♦ J PAGE 2 «A L S Z Y HALSEY E N T E R P R IS E AUG. 31. 1920 E N T E R P R IS E coojpanies want to keep faith with the men who have been promised those right« if they remained at work. The striker« want to be able toeay, wheo they «trike again: " ' ' ¡ ‘ H you go to work in our placer ■ubacriptio na, 51.1« . n i»ch; companies will betray you and T ra n a ie n t ad verttsins. 25< 25c an Inch; p.r- pe r- Jthe , ,#c 1,0 t r ,d e 3 w , y > ° nr r i8 _ h t» - to u«. at In “P a id -fo r P arag rap h »,” 5c a line. they did before.” N o a d v e rtis in g dtegutaed a» new». A n ta*4ep«nd«Dt— N O T n e u tra l— new»* P»««a. publlahed ev ery Th ured ay, by W M H and A A . W H E E L E R , W m M. W h ee ler. E d ito r. M r». A. A. W h ee ler. Nueine»» M a n ac er and Ix ic a l News E d ito r. opens on Tuesday, Sept 19 _ 1 1 ___ A T H E PARTY DID IT -N O T The 35 Inglewood (Cal ) raiders were tried at Los Angeles and ac­ quitted on the grouud th at the raiders were oliicer« of the law. It is apparently correct form at Los Angeles for officers to go masked, without a warrant, and yauk the male and female mem­ bers of a family from their beds and elam them aronud like rats. «*9 la Evcellent, Enlarged Faculty- I Most f° r S tu d e n t’» Money î Ranges & Heaters You should not miss this place if in need of a new range or heater this fall. We have the largest assortment of each in Linn county and can supply your wants at a n Reorganized Departments of Instruction Classical and literary coarse« leading to degree. Bachelor of Art» Complete coarse» ia Business Aminislration and Commercial Law. Special arrangement of courses articulated with technical and graduate ourses in other institutions : c HALSEY, Linn Co., Ore.. Aitg. 31, 1922 17» _ 1 __________I P rk E nginehrino P rb L bg al E rb -J ournalistic P ob -M bdic 1510 The first two yean of practically any course, if the student plans to crowd all his preparations into four years above the high school. Saving in Price For catalog or description of courses apply to The Halsey Enterprise is author­ President ity tor the statem ent that ‘‘the Albany, Oregon purchasing power of the farm er’s income is 25 to 40 per cent less than it was before the w ar.” The Underwood tariff did rane havoc with the farmer in the fall of 1920 and, to a less degree, in 1921. When the war ended sod commerce regaioed the eeas, the Twer Portland women were killed United States was made the dum p­ and a man injured so that he was ing ground for all kinds of South taken to a hospital when their car American, Australian, New Zea­ land and Canadian farm products. ran off the road ten miles north of Eugene Friday. They were going — Albany Herald. at terrifio speed and hootch was The American farm er’s grain is found in the wreck. No further marketed all over the world—wher­ Author of TheVoice of the Rack" explanation is necessary. Two ever people are able to buy. In many places they are dying of causes were combined, either of Illustration* hy starvation because they are not which would have been sufficient. Irw in Mgertf thus able. How much would In an effort to make automobiles higher tariff have added to the price the farmer gets for it? pay for road bonds the price has I, the Underwood tariff fixed the been hooeted until in many ol the price of cattle in 1920 and 1921. smaller towns in the state no li­ Copzjnqht by Little. Brown, and Co was it the same tariff that enabled censes a t all are taken hy ji‘,ney CHAPTER V II and~lie could see the wumau's eyes C hut Davis of Halsey to sell his drivers. It will be an ttphill job Brurp couldn't mistake the cabin, At Then be understood. cattle for 17.40 a hundred iu Port­ to pay for the through roads whioh They were set deep behind grizzled flip end o f the trail be found It—« land the other day, after getting have been built and (he market little shack of unpointed honrrtr with brows, but they glowed like coals There was no other word. They were |5 in 19217 Ho got an extra 1500 roads, which might develop the a single door and a single window. H e stood ii moment In the sunlight not the eyes of one whom time Is orsn. If the tarilf does all good state, will come harder etill. about to conquer. H er bodily streogth fie could not guess what wus his des­ or bad things th a t happen to the was gone; any personal beauty that tiny behind that rude door. It was m arket it did that. The compulsory education hill n moment long waited; for one of the she might have bad was ashes long Listen to the pettifoggers of one is likely to be defeated because the few times In his life he was trembling and long ago, but some great fire burned In her yet. party a n l you will hear th at his K. K. K. brand has been stuck with excitement. He felt as If a key, She blinked In the lig h t “Who Is long lost, was turning In the doorway party a few years ago ItT ’ she crooked. upon it. Nevertheless we believe of understanding. , Bruce did not answer. He had not Raised the price of the fanner's ibo state would be improved by its He walked nearer nnd tapped with I prepared a reply tor thia question. But Wheat not to the i t he had been hla knuckles on the door. adoption, j It was not needed. The woman leaned dreaming of for years but Io #2. A. M. WILLIAMS, Iron Beds Springs Mattresses Dressers All at The Strength Of The b9 Pines N ew Low Prices. BARTCHER & ROHRBAUGH $ ALBANY ., $..a. Enabled every second family in Oregon to buy an automobile. Doubled aud trebled the number ol phonographs Iu the homes of la­ boring men. Etc., etc., etc., Liatsn to tho fake patriot of the the other party. Ho claim« th a t his party Well—is just getting ready to: Keep tile home fires burning by in I ii mg coal. Keep the locomotive fires burning rod run the railtoad trains. Build up our merchant marine by allowing it to make a profit selling tioozc and by shoveling dollars out of the public treasury as subsidies. Raise the price ot everything anybody has to sell. Reduce the price of everything anybody has to buy. Etc , etc., etc. I f the forests have one nll-pervad- lug quality It Is alienee. What sound Work will soon bo completed nn there Is curries far and seems rather the Big Torn, a slough in the Lake out of place. Bruce could picture the Creek district, that is being deep­ whole of the little drama that followed ened slid widened in connection Ms knock by Just the faint sounds— with tho drainage project there, Inaudible Iu a less silent land—that Recording to ¡information received reached him fpora behind the door. At by county agent A. C. Hvman. first It was Just a s ta rt; then a short The county agent reports also th at exclumatlon In the hollow, half whis­ the deepening and widening of the pering voice of old, old age. A mo­ Robinett slough in the Shedd dis­ ment more of silence— as If a slow- trict is about to bpgin. This proj­ moving. aged brain were trying to who stood outside— then ect, including lands situated upon conjecture th$ creaking of o chair as some one branches of the slough, consists of jrose. The last sounds were of a 2,000 acres, which will, when the strange hobbling toward him— a rustle project is completed, he redeemed of shoes Isilf drugged on the floor and lor farm ing.—Albany Democrat. the Intermittent tapping of a cane. The fHce that showed so dimly In th« shadowed room looked Just as You name yonr salary. Bruce hud expected—wrinkled pa«t belief, lean anil hawk-nosed from age. The liund thjit rested on the cane waa like a bird's claw, the skin blue and should you become disabled by any ac­ hard and dry. She stood bowed over cident or any sickness. See her cane. D IC K W R IG H T . Hotel Halsey. Yet In that first Instant Bruce had North American Accident Insurance Co., an Inexplicable Impression of being In the presence of a power. He did not have the wave of pity with which one and Oliver usually greets the decrepit. And at Gant Plow, first ho didn't know why But soon he grew accustomed to the shadows W e pay it, Bull Tractor Œ Hlow $200 Young Mare $50 The writer of this article saw l i -•» hogs selling at 6 and 7 c.mts a pound. That was when d e v e ­ 5 years old. weight 1500 pounds, broke FRED ROGGA, R. 2, Harrisburg lan I was president, had Anything to do with Gxiug those prices. # FOR RENT Mr. W ibon had a facility ol getting what he wanted trim co n ­ gres«. He was l«m|iCM>ned for I Fzir building«. Three miles from even trying to do so. Mr. Hai | Il.ilte i iling tried hard to t m the machine I W J. RIBELIN without getting into the same rut, but ’it vgiti. H-, ¡a now in the rut and is trying his level best | B A R B E R S H O P lo ,.-l Ibe .10,01, « , ,„ I B , , . Io U,e I E lm ,ic H oircouiot. b i o u n o m n o r a a t l r v i i a l b a -a ll^ a congressional ball« to q m . t 1 playing sud Shampooing. horse anti go lo arork. Let us hope Cleauing a id Pressing. twajr succeed 1 E. C . M IL L E R B ut not until we nil can raise ourselves by our bootstrap! will C. C . B R Y A N T «n all get rich ixtrriugb a customs ATTORNEY AT LAW »•riff. The •( «el | rust and a few "I its like liAVe d o n e so, but tl.e Cusick Bank Building, common people never d,d, s li d Albany, Oregon. the most of m at e just common people. FOR SAI 8 —*a horsepower 2 Jersey Cows 1 D riving Horse 400-Acre Farm Ib e nub of the seniority ques­ tion, which preset Is striking shop- men from going U ck to work in the railroad shop» ia thia; The Electric Motor Used very little $30. Enterprise office, Halsey, Oregon. forward, and ■ vivid light began to dawn In her dark, furrowed face. 1 Even to Bruce, already succuinhed to thia atmosphere of mystery Into which his adventure had led him, that dawning light was the single most startling phenomenon he bad ever lie- held. The wltchltke face teemed to gleam with a whjta flame. And Bruce knew that his coming was the answer to the prayer of a whole life­ time. It was a thought to sober him No small passion, no weak desire, no prayer that time or despair could si­ lence could effect such a light as this 1 “Bruce," he said simply. It did not even occur to him to use the surname of Duncan. I t waa • name of a time and sphere already forgotten. “I don't know what my real last name F U R N IT U R E E X C H A N G E Albany E d ison M a r s h a ll Raised the price of berries to 10 and 13 cents,a pound. Raised the price of cattle, sheep and Ilogs until there was danger that breeding stock would l»e sold out und a shortagecreated that would last tor years. Raised the price of liny from 15 and H> a t in to $JO and $40. Raised wages from a co-.iple of dol­ ls a or less a day to »5. $8, $lo and Chiffoniers Bedroom Sets Dining Room Sets Oregon $ \f/ such evil ns would cast her to hell such a cry as this could not go un­ heard. The strength seemed te go oat of her as water flows. She rocked on her cane, and Bruce, thinking she wat about to fall, seized her shoulders “At last—at last,” she cried. “You’re come at last.” She gripped herself, as If trying tc find renewed strength. “Go at once, she said, “to the end of the 1’lne Needle Trail. It leads from behind th« cabin.” He tried to emerge from the dream like mists that had enveloped him ’How far Is It?" he asked her steadily “To the end of Pine-Needle Trail,' she rocked again, clutched for one ol his brown hands, and pressed It be tween hers. Then she raised It to her dry lips Bruce could not keep her from It. Anti after an Instant more he did nor at­ tempt to draw It from her embrace. Ir the darkness of that mountain cabin In the shadow of the eternal pines, h« knew that some great drama of humor life and love nnd hatred was behind the action; und lie knew with a knowl­ edge unimpeachable that It would b« only Insolence for him to try furthet to resist It. Ils meaning went toe deep for him to see; but It filled him At the End of the T rail He Wou'd Find— Linda 1 with a great and wondering awe. Then he turned away, up the Pine needle T rail. Clear until the deepet forest dosed around him her voice still miles from the cabin. The hour was followed him— a strange croaking Ip •bout six-thirty; In two hours more the afternoon silence. "At Inst," h« It would be too dark to make his way heard her crying. “At last, at lust at all. n e examined the mud about the spring, and there wag plenty of evl- dence that the forest creatures had In almost a moment, Duncan wat passed that way. Here was a little out of the thickets and Into the blj triangle where a buck had stepped, is." ■ timber. As far as he could see then and further away he found two pairs | “Bruce— Bruce." the woman whi»- wss nothing but the great pines climb of deer tracks—evidently those of s ■pered. She stretched a palsied hand Ing up the long slope of the ridge. Thej doe with fawn. A wolf had stopped to him as If It would feel his flesh to stood straight and aloof, and they wen to cool his heated tongue in the wa­ reassure her of Its reality. He saw very old. ters, possibly In the middle of some the exultation In her wrinkled, lifted He fell Into their spirit at once. Th« terrible hunt In the twlllgnt hours face. “Oh, praises to H it Everlasting I half-understood emotions that hat Then he found a huge abrasion In Nam e!“ ah« cried. “Oh, Glory—Glory flooded him In the cabin below diet I within him. The great calm that is the rood that puzzled him still more. to on High I" At the first he couldn't believe that And this was not blasphemy. The after all, the all-perradlng quality ol It was a track. The reason wss sim­ words came from the heart. No mat the big pines came over him. Bruc« ply thnt the size of the thing was In­ ter how terrible the passion from ' was rather tremulous nnd exultant at credible— as If some one had laid a which they sprang, whether It wai he crept softly up the trail. flour ski k In the mud and taken (t up It was the laat lap of his Journey again Ha did no( think of any of 1 At the end of the troll he would flnd- the modern-day forest creatures as ; Linda I And It seemed quite flttlnt being of such proportions. It was very s ale and had been almost oblit­ that she would he waiting there, erated In many days of sun. Perhaps where the trail began, In the wildest he had been mistaken in thinking It heart of the pine woods. He wss an imprint of a living creature. He quite himself once more—carefree, delighting In all the little manifesta­ went to Ida knees to examine It. But in one Instant he knew that he tions of the wild life that began to stir about him. had not been mistaken. It was a track not greatly different from that His delight grew upon him. It w is nf an enormous human foot; and the a dream coming true. Always, It to separate toes were entirely distinct. seemed to him, he had carried In h it It was » bear track, of course, but mind a picture of thia very land, a 1 illakook C ountv B rachts N' iw post ry - thb -S ba such, size that the general run sort of dream place that was a real­ rtB* C rater L akr N ational P ark O rbcow C avb S N a T' i . M onumbnt " f little black bears that Inhabited ty at last. He had known Jnat how O regon ' s F orbst , L a ««, R ivbb and M ountain R bsort » the hills could almost use It for a den •t would be. He had aiw.ya known S hasta M ountain R esorts Y oikmitr N ational P are of hibernation! how the pine shadows would fall He got up and went on— farther across the carpet of needles. The toward Trail s End. He walked more trees themselves were the same grave swiftly now. for he hoped to reach companion, that he had expected, hat the end of Pine-Needle T rail before hl« delight was all the more because nightfall, but he bad no Intention of of his expectations. nltlng In case night came npon him A» the trail climbed higher, the before he reached It. He had waited sense of wilderness became more pronounced. Even the trees seemed too long already to find Linda. Another hour ended the day's sun- la rg e r and more and Bflht. The shadows fell quickly, hut • glimpses of the wild people • more frequent The hlrds stopped » was a long time yet until darkness. their rattle-brained conversation and He yet might make the trail end. He and to «are no thought to fatigue. In the « •re d at him with frank curiosity The grouse let him get closer before “«I place, he had stood op remark­ ably well under the day's tramp for took to cover. no other reason than that he had al­ dlitm ™ tr* " dimmer. Now It was Jnst a brawn ways made a point of keeping In the »« re n t in the plao needles, colling neat of physical condition. Besides. ■"•nethlng more potent than ra i, lo » *I every 1 er* t of It. It dipped down to a little » • r e physical strength to snstsln , he ^ , 1 1 ^ , , ^ stream, of which the blasting sun of "im now. it ' Oregou Outdoors," ’ ‘California for the Tourist " and other beauti­ the nearing end of the t r a ll - a kaowl- ful folder» w ill he mailed FRBF. ON REQUEST. of tremendous revelations that of shallow pools Yet the water was would coma to him In a few hours J X And M kn~ *•» For fares, reiervatioas and other particulars, Ssk agents little brook trout—waiting until the mow. .B rains should m .k . . t o r ^ t w rvest truths were taking • mpe in his brain; he only needed a y ,n *1 tbu’ «"«le sentence of explnm.tl«,. to .on- dra^k?’ * * M hl” wUlb h* ■ect them all together He begaa JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent. By a queer pounding of his blood to reel a growing excitement and I to- Bruce knew that be was In the Met. pBtlcare. CH APTER V III IT’S TRAVEL TIME Round Trip Fares afford greater savings in travel coats thia year S A N FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES SA N DIEGO BACK EAST CITIES Through California “ Tho Way to See Moro of the U. 8. A. SO UTH ERN PACIFIC LINES •ljltudea. h ^ o lr r a d i X S could barely , h< , raiL f o r (h-