The next meeting ot the Linn- Benton association of I. O. O. F. W. J. Ribello occasionally receive« i o ' will be at Lebanon in Apaii. Near-M irsele« - Perhaps FURNITURE fo r th e hom e & Co. STOVES and RANGES FLOOR COVERING C o n g o le u m a n d L in o ­ le u m in ru g s o r by O u r p rice s a re m a d e w it h th e Jots a n d o b je c t o f s e llin g goods S ee o u r s to c k a n d p ric e s b e fo re y o u b u y care on which free time can be a l­ l ittle ? Fresh and Cured Meats F IS H *b •***on The Old Stand Barter Shop |ajr n,a crOp H alsey Garage F o r th e best cash p ric e s see 0 . W. FRUM » » H A Y . G R AIN , FEED A N D LIV E S T O C K First-class grinding and grain cleaning done at any ujae Governor Olcott is to be at a republican rally at Brownsville ' Tuesday night. N. C . L O W E Lebanon’s Reliable Funeral D i­ rector and Mortician Large stock ; fine equipment, lnc’. udiug .» o g x x l auto hearses Prices most reasonable. Lady attendant. Lebanon, phone 9. A 12-year-old boy wss shot year. That is the highest record through the left foot near Oregon for Oregon. C itv and a 13-year-old lad wav Ohly two hens in the world have shot in the right foot near Eugene been known to lay 824 eggs eaob Oct 15 in the phesant hunt, and in a year. Both arc of O. A. C one man was killed and one prob­ stock and one is a barred rock and HUB CLEANING WORKS ( In c ) ably fatally injured near Haiuea the other a Leghorn. DYERS CLEANERS the same day in a deer hunt. D ost hunting is dear hunting. j Six PUP* s of the Pine G ’ove T A IL O R S HATTERS ------------------------ i school, near Hood River, have for using tobacco. Cor Fourth and Lyon &ts. The first Christian church of been expelled Eugene, the church w'jich adver-l ------------------------- Oregon tises in the newspapers more ex- The OreRon Federation of labo1 Albany teusively than enj- other in Ore- iwotert 85 to 27 for wine and beer Local gon, had a Sunday school atten d ^ T h e womin were not represented Agent ance 1666 on its rally day th is ' in that vote. E. L. Stiff FURNITURE EXCHANGE Milton A. Hearn, once depot agent here and later at Harris- burg, was found dead near Aurora Oct. 1. He ba« been through marriage and divorce aud to the state Insane avyluin, from which he escapod not lung befora bie death. structed in the woik and made some well received remark«, this being her home district. Past presidents Pauline Cline and Aouetta Weatherford were also present. The following officers were elected: Teeiji Forrell of Shedd chairman, Kttua Krauger of A l­ pine vict-chairman, Ten a Howard ot Corvallis secretary. The next conveution wilt meet at Alpine. At eix o'clock a banquet wa« served by Rrrol ard Ieillta lodge« to over two hundred aud the A l­ bany degree staff exemplified very beautiful floor work. Vincent Paddock o, Sweet Home eaye hie rheooietiem ie belter since the recent removal of a bullet that on hand and are getting more ever« day be hae hnrboyed in bie body ever tince the Argonne fight. Upon invitation ot the Browne- to $92 villa Good Citiienship league W , Used ranges $2« to $40, Very good J. Herwig of the Oregon A n ti. conditon. A ll st^bargatn prices. 4alooo league appeared Thursday night aud gave an address at the 422 West First st., Albany, Oregon. Methodist church. A chorus rep. re'entativv of the church choirs F O R SALE >f the city furnished special music under direction of H. A. Slanard. At the clo«e of the address the from 1 to 3 years old. Big, fine ewes. speaker showed on the screen hie motion picture entitled “ Safe- guarding the Nation.” — Albany Democrat. registered Or w ill let out on shares 23 We have lots of good USED FU R N IT U R E WE DO DYEING Beauty Banquet Ranges $65 E. C. Miller, 1 Shropshire Buck, old ewes, or st $2.50 per head. 2 and the Governor When a candidate for the high office of governor bases his candidacy on certain claims and promises as to what he will do if elected, the public ia entitled to have his claims analyzed and exam hed. In this campaign, W alter Pierce has gone about the country meto-dranud ically tearing tax bills in two by way of illustra ring what he win do to taxes if elected. The voter, then, should anal yre the tax mat­ ter to the extent of bcconun» informed as to just what part the governor | lays in imposing or reducing taxes. In the first piece, the voter b hould know that the t al levy in Oregon for 1 9 SS ia $40,471,SOS. Thia is a reduction of ovt r $1,800,000 from last year, so that it will be ae- m the high cost of government following the wa r ia already reced- O f thia IM S levy of 40 mi Dion, over J1 mil­ lion was for county, city » nd school district purposes, over which the ge vernor could have no possible control whatever. . O f the remaining S million f o r state purposes, only 8*4 million are taxes o\ t r which the legis­ lature has any discretion, a ad of tTti* amount only 1% million are for the actual expenses ot state government and migh t, therefore, in even the remotest degree, he charg ed to the m.-thoda employed by the governor Sn administering' the state's affairs. In passing, it should be no ted that this statY levy is an increase of 41 pet cent, since l i l t , and not several hundred per cent, as stated on various occasions by the ^eo locratic candidate. I t should also be note'*, that leas than half of thia 41 per cent ocr ^ t i dt ring M r. Olcott's administration. T K « ability 1 « keep down the coat of the its* . ' , ov e m m rt t to so small an increase, w lw living expense* in the ordinary home in t h * . ¿ m ep en o d men aaed over 100 per cent, ia mogt „editable sb® * inR P IE R C E 'S T A X R E C O R D MR. thia point to examine M r. O f the $9,374,949 of *u t * a tm o ’at of the other • per cent. p I F PCF' . , »1» imi «tate taxes. Pierce introduced O f the bül» accounting for 439 m or is per cent, 10», and he has given his public approval on numberless occasions of measures passed since he was returned from the legislature causing taxes amounting to $1,0*0,»04, making a total of state taxes approved by Pierce of $»,*44,03», or M per cent of the total I»»»- There is no telling how much of the remainder he might have approved if he had had a chance, and it may be significant that the state taxes have decreased over 11 per cent a n te M r. Pierce was retired from the State Senate. M r. Pierce has always been a consistent tax booster. H e voted against only three per cent of all the appropriations of the 191» session of the legislature and voted for all the appropria­ tions of the 1980 special session. In 1917 Mr. Pierce introduced a bill to exempt money, notea, mortgages and accounts from taxation. Yet he poses as being anxious to take the burden off real estate! H e voted for submission of $400,000 bond issue to build a new penitentiary. Mr. Olcott, at no T A X expense and with prison labor, has fixed up the old penitentiary in excellent shape for another »3 year». M r Pierce voted against accepting road ma­ chinery from the government. That machinery now amounts in value to $1,»00,000. G O V E R N O R O L C O T T ’S REC O R D T h e above are but a few of the extravagances o f Pierce. M r. Olcott, on the other hand, has conducted the business of the state in an eco­ nomical, sane and business like manner. He has saved the state thousands of dollars because of his level headedness and his intimate knowl­ edge of state affair» H e built a new Bovs’ Industrial School Building by diversion of a millage fund, and therefore, without a single cent additional tax. H e has inaisted upon devel­ opment of the various stats farms connected w ith the state institutions until the present year »hows the unprecedented income from this source of $4»l,»lt. He ia no td k tr, no politi­ cian, no idle promiaer and ia not seeking re-elec­ tion under false pretenses nor catering to preju­ dice. but ia going to the people on hie own splendid record, confident that If he can but get that record and M r Pierce's record before the voters of Oregon that he will be vindicated on election day, Tuesday. Nov. 7tfc. Jersey heifers grade I W A N T TO BUY I Carload Oat and Vetch or Clover Hay and 1 car Cheat Hay R. B. M A Y B E R R Y , 477 West Eighth street. Eugeue, Ore. Fresh Salmon for sal©, f. o. b. Oyater- ville, at 6c a pound Send orders to W IL M E R K Y L E , W insnt, Oregon. Spuds First-class Bnrbank and Mortgage Lifter potatoes for sale. $1 •nd |.3 O par owl- R A I.HU M cNRlL, Halsey, F. M. GRAY, Drayman. All work done promptly and reasonably, Pbone No. 289.9 for GOVERNOR REPUBLICAN state central committee T O O K , Chairman C. X IN G A L L S . Secretary. W. J. Ribelin Office 1st door »truth of school bouaa Halsey, Oregon. The Harrisburg Bulletin beats the four-pound cucumber story with one about a potato raised by George Bi«« that weighs 5 poun ■ and 14 ounces. A car shortage is confronting the entire country that promise* to be the most serious for many years and the Southern Pacifio appeals to shippers for assistance. By double loading they w ill be ten- dering valuable »eaistance, not ooly to the railroad but to their country at large. Every day they bold a car ia not ooly a loss to the railroad but contribute* to the oar shortage everywhere. In this acute situation shipper* are asked to dieregard the free time lim it If they do not there w ill be no We make a Specialty of Friendship, Engagement and W edding Rings F S r . M. r e n c h a ons ALBANY OREO. PUBLIC SCHOOLS Vote 314 x Yes Amor A. Tugging Passage of the Compulsory Public School Attendance bill now—this year Insure that a minimum number of private zchoola and private school pupils will be affected. Of the 34 counties of Oregon 14 are at present with- eut any private schools whatever. The combined aggregate of pupils In all the private schools In five other counties It fewer than 200. The total attendance at the private schools, of the grammar grades, of Oregon 1« about »»41. The total attendance at the public schools, of the grammar grade«, la about 131,44». Surely If the public school« are good enough for the 131,48», they nre also good enough tor the other 9841. LA W Y E R AND NOTARY At present, while the private schools ara few and »mall, 1« the time to make the change proposed by the public school bill. Dealer in Real Eitate. Handle» Town and Country Property G ive him a call and See if li» can fix you up. C -C . B R Y A N T ATTORNEY A T LA W Cusick Bank Building, Albany, Oregon. _____________________________ I. O. 0 . F. WILDEY LODGE NO. 65. Regular meeting next Saturdaj night. .4 > f t The item about four men going ou a tec-day bunt for deer laet week prove» to have been 50 per cent exaggeration. Red Pearl and George Hayes went, ae elated, aud the reporter who wrote the event up was ¡informed and believed that Dr. Garnjobst and Charles Morn- hinweg went with them. This wee unfortnnate especially in the doctor’s case, as it would lead patients to suppose it would tie vain to call for him It hia services were needed. He wae on the Job all the time- P r . Esther Pohl Lovejoy of Portland telegraphs: “ I have luat returned to Constantinople from a week in the inferno of Smyrna. Turkish soldier« svstem- atioally rob the refugee«, wrench­ ing rings from women's Augers. The quiet of the night is disturbed by piercing cries from young wu> men end girls who are beiug taken by T urkish soldiers. They desist from their crimes onlv when the searchlights of American, warships »re turned on them.” Six shiploads of food have been dispatched by Near East Relief, for a population greater than Ore­ gon’s is homeless. President Harding hae appointed W ill Hayes national chairman and Archie Roosevelt executive secre­ tary of a cantpaigu for funds for relief of the Smyrna aufferer3 who number nearly one million. A t least $16,000,000 will b° needed. Cqntributiona should be sent to Near East Relief, 618 Slock E x- change building, Portland. Now Is the Time for Passage of School Bill B row . yivili . k , O rxoof Vote for Olcott Rescue the Perishing 50 Blackface Ewes, to freshen this fall. Taxes PAGE J lowed. 1 distribution the " kelp ore " which >1 H Brooten declares is a cure for almost e r C. C. Jackson was at the county ery disease (Continued from page 1) M r. Ribelin and A. Wesley came home seat Saturday, Jowalla Singh had a leg broken from llrooten springs, near Cloverdale. The weather clerk aeema to hare Tillam ook county, euthusiastic over the AU kinds of in an accident in the Hammood treatment Brooten gives. day« ago. Joined the “ Oregon dry" party. few mill at M ill City for canning Mrs. Cyphers, from the Triangle lake Quarters of B E E F country, went to Brooten almost com Robert Bruce, “ known to the Mrs L Pugh of Portland was purposes at canning prices , pletely paralyzed and unable to talk. elected district president of the police,” and Roy Dempsey, both ; Now she walks a little and utters words Rebekahs and Mrs. Maggie G il- of Waterloo, have been arrested by Chester Rust of the same locality had ! a daughter w ith an abscess inside the Sheriff Dunlap ou the charge of chriet secretary. I skull. finally extending to the neck Stealing those automobile patts and : which i t is claimed was cured by the M 0 . Mills o, Brownsville, who tools from county trucks near Leb- Brooten treatment after physicians had raised such fins potatoes and sold | BnOn Oct. 9. G carantkxd W okk reported her incurable. many of them in Halsey, with his M r Brooten puts forth s circular which L aondbv The Albany, Foster and White wife goes to California for the win. is far from scholarly and contains chtru C lkaning akd P ressino Iceland geologicsl misapprehensions. His C.ty railroad, up to the Santiam ner. ‘ kelp o re " he believes was formed in pnaa, ia being vigorously promoted, D D R IB E L IN . Prop. the eocene era. which was marked by the Ed Holtowav of Brownsville with promise oi actual construction > first appearance of in s in u is i» . ■ -----sprava hia apple orchard a n d cares work next spring. The promoter H e la prospering and has m in y follow to,. r , . k . ) for it, and it» product took first also advertises town lots for sale ers who claim they have been cured bv tll# county him of such ills as cancer, tuberculosis, on the line. bushel-, ail first clast. etc. (Continued on page 4) Another man I .a Pl ante by name, has a deposit of dry powder near Clatskanie __ • v _ i There are registe eJ ae Linn which he claims is a cureall. Patients [county voter* 6674 republican«, District Rebekah Lodge swallow the powder or sprinkle it on . 3732 democrat«, 218 prohibition­ the diseased part or drop it into affected and get prices. One of the most eutertaiuing and ists, 165 «ocialiste and 338 other*. eyes or ears ; or they dissolve it and We haudle G O O D Y E A R . R IS K sad instructive Rebekah convention« use the solution. W onderful cures are G A T E S T IR E S and a rt able to sell A Barteher & Rohrbough truck was held with district No. 6 at claimed for it. too, but one man, in ' you a tire at almost any price you wish Boise valley, Idaho, is reported to have to pay. loaded with furniture ran off the Shedd on October 19. About one died as a result of redepoeit w ithin him . Automobile repairing. W illard bat­ grade and overturned 19 toile« from hundred member« from the dif­ of solids from the solution. tery service. Albany on the way to Salem ferent lodges attended the after­ There are many other healers who are HALSEY G ARAG E Tburedey. The truck wae dam­ noon session. apotheosized by their followers and sneered at by sceptics. FO O TK B R O S , Props. aged more than the furniture. Mildred McMahan, assembly Phones / Shop' “ l 5 ‘ uones j Ketldrnce lfc4 president, wae present and in ­ Btfoi o 1 U3 ing nutomo- ¡I# bile supplies of any kind ,w„ 4000 it will pay you to come to * H A L S E Y E N T E R P R IS E W. F .C A R T E R th e y a r d th e b e st m akes OCT. 36, 1932 COSTS. No tax w ill he levied fer years to come, a t the bill does not take effect until September, t»2S, and ne tax then If the amendment Is In tha courts fer several year«. When all attend our free publle echoele the additional cost will be alight, for the overhead will he the same Most ot tha children will find a place In existing classes and the added expense to the average taxpayer wUi he nominal. The great benefit to our nation w ill be worth many times the small cost. Now Is the time to pass this measure. Insuring that In Oregon all of our children w ill ha educated to a common patriotism, common Ideals and a unified allegiance to our Institutions. One Flag—One School—One Language - P. S MALCOLM. 33*. *•-. (Paid Advertisement) Sa Inspector-Oeniral In Oregon. Ancient and Accepted Scottish R ita