SENATOR CHARLES HALL « FKB 23 l'»23 UFE IS CALLED ‘HUM-DRUM’ P H O N O C R A P H S Oregon Woman Fights Typhoid. Saves 1000 Children and Runs Special Trains. AND Mayth and Throa Washes R E C O R D S Peroxide Lavoris Listerine Glycothymoline Borolyptol Witch Hazel * R e c o rd s fwMarch to I submit my candidacy to the Repub­ licans of Oregon for the nomination for Governor. Following are some of the principles for which I stand: 1. I have made no pre-election prom­ ises and I will make none, except those herein stated. 2. Taxes on general property must be reduced. I fsvor substituting net to exceed ten departments for the seventy or more existing State Commissions. (Illinois System.) 3. Not only reduction of taxes, but improved msrketing facilities and Increased credit are eeeentlal to In- eure the prosperity of the farmer. 4. A more equitable adjustment of the automobile license tax with due re­ gard to the actual value of the car. Gasoline tax for highways only. 5. As to my attitude on the labor question, I refer to my employes, and my Legislative record. 4. Completion of the State Highway System with special attention to market roads. 7. The public school is one of the fundamental factors in our systsm of Government. I favor compul­ sory attendance In the primary grades. Teach pure Americanism to all pupils, beginning st an early age. Continue to strengthen and build up this typical American In­ stitution. 8. Strict enforcement of all laws. 9. I am against Japanese land owner­ ship or control. Senator Charles Hall of Marshfield, who has long been mentioned as one of the strongest prospective candi­ dates for Governor, has announced definitely that he will enter the guber­ natorial race. This announcement has been expected by his friends for some time, as strong pressure has been brought to bear upon the Coos and Curry Senator since his name was first mentioned as a prospective can­ didate. He was born on a farm In Jefferson County. Pennsylvania, and came to Oregon in 1901. Shortly thereafter he began hts business career as a clerk In a drug store at Clatskanie, Oregon. Eventually he acquired ownership of the drug store, sold it and bought a drug store In Hood River, where he lived until 1914. In Hood River his ability for organization asserted It­ self. Durtng the eight years he spen’ In that town, he was one of the build ers of the telephone system there, the Oregon-Washington Telephone Com­ pany, and built the Central Building. Oregon Hotel and the Hall Building, and owned and planted a number of orchards in the Hood River Valley. He also served as Director and President of the Hood River Commercial Club. His activities were transferred to Coos Bay In 1914 and Immediately thereafter a number of new organisa­ tions In that district came Into being. He organised the Coos and Curry Telephone Company of which he Is President today; organised the Bank of Southwestern Oregon In 1917 and was President of that institution until 1921. Outside of his business activities In Marshfield, he soon became one of the prominent citizens of that district. He was one of the original promoters of the State Highway program. He was elected Senator from the Eighth Sena­ torial District comprising Coos and Curry counties in 1920. Senator Hall soon became one of the leaders in state-wide politics as a fearless exponent of the highway pro­ gram. As a Legislator be played a prominent part in all important legis­ lation during both sessions In 1921 He risked censure from the exponents of the 1925 Exposition Bill when he refused to listen to any proposed In­ roads into the road funds for the pur­ pose of financing the Pair, Hall's un- deviating course In this latter action brought forth the highest praise from all parts of the State. Sines his debut into state-wide poll- tian, the leadership In various non­ political movements has gravitated naturally to him. He Is a member of the Oregon Lead Settlement Commis­ sion and served for three years as President of the Oregon State Cham­ ber of Commerce and Is now a director of that organisation. Friends of Senator Hall proclaim him as a natural leader, and point with pride to his record of achievements In public and private life. Others con­ cede that his Judgment is sound and, admit that no outside pressure or log rolling can swerve him from any pro­ gram or movement to which he has dedicated hinjgelf. — -------- "My life has been so hum-drum and as nothing has happened to me out of the ordinary I am sure there is noth­ ing In what I have done the last two years In the Near East that would be of interest to my Oregon friends,” stat­ ed Mrs. Amy Anthony Burt of Bend, Oregon, to J. J. Handsaker, State Director of the Near East Relief when he met her In Constantinople last summer. “After much effort,” says Mr. Hand­ saker. "I persuaded her to tell me some of the things of this hum-drum life of hers. Sitting in a Constantinople cot i fee-house she told me of some of the events of her life since March 1919, when she arrived in the Near East.“ “Her first work was at Karakllss, where with her sister. Miss Gertrude Anthony, she had charge of a large orphanage and a territory 75 miles square for general relief. During the time she was there she nursed her sis­ ter through both typhoid and typhus. The two women were alone in this sta­ tion. “After going through this experience they went to Alexandropol and there one day received a message from the English that they were evacuating Baku, some 600 miles away. The British had been feeding about 1,000 children, and unless they were trans­ ferred Immediately they would starve as soon as the British left. This Oregon woman whose life was so hum-drum I quietly secured two special trains', put- j ting a man in charge of one, and tak­ ing the other herself. On arriving at Baku, she began loading the children at 10 o’clock a. m. and had the children and their supplies all aboard by 4:30 p. m. She read the riot act to the Turkish captain In charge of the train and he compelled the guards to cease attempting to enter the cars where the older girls and women were. The round trip took nearly two weeks, but Mrs. Burt returned to Alexandropol with her two train loads of children without having lost a single child. LIFE OR DEATH? A question which is still haunting State Director J. J. Handsaker of the Near East Relief; was put to him by Mrs. Jeanette W. Emrlch when he was In Constantinople late last sum­ mer. Mrs. Emrlch Is well known in Oregon through her talks on condi­ tions In the Near East four years ago, when she spoke In the 1918 campaign. “Mrs. Emrlch Is now in charge of extensive Near East Relief work at Constantinople, her duties Including the management of several industrial units, a number of soup-kitchens, and a feeding station for 6,000 children,” said Mr. Handsaker. “She is one of the most energetic, efficient and de­ voted workers on the Near East staff, and has borne up wonderfully under a airpesaion of heavy personal griefs He» husband died when heading a relief expedition in Aleppo shortly I Now on Sale Dy-It to Notable Recordings by World-famous Sj A rtists 2181 75c This is the best dye to use to make your last sum m ers hat as good as new. ALL COLORS EASY TO APPLY Bottle, 25c Schoolhouse Blues____. ________________ K rueger’s Orchestra I've Got M y Habit O n __________________ Krueger's Orchestra 2180 T y -T e e — Fox Tro t - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ___ Carl Kenton’s Orchestra 75c Stealing— Fox T ro t____ ____________ Carl Kenton's Orchestra 5080 Aloha O e ...___________ . . . . . . . . . ___Soprauo and Male Trio $1.00 Golondrina___________ ______ _______ Soprano and Male Trio 5075 Arlesienne (Farandale)__ ________ ___ -Vassella's Italian Band $1.00 Arlesienne— M i n u e t . . _______ HALSEY BNTBRKRISM _____ ..V a s s e lla ’s Italian Band Ringo's Drug Store 5074 When Night Falls, Dear .......................................... -Male Quartet $1.00 Ann Arbor Davs . . . . . _____________________Male Quartet 2183 75c By the Pyramids— Fox T r o t _____ ______ Rodeniick’s Orchestra Right or W ro n g ...___ ___ ____________ Rodeiuick's Orchestra LOST 10050 Melody in F—Piano Solo________________________ Godowsky Near Halsey, Saturday last, one 10049 Rigoletto— T e n o r ._______ ____________________ M ario Chamlee 13033 Little Town in the Ould Country Down___sung by Theo. Carle Drawer ' T Sewing Machine containing metal box with extra parts. Kinder return to Enterprise office anil receive reward. We will be just as glad to play these now records tor children who do not buy as for those who buy. Woodworth Drug Co., ALBANY O R EG O N 7500 Recodrs to select from MEXICO WOULD ABOLISH PULQUE 9 Government Tackles Big Task in Depriving Poorer Classes of Their Beverage. TRIED MANY TIMES BEFORE Conqulstadoras Found the Aztoco Drinking Fulquo, and It Has Boon Favorite Tipplo of People Ever Sine«. FARM ERS sz MZ V v the gluey, whitish fluid will And Its way into the exaggerated 'schooners,' set out on the long counters of tlio pulquerías. "The most picturesque thing about pulque 1» the method of Its gathering. I f undisturbed a maguey plant would develop a stalk from three to five times as tall us a man, and thousands of yellow flowers would bloom on this stalk. When the flowers are about to sprout this stalk Is cut off, the heart of the plant Is hollowed out, and Into the receptacle thus formed flows the sap of the plant. Tilts sap the natives call aguamiel, honey- water. “Along comes the harvester, recog­ nizes a plant which Is ready for him by the fact that the heart has been stuck on one of the sharp spines of the cactus, and proceeds to empty the ’honey-water' Into a pig skin bag. A Difference In Viewpoint. “Fermentation of pulque Is has­ tened by the introduction Into the fresh liquid of ’mother-pulque' which has been kept for ten days or tw-o weeks. One's attitude toward the fin­ ished product is akin to that toward the olive— only much more so. The disinterested purtaker's reaction is al­ most Invariably the same— that pulque tastes like sour milk and smells like fetid eggs. "This beverage is drunk so gener­ ously by the lower classes, least able to restrain their appetites, that It has become an economic problem of great magnitude in Mexico because of the Immediate enforced Idleness It causes, and because of the degeneracy that re­ sults from Its long-time use. “Pulque is not to be confused with tnescal and tequila, both distilled liquors derived from the maguey, or with aguardiente, a brandy, distiller) either from sugar cane or from grapes. "In lesser altitud«« than that of the Mexican plateau the maguey matures very slowly, a fact which led to giving the nickname ‘century plant’ to the variety found In the Southwest of the United States. The abolition of pulque would not affect the high esteem In which the maguey plant is held In Mexico. Not only Is Its beverage very ancient, but Its uses always have been many. A 'miracle of nature' Prescott called It, nnd small wonder. Its leaves provided papyrus on which many Aztec manuscripts were preserved, the na­ tives pulled out a thorn with Its attached fiber, and hud a needle ready threaded. Washington, D. O.— “I f the Mexican government has undertaken to abolish pulque drinking, as dispatches say. It I hat assumed a task beside which the , enforcement of our own eighteenth amendment would seem a minor de- I tall of~lUlmfnlstratlon,” according to a bulletin to the Washington (D. C.) , headquarters of the National Oeo- I graphic toclety. I “IwiUts against pulque are nothing "new In the Mexican’s life. As early as 1692, at least, a Spanish viceroy th o iifM It would be a good thing to stop pulque drinking, and precipitated a riot which ended In the burning of puhlle buildings, and as recently as 1917 an anti-pulque section was In­ corporated. In the new Mexican consti- I ttitlon. But the Mexican has bllss- ! fully Ignored such prohibitions, as did the Aztec before him, and a t did the j Toltec before the Aztec. "Drunk only by the poorer classes. ' pulque can lay one claim, that of age. I to be #n aristocrat of new world bev­ erages. 'The conqulstadores found the Aztecs drinking pulque, and the Az­ tecs told the legendary tale of how a certain Toltec saw a mouse gnawing at the heart of a growing maguey. Peering closer he discovered a field oozing forth. The observant Toltec sent his daughter to convey a sample of the fluid to his king. The monarch MRS. J E A N E T T E W . E M R IC H liked both the beverage and the girl. after the signing of the armistice, and To them was born a child named Me- one of her little boys died suddenly conetsin, meaning 'Child of the Ma­ Just one week after my first conversa­ guey.’ From that time forth, so runs tion with her. • • • When I saw her, the story, the Toltecs began to dec line her heart was heavy because of her In power and, their vitality sapped by inability to give the children under the wine of the maguey, they fell easy her care enough food to keep them prey to the Aztec conquerors In the Death of Abraham. In normal health and strength In Valley of Anahuac. And these are the days of the years "Pulque has long entered Into Mex­ great agoDy of soul she discussed with of Abraham's life which he lived an me whether she sheuld continue feed­ ican history, and la closely related to hundred threescore and fifteen years. ing her (.000 children as she was do­ social and labor condlttbns there, be­ Then Abraham gave up the ghost, and ing. or whether It would be better cause the geography of certain dis­ __ ____ of _____ died In a good old age, an old man. trict« of the states Hidalgo. Tlax for the future of the race to double the eala, Mexico, and of the federal dl»- ! and full of years; and waa gathered allowances of food for each child and cut the number of children In halt. ( tr,rt ’• ««rem ely favorable to to his people.— Genesis 2 5 :7-8- The latter plan, of course, would mean growing certain varieties of cactus. The Murmuring Congregation. the abandonment of 2.600 helpless There are 33 kind« of ractua which And the Lord spoke nntn Mooes and little boys and girls to the stark fate thrive In the Mexican plateau, all of onto Aaron, saying, How long shall of starvation, and the giving of their which are grouped under the generic I bear with thia evil congregation name of Tnaguey.' The Greek ‘Agave’ food to the other 2.500 children. In (noble) also la applied to thia group, which murmur against me!— Numbers order that the smaller group might be brought to normal maturity. W ith­ a characterisation which Is defensible 14 .26-27 in a week after she asked me thia even If tha maguey la comparable to question, her own little boy was a Gargantuan artichoke. Rage Nebuchadnezzar. S h ip p e d by Trainload. stricken and died. One week after the Fickle packers u y that every true lad waa burled. I returned to Cod- “ ‘T h e visitor to Apam, a town of American must eat a pickle every two etaatinople, from the Interior, to find southern Hidalgo, might mistake the weeks. In that caae. how’a Ibe hay Mrs Bmrteh again at her post, with long lines of cars constantly moving market? We don't want to be pot to the antweoom of her office filled with away from the sidings as milk trains. the necessity of eating a bale of hay widows and orphans to whom she was Instead, they are pulque cargoes, many to establish our Americanism — Toledo gtvtog egreful sympathetic attention.' of them bound for Mexico City, where •lade. accumulation ol articles no longer’needed, or succeeded by better ones, which somebody would veruseniem the me like to obtain. An advertisement C, might find s size of this, costing 25c, buyer and covert what now only trash into good £ C A SH KAG A baud of boy scouts went to tal e Ogle last evening and had an outdoor feed with th eir bike. The rexival meetings at the Methodist church are being lar.e-y attended and the evangelists are gaining much popularity. Three members ol the Blain Clothing company were at the meeting of the Oregon Retail Clothiers association. J. Deo McClain, one of them, waa elected eqretary. The Stale Tax Reduction league •fill hold a meeting at Brownsville ivxt Saturday at one o’clock sharp or the purpose of organizing. Ev- rybody, men and women, urged to ttend. Speakers w ill be there. The fellow who robbed M r. J'Brien at the Halsey hotel, sa ie- ounted on page 1, had taken a torn there fcr the night. As a breediug place for purebred veatoca Lion is the first county •i Oregon. — Herald. Mrs. Albert M iller and grand- «ughtera Helen and Janet Set-le f Eugene visited at the Karl Iraniwell home from Tuesday to Thursday of this week. The Robertsons and Kumps hanged residences Wednesday. E. Gardner and Bryan Perry lid the moving act. O. W. Frum returned Thursday rom Portland, where he had been o attend the funeral of his brother- n-lsw. While cutting wood Wednesday -ear his home southeast of town I M M iller accidentally cut his ieot with an ax and several stitches vvre required to close the wound, vbich was ovor two inches long. Graat Feat of Balancing. A eertnln mayor In the South, who«- r>ertnd of office had come to an end Llloyd Arthur G illett arrived at was surveying the work of the year "It has been my endeavor." he said the home of M r. and Mrs. 0 . E. with an air of conscious rectitude, "to G illett southeast of town Saturday, administer Justice without swerving hut baa not done much work on the to partiality on the one hand or Im­ farui yet, except to assist at m ilk­ partiality on the other."— Wayside ing. When his hair and teeth Tales. have grown, and he gets the lay of Jots and Tittles th i land, he may take a hand in other work. The E, H . Pet rick fam ily, in- oluiing that big new boy, took the (Continued from page 1) traiu today to join their husband Judges Bingham a»d Kelly are ind father in their new home at candidates for another term. Sweetwater, Idaho. Mr. and Mra. Harvey Clingman Miss Bernice Coshow of Browns- were recently laid up for a week ille, in a hospital in Eugene, is reported improving after an oper- with the prevailiag cold. Mrs. Jesae 8nfl«y, who reoently ition for appendicitis. Her mother cam« home, apparently improved returned from there yesterday. The basketball team of Company in health, from an Albany hos­ pital, after an operation for goiter, C, Oregon National Guard, will grew worse again and returned t j meet the team from Halsey tomor­ row evening at the court of the Albany yesterday. local armory. This is the second Clarence W illiam s advertised ame between these team», the baby chicks in the Enterprise and talsey quint having obtained x baa been awamped with orders, so victory over the guardsmen on the he orders it out. It pays. Halsey floor recently.— Wednes­ Evangelist Straub, who had be< u day's Eugene Register. delayed so that his date at the When moving from Brownsville Brownsville Christian church had Oren Stratton lost a drawer and to be advanced, arrived last Sat­ contents from a sewing machine. urday. He thinks it was lost near Halsey J. VV. Bowers of Shedd bat trail­ and offers a reward for its return Mr. ed off his farm and baa an auction to the Enterprise office. ‘.’Hope Mrs, sale of personal property next Stratton writes: Tuesday. A week from today he Wheeler will again he able to be You were leaves for Malheur county, hoping out as in days gone by a change of climate will improve certainly a pair of hustlers while living in Brownsville," bis wife’s health. f Mrs. E lth a Turner of Albany The name ‘ Borden Dunlop" in the Browusville correspondence un is here with her sister, Mrs. I^ecper, page 1 should have read "Bower who is sgsin confined to her bed with a relapse of the ailment from Dunlop.” which she waa recovering. A new ink roller, ordered nearly All members of the D. 8. Mc­ a month ago. arrived it time for thi« iseint, ami the Enterprise is W illiam s family were alternately printed better than it has been for disabled by illness last week. some weeks. The Hcio high school is publish­ Mrs. W. A. Ringo is suffering ing a wide-awake monthly entitled from a very severe cold, altho not "The Scio Sphinx." Il ia a credit­ able publication of ten four-column confined to her bed. pages. Mrs, J. C Bramwell returned Miss Betty Jean Dissmore, three Tuesday from tint Gillette resi­ dence, where she assisted the stork months old, baa been yisiting her in bringing a little sun (son) into giandpaients, G. R. W alker and wife, for a couple of weeks. In ­ the home. cidentally her parents came along. The streets of Halsey were huzs- They left for their home at Rufus, ing with the hosv Rel>ekabs on O r., yesterday. | Wednesday. They were making great preparations for initiatory j Halsey encampment No. 32, I. work a id a big feed of ice cream O. 0 . F., met in regular seasion and cake They outdid their breth. Tuesday night. One candidate took ren who had Ibe hall the preceding all three degrees and two took I he Delegations were night, initiating twice as many royal purple candidates, five-axths of whom present from H-trrisburg. Shedd A feast and were of the female persuasion. and Brownsville. Their closing hour was iato but not grand time were enjoyed, and aa scandalously so as at ibe en­ some of the participants did not go home until far into the morning. campment. BIG DOINGS Girls’ Glee Club of Halsey H igh—24 Voices R i a l t o H a l l M u r c h 11, 1 9 2 2 General admission : Children, 25c ( adults, Me. Reserved seats, 40c Tickets at Stewart A Price's conloctionerr alter Feb. 25. tverybody out and help the school t hit-