» \ > PAGE 2 H A LBST HALSEY E N T E R P R IS E OCT. 26. 1922 E N T E R P R I S E thia nation, and it looks as though the reactiou against it is likely to disintegrate the old parties. A n In dép end ant— N O T a e u tr e l— n e w s paper, . - ------------------ published every --------- Th u rsd ay. *>•1 ---------, _ by W M H . and A A . W H E E L E Î W m . H . W h ee ler, E d ito r, M rs. A. A. W h e e le r. Business Ma »sr and Lo cal N ew s E d ito r. | Film it UFC â /o riousV acation/and Congressman Burton complains Where dreams come true and cares of yester the League of Nations discusses day are soon forgotten Subscriptions. 11.50 a ye ar In advance. relief contribations of eeyeral ns T ra n s ie n t a d v e rtls ln c , 25c an inch; p e r i tions but aays nothio^ of the m a n e n t a d v e rtis in g . 26c No discount (o r tim e or space. larger sums given by the In ‘T a ld - f o r P a ra g ra p h s ,’' 5c a Un« United States. What of it ? The N o a d v e rtis in g disguised as news. United States ignores the league HA LSEY. Lion Co., Ore . Oct 26, 1922 why should the league recognize the United States? It waan'l the UniteikStat.ee that gave the bulk FOR SHERIFF of those fuuda, either. They are Sunlit skies—Flowers in blossom—Miles of The contest for the shrievalty contributed by private citizeng as sparkling ocean at your feet, are just a few of So this county w a r in g up as elec such. life’s advantages in this vacationland for every- tion day grows nearer. The re. If all the young children went one. publican candidates outnumber to the public schools, aud the the democratic about four to one. money now coaxed, begged, wheed but io this case numbers do uot led and scared out of members of mean strength, for if the democrats sectarian organizations for sec should all vote for the democratic to tarian schools were paid to min candidate and the republicans isters whose families are now half divide their votes evenly among F r a n c is c o S a n ta ^ B a rb a ra — L o s — San starved, the creeds of those people the republican candidatea the dem 2 ) ifg o a n d u th r n S a h d ir n la d R l l t n l f i o l n l s would be more successfully advo ocrat would probably win. cated and their membership in- Probably eaob candidate will re 'T h k C a l if o r n ia E xpress " has through Pullmans Seattle, Tacoma created. and Portland to Los Angeles via Sacramento. ceive a majority of the votes in his Sttaub on the School Bill own town, for all are reputable, Stay a day or more in San Francisco—a delightful stopping place o'pable and popular men. Aga inat the claim of opponents Mr. Dunlap, among the republi of the school bill that tie . e are 12. earn, having the prestige of being 000 children in private schools Mr. 8traub of Eugene says there For fares, train service, sleeping car reser already occupying the office, will are 8.763, including many who vations or beautiful folders ask agents or write probably derive aome advantage would not ba affected if the bill be L IN E S from that fact. Having been a came a law. To the claim that there is a J O H N M. S C O T T , resident of the city of Albany only for the short time since he succeeded scarcity of public school teachers General Passenger Agent, Portland, Or. which would be accentuated by the late E. M. Kendall, the tend the proposed law be asked: “ If ency referred to above of voters to the teachers io the private schools prefer their own townsmen is not are competent why could they not likely to give him the advantage teach in the public schools ? ” He replies that a large majority from living in a large oity that it of these private teachers are with would had he resided there longer. out certificates because they are Halsey will probably give a ma incompetent. jority to Mr. Walton, who is now The Oregou health exposition mtyor of the city and has a record M O R N H IN W E G STORE. - will be staged in the public aud as deputy sheriff that will not be itorium in Portland October 26 to Don t forget we sell P L O W S , H A R R O W S . D IS C S . a handicap, but Halsey is too Noyember 4. It is claimed that C R E A M S E P A R A T O R S , in fact, everything in the imple two boars spent in examining small a burg to turn a county ele ment line. Special prices on D R IL L S while they last. ction. Mr, Walton is reported the wonderful displays will be a Red Seal B A T T E R IE S . Fresh stock. Call and get prices on liberal education in what ia bning rn ming well in other parts of the implements. The store for quality and promptness done for individual and commu county. nity health. While something new the health exposition ha» HUNTERS AND TRESPASSERS baek of it the same idea that ia back of the county fair and live In contrast to the objections of stock shows, only now people farmers to permitting hunting on are realising that a good strong their premises, atated in last healthy race of men ia ar import- aud as good livestock.—Ex. week's Enterprise, ■ citizen indicts farmer« for li.tvlug the benefit of atreeta, sidewalks and street lights, Fire, theft, collision, property damage and which coat them oi thing, for personal liability. Protect yourself against driving cattle through town which I.lundry teot Tuesdays loss. esoipe their drivers and trample Dyeing, Cleaning and Pressing front yards, sidewalks, eto , and think they should reciprocate by A B E ’S P L A C E pirmitting bunting. The Double with reciprocity of that kind ia that the farmer whose I* alim alad oth e mischief may be financially irresponsible, so he ' " , J 7 '. cannot pay damages, and may have no derirable hunting (rounds I where the hunter oould take hie î t ill if permitted, and the vandal who ignores the fanner's right and < V A, A / * dnnagee his property may be one who never paid a cant towards O U ? forefathers fought for their I rights?1 atty improvements. Meny of them gave their lives.that we, It's a case of “ every men fcr — < might enjoy freedom. . . J J,J > 7 ' bim eslf’ on both sides. T te ,* " - ’** / ‘ g oups cannot be held for the In the Declaration of Independence they $ - trespasses committed by individa- I Stoves f Ranges,etc. Sunny Southern C alifornia easy payment plan $10 down and $2 per week buys $100 worth of furniture $15 down and $3 per week buys T $150 worth of furniture w /h $20 down and $4 per week buys a) $ $200 worth of furniture W \|/ Low Round Trip Fares We extend to you dignified credit to help you furnish your home as it should be. Use it while paying for i t Albany Furniture Exchange 415-421 West First Street, Albany, G. W. Mornhinweg Automobile Insurance Modern Barber Shop , C. P. STAFFORD, Agent. Don’t Surrender Y o iS Righ'ts! recorded those truths that have,so safely ».' - guided our democracy. « , . ’ £ . * > » > • it- r . ,Sdr*, - ' ’’ , have written that meniare endowed •' y their Creator with certain/unalienable* ’ ghta, and to secure thesefri&hts govern-1 ments are instituted amongjx^uen.’’ »1/ » tie. When the millennium comes, end every person does as he would be done by, all will be satisfied, au I not toontr. Conan Doyle, the romancer, gives n« oouio more ¡information on ectoplasm (not octoplasm, a* the dispatches at Aral had i t ) . It cornea out io the shape of rod« (bacteria, as it were) from t ie pores of a medium, who sometimes loses 12 or 15 pound« ia weight in the process. One of the ways it works ia to form puddles under the leg of a table and lift it de spite ell efforts to hold it down. He now aays it that it sometimes increased in quantity by attract ing excretions from the poree <f other person« in the room. Now we can understand its power The emanations fiom aome people’s poree are atrong enough to lift any table in the world. « Priiv d n n T /th nii . rieht3var# attack« < ,r The School MoiT' BdH ° " th® ba^ trt Co'rnPu,sory Education L K . \ h3t W® surTen<5er a Qod-given rig h t-th o X t control-the right oE a parent to say ia -s- ‘ . Of her own child’shainbe educated, v f 1 1 H y0U tffln d $ ht * cont^ ‘ y ^ c h l l d through^tho »1 S nght to S’7®iL 1^0 not he led ««¿ray “ 3° th“ dan?”ro j l bilL You twill rights is at etfika too vital principle of ^inalienablef ' ** ► - \V ' ----------- --------------------------------------------------------------- C a l k J o n t k * K o lk Lloyd Georgs complaint of people who "pot party above the nation.’’ That's juat what ails ’• K ut U paid aw by th« N« “Y I Scheel» Cc-feosLme^ • - • ' «5 Oregon * iOMOQOGOOOOOOQM vergence from wilderness customs, the gristly had failed to return to his feast. I t seemed «id lest hours since he had re-entered the empty rooms of Linda's home. A wave of hope crept through the wbole’hydraullc system of his velna. And then, as a sodden sound reached him from the forests at one aide, that bright wave of hope turned block, receded and left only despair. B e heard the sound hut dimly. In fhrt, except for hla atrnlning with ev ery nerve alert, he might not have AHA heard It a t alL Nevertheless, distance alone had dimmed I t ; it had been a Isrge sound to start with. So far had it come that only a scratch on the Author of eardrums w a s je ft of It; but there was “The Votes of the Pack“ ' no chance to misunderstand It. It cracked out to film through the unfath omable silence, ynd all the elements by Hhutrattoni by Irwin Myera which he might recognize It were dis tinct. I t was ilhe nolae of a heavy Smrricbt hr Uttu. Bmm A Os. thicket being broken down and parted before ea enormous body. (Continued) B e listened, straining. Then he He watched until the shadows had heard the sound Again. Whoever came hidden them all. Then, straining up toward him bed passed the heavy The sounds that ward. he tested hla bonds. He tugged brush by now. with the full strength of hie arms, but reached him were- Jost faint and Inter there was not the play of an Inch be mittent w hispers--first of a twig tween his wrists. The Turners hod cracking beneath a heavy foot, then done their work well. Not the slight the rattle ot two lobbies knocked to est chance of escape lay In thia quar gether. Long momenta of utter silence would ensue between, in which he ter. He wrenched himself to one aide, could hear the steady dram of his then looked about him. The fields heart In hla breast, and the luug .oil of hla blood In hla veins. stretched even and distant on one aide, The Umbs of a young fir tree rustled but he aaw that the dark forest was and whispered as something brushed hut fifty yards away on the other. He igalnst them Leaves flicked together, listened; and the little night sounds tnd once a heavy Umto popped like a reached him clearly. They had been sounds to rejoice In before— Impulses distant antall-callbered rifle as a great weight broke It In two. Then, as If to delightful fancies of a Town steel the gods of the wlldemees were using ing through the thickets, o r some of all their Ingenuity to torture him. the the Little People In th«dr scurried. silence closed down deeper than ever h emulous business of the night hours. before. But lying helpless at the edge of the It lasted so long that he began to forest, they were nothing to rejoice n now. He tried to shut hla ears to hope again. Perhaps rhe sounds hnd been made by a deer stealing on Its ’hem. way to feed In the pant,ires. Yet he He rolled again to hla back and knew the step had been too heavy for tried to find peace for his spirit In the anything hut the largest deer, and stars. There were million« of them. their way was to encircle a thicket They were larger and mere bright rather than crash through It. It might than any lime he hHd ever Mren the— have been the step of one of the small, They a»ood In their high pi anas, wholly black hears— a harmless and friendly indifferent and Impassive to all the wilderness dweller. Yet the Impres strife and confusion of the world be sion lingered and strengthened that low them; and Bruce wlshwl that he could partake of their spirit enough an only some great hunter, a beast who thnt he could rise above the fear and feared neither other beasts nor men. bitterness th a t had begun Ur> oppress had been steadily comln.g toward him through the forest. him Rut only the pines cotdd talk te At that Instant the mr.pn slipped them. Only the toll trees, stretching upward toward them, could reach Into under a particularly heavy fragment of cloud and deep darkness settled their mysterious culm. over him. Even hla white face was no His eyes discerned a thin filament longer discernible In the dusk. H e lay of cloud that hud swept up from be scarcely breathing, trying to- fight hind the ridges, and the slgNt recalled down his growing terror. him io his own position with added This silence could mean but one of force The moonlight, soft bs It was, two things. One of them was th at the had been a tremendous relWf to him. creature who had made the sounds had At least. It would have enabled him to keep watch, uud now he dh-eaded the tamed off on ooe of the many Inter fall of utter darkness raor»- than ha secting game trails that wind through had ever dreaded anything In his life. the forest. Thia was his hope. The aJ It was nu ancient lustlncL coming ternatlve was one of despair. I t was straight from the young days of the simply that the creature had detected his presence and was stalking him In world when nightfall hronght the hunt ing creatures to the mouth o f the care, silence through the shadows. He thought that the light would nev-1 but he had never really experienced It er come. H e strained again at the before. I He watched with growing horror the ropes. The dark cloud swept on; and the moonlight, stiver and bright, broke slow extension of the clouds, rin a lly ~rer the arene. the moon swept under them. Th« foreat stood once more In sharp The shadow fell around Bruce. For the first time he knew the age-old ter ellhouette against the sky. He studied with straining eyre the dark fringe of ror of the darkness. He no longer knew himself as one of a dominant shadows ane hundred feet distant Then he detected a strange variation breed, master of all the wild things te to the dork border of shadows. I t held the world. . He was simply a l lr ii g <»**• end its outlines slowly creature In a grim and unconquered So still it stood, so world, alone and helpless In the terrer strengthened. ae anil ugly e natural shadow that aome of the darkness. The moonlight alternately grew sad irregularly shaped tree had cast that died as the moon passed la sad eat ■la eyes refused to recognize IL But of the heavier cloud patches. Winds in on Instant more he knew the truth Th« shadow was that of a great must have been blowing In the high lanes of the air. but there was no boast that had stalked him d ear to the breath of them where Bruce lay. The border of the moonlight. The Killer fore«s were silent, and the little re » bad come for hla dead. tllngs and stirrings that reached hin (To be continued ) from time to time only seemed to centuate the quiet. Election campaign adverlieihg He speculated on how many be__ crowd« thia week'« installment of had passed. He wondered If ha could o i r i l o n , “ The Strength of the lare to hope that midnight had al Fioea, " into «mall «pace, but the ready gone by qnd, through tome dh The Strength o f the Pines By Edison Marshall 1 ^ “ Fairbanks-Morse Scale for $21.50? „.VSX, * | \l/ JK campaign nUl soon be over.