they were m arried and speech displayed to his audience a pho of flesh nearest th eir hearts, i :|it b" revived, tho u g h 1" ik w ith her when she moved The tographic copy o f Special O rder No. 52 A L B A N Y OACO. “T hey are not w illin g te sign this a fo rm er P re sid e n t o f th e S' ennd emne when the first left to go Issued from the A d jutant General's de- bloody bond which Is a first lien upea Hjiro.d Albro, ••1 St R « " .Id have hnd IlftlP Iq and live w ith her sister. I arlm ent o f the State of Ohio, dated the life of every boy beneath the etsrs Manufa lu rin g Optician. i n ' nnd ilnte who«e new s, There must he a reason fo r their Columbus, October 25, 1919, which des and stripes. m ed - 'V ih ' ii m onths aft- ’■"aylng, II was suggested to Mrs. Cool- ignated certain officers for Im m ediate "H e was blind Indeed who bad net • of tl ■■ l.n sltn n ln . th a t h ge. nnd she thought possibly there active service and paragraph 4 of already seen the black shadow of the THE FURNITURE HOSPITAL n V b o a ts h a v e com m itted Were several. She thought lhe type of which reads: M aine alectlons visioned upon the hori iln ’ t us." Renovates and makes feather zon.” r ild h a d , something to do w ith It. Facts Presented, In whnt w lrrln g words H e r s both have been American wo- "In anticipation of the development m attresses, old furniture and ■nouneed th e l .u s lta n ll i ien old enough to have a sense of re- " f a rioting cood.tlon at Canton, O , the BACK PO RCH C A M P A IG N TO m attresses made like new. hov th ro u g h o u t alt th a t .«t'onsihlllty to theli work nnd lntelll- Governor of Ohio has deemed It neces BE B EG UN 8O O N BY W IL 8 O M . of A m erican • neutrnllty, n nt enough to respond to reasonable sary to assemble a sufficient number of B ing them in or phone 2* vo ' ■ rung . th ro u g h th e ei tirtenns treatm ent. state troops at Akron, O , to he held 1» Washington. — G radually being 128-130 Ferry St. Albany, 0 ing Hie | tit riot I riii of o n r “ A geisl many wonipn who keep only icadlness to render aid to the civil io - pushed te the rear by the progress of ip culm lm ition In A pril, cue maid have trouble In th eir house tborltles st Canton, O , and has so di "even Mr. W Ison Anility holds because both mistress and maid, rected the A d jutant General o f Ohls, the canvass It Is now anoouneefi that President Wilson Is to wage a “Bach- Do voti want a i*d to fa -e th e luevittihle. I ut chiefly the mistress, are afraid of who. pursuant to such order, direct» Porch" campaign The local evening io law ngnliiRt G ov ern o r work. A woman expects one maid to donel Benson W. Hough to proceed papers announce this fa r t and say of Colonel R oosevelt'S tie the rooking and R< rubbing and ev without delay to Akron, O , to taka Is th e re tiny law on th e erything else and still be dressed up In ■ -ommand of all state troops upon ar that the plan Is being discussed by the Adm lnistrutlea leaders. I t may See E S Marsters about it and i p roviding for th e erlmt'R Mack dress w ith w hite cap nnd apron, rival at Akron, O„ and to hold them la even come w ithin a week, aoroe of 'tiia iitte d In th e nam e of let him dem onstrate it for \ou. ready to answer the doorbell any m in readiness for duty, »w atting fa rth e r these leaders b-lleve. Kdmuad H •SR fo r w hich Colonel ute. It Isn't humanly possible I al orders," Moore, who managed G evsraer Cox's 'mt 1 tier«* an- N apoleons ways answer my doorbell myself I The order Is signed by the A d jn ta n t >f w heal, of oil mid of do It for two reasons. In the first General and counter-signed In these pre-convention campaign, la given lh e following m atter is run credit fo r this rear attack oa the th e re w as onlv one Na place, there Is no one else, ami. In the •'His, “ By command of Governor Cox." H arding method o f using the Croat for the «republican party. Like ve a re Jim m ie s and Kd- ' -etind, I like to greet my friends at Did Governor Cox tell the tru th to porch. trie s, hut th e re w us only the door myself." m atter can be run for the demo ibe worktuamen? one T» cratic party on the same terms. I T h e H a lse y E n te rp ris e ’ " ic . w r • C 'O T ■ ? in ■ ’a - fftp CfspmG’ wn pnnn n’hfch w* r m r **nh»r<‘ij» th e p.i.uc «4 Kuusoxelt S W i ? 79 FORE1: IN C A M G N TALK ? AMERICAN WGÎ.ÎEN COING FULL SHARE FOR THE COUNTRY COX'S STATEMENT TO LABOR PROVED TO BE GROSSLY INACCURATE 0LD AND NEW BRYANT PARK PLACE SH O R T H O R N CATTLE DU ROC SWINE O p to m e trist Milking Machine’’ .