PAGE Vaudeville at Brownsville Hill &Co. FURNITURE for the home FLOOR COVERING Congoleum and Lino­ leum in rugs or by STOVES and the yard O ur prices are made with RANGES the best makes the object of selling goods See our stock and prices before you buy For the best cash prices see 0. W. FRUM H A Y , G R A IN , F E E D A N D L IV E S T O C K First-class grinding and grain cleaning done at any time «idea, she know how to wield ft, and all her life ahe had kept tt for Just auch an emergency. The pein of the blow was quite gone now, except for a strange sickness that had encoinpuased her. But she was never colder of nerve and surer of muscle. Cunningly she lay down again before she crept through the door, so that If Simon chanced to look about he would full to see that she followed him. She crept to the thlck- eta, then stood up. Three hundred yards down the slope she could see Simon's dimming figure In the moon­ light. and swiftly she sped ufter him. (To be continued.) B. M Watson of Lake Creek and R. L. W iouiford cA route 2 were in town Thursday and the latter showed his appreciation of the Enterprise by pungling up $1 - 50 for another year. These pung­ iere (and they are numerous) are the life of the paper. Enough of them could make six or eight pages every week, with news of the state, nation and world, presented us tbp local uews is uow in its columns. Frloht. A timid person Is frightened before a danger; a coward during the time; end a courageous person afterward.— Richter. The Christian. A Christian Is God Almighty's gem tlemuo.—J. C. Hare. Furniture Stoves Ranges, etc. Clifford, Dellis and Claire Cor­ nett of Shedd, the Lion county stock judging juvenile club which will compete with other county teams at the Pacific International Livestock show, Oct. 4 to 11, at Portland, have been taking a week’s course in judging at O A. 0 . j Albany Furniture Exchange 415-421 West First Street, Albany, ’ Lesson ’ ing of miracles Is the authentication of the divine mission of the one per­ ANGELS NOT IN HIS MIND (By REV. p. fi F1T7.WATER. D. D. forming them. The working of the Teacher of En y ■*.. /. ' ’9*- ¿V ote N O on the :: School Monopoly Bill F 4 -4 -a nut Called on the Ballot Compuhory Education BiU *• Oregon SimdayMiool II. Jatus Haals a Woman of a Groat -V on the easy payment plan $ 10 down and $2 per week buys ' $100 worth of furniture $15 down and $3 per week buys $150 worth of furniture $20 down and $1 per ueek buys $200 worth of furniture mediately, “ An angel.” Then she Cometo H A L L ’S wondered why in the world he was FLORAL and MUSIC SHOP asking about angels at midnight. The Dangerous Lie. Albany, and »ee the new Every lie, great or small, Is the B u sh a l a n e p l a y e r piano brink of a precipice, the depth of Also other models of the tame make. which nothing hut omniscience can Late rolla on hand. Phone 166J fathom.— C. Iteade. % Vaudeville, sponsored by Cala- pooia poet of the American Le;ion, was given at Brownsville Thurs­ day and Friday. Those talcing part in the music and dramatics were: Mrs. Leon B Morse, Mrs. Dean Morse, Rex ! T u n in g , R'tetmary Snyder, Jalia Crawford, Merle W altz, Marion Moore, Wallace Coshow, Margaret 'Thompson, Marie Putman, Frank Darling, Kenton Thompson, Bet­ tis Coshow, Jack Crawford, Hal GrossJBoyce Stanard, John Gross, Gladys Howe, lames Stanard and Dorothy, 8nyder in the Story book Ball, a Mother Goose play;! and Harold Stevensob, Jesse H in ­ man, Fred H am ill, Marion Dor­ man, Leighton H*ndereon, Alton 'W illiam s, Edna Haverland, Bee ■ Darling, Greta Hsr.ison, H een i Fanning, Lois Henderson, Dorothy . , Faller, Faith Proebstel, Lloyd We extend to you dignified credit to help you furnish your home 'Henderson, Dorothy Stevensou, ai it ahould be. Use it while paying for i t Charles Tysou, ,Leta Tycer, Lola Tycer, Alice Moi re and Florence Rush in other music and plays. — Albany Democrat. There wag a sidehcw the second evening at A tari’s confectionery. F J. Ham ill and Jesse Hinman disagreed about the conducting of the entertainment so pointedly that a showcase was smashed and the floor came up and h it Hinman a crack. There is a difference of 4. The purpose of Miracles (vv. 21, IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL opinion as to which is handsomest, 22). The Pharisees accused Christ of black eyes or blue, and bis was blasphemy when He declared the man's reported as compromising by sport­ sins forgiven. Jesus showed them ing both colors next day. Reports that back of the beneficent deed to the of H a m ill’s appearance after the man was the demonstration of His love feast have not come in. deity. The main purpose In the work­ bv the Noa-Secaari.-in sod Procer tarn Schoch Cetanlttr« - Fovor (vv, 38:39). Peter’s mother-in-law was prostrate with a great fever. They of Peter's household besought Jesus for her. Jesus rebuked the fever and it left her so that she immediately rose and ministered unto them. No earthly phy­ sician had ever been known to heal In that way. Divine healing la im­ mediate and complete. We should distinguish between divine healing and faith healing. Faith healing Is the re­ sult of the action of the mind upon the body and Is measured by the degree of the faith, while divine healing Is the a o tlon of the power of God upon the diseased one, and is always complete and Immediate, because tt Is measured by the power o f the Healer, God. His fame spread abroad and many sick of divers diseases were brought unto Him and He healed them «tit, even casting out demons and forbidding them to testify of Him. III. Jesus Heals a Leper (5:12-10). Leprosy was a most loathsome and terrible disease. Because of Its foul­ ness one afflicted therewith was an outcast. The disease was Incurable by man. therefore the leper was regarded as hopeless and dead. In response to the leper's earnest request Jesus touched him and bnde the leprosy to depart, and Immediately he was healed and cleaned. Leprosy is a type of sin. Jesus has power to heul and cleanse and restore. IV. Jaaus Heals a Paralytic (C oouaued from page 1) Mrs. L. E. W alton was at the county capital Friday. Mra. Hazel Wallace and one of the little girls were at Shedd Thurs­ day. i Mrs. D. Taylor and son L aw ­ rence motored to Corvallis Satur­ day afternoon. Mrs. George Laubner and Mrs. C. F. Stafford were at the county capital Friday. Ed. A. Tachauner, father of ¡T . J. Tachauner of Brownsville, died Thursday at bis son’s home, aged 77, Near Harrisburg Jesse Smith raised 14j pounds of Burbank pot­ atoes in out h ill and there was not a small one among them. The first price on bread at the county fair wsnt to a sample made by Miss Large from William hl ills A Bun's Brownsville flour. M aynard Bilysu of Albany, 17, died Friday morning from injuries received in a football game at Salem just ons week previously. County Superintendent Geer says that the Brownsville school is the first to report every teacher a member of the Oregon Teachers’ association. Burl Dayis, now employed in a grocery store in Albany, after a tew days in Brownsville took the train here Friday evening for the couuty seat. J. E . Cushman of Brownsville has been appointed guardian of the estate ot A lton Lluyde Tucker and H ild a Elisabeth Tucker, neph­ ew and niece of his wife. H. W . Steinke, on route 2, raised five potatoes that weighuu 11 pounds and ill ounces. One o i them can be seen iu the E n ter­ prise window which weighs 33 ouness. A n unusual number of wild geese flew south about m idnight Thursday. Some weather prophets ■ay thia indicates the approach of a cold spell. Others say it pre­ sages flus weathar. Tue comer the fairer, usually. Thomas Slate of A lbany, who receutly won a suit to prevent in ­ on a East African Bamboo, of Whleh Im­ fringement of his patent self-regulating propeller lo.r uero, mense Supplies Are Avallatola^ Said to Answer Purpose. planes, has sold the right iu Can­ ada for a good sum aud w ith his East African bamboo; one of tbs wife will reside in Toronto. NEW SOURCE OF PAPER PULP latest sources from which it has heen found that paper pulp may be oh* tained, grows on the plateaus and mountains' of the colony of Kenya, at an altitude of 7,500 to 11,000 ect. These foresta covar large areas, n some cases many square miles in extent. The largest of these are lo­ cated in the Kikuyu and Man ee- carpments, the Aberdare mountains, the slopes of Mount Kenya a " 4 Mount Elgon. The distance of these forests from the railroads is one of the difficulties which must be overcome, if they are be thoroughly developed, the nearest of them being three miles from transportation facilities. They are well supplied, however, by many streams of sufficient depth and pow- to float logs down to central points. Native labor it plentiful, but be­ cause of the high altitude at which the forests are located the Africans who live in the warmer parts of the country have difficulty in acclimat­ ing themselves to the cooler tem­ perature. Once accustomed to the change of climate, however, the na­ tives do not object to working in the cold districts. For Europeans, of course, the climate ia ideal. MESSAGE FOR THE MASHER Isaac W. Pouttu, associate edi­ tor of the Brownsville Tin) es, is taking a course in journalism and other studies at me U. of O. Friday he cams home for t u t first time iu several weeks and was met hare by agreement by tbw olber Times boys on their way home from a trip to Corvallis. George M axwell and wife got uotnc from Newport Friday. George had a great time c a tc h in g salmon w ith book and line, one of which came by mail and fed the Enterprise family to t ue full. He salted down 100 pouo ds for future reference and has tr.ore preserved for use. Enos Hostetler i s tile draining a low place onhis f i rtn near H arris­ burg, using 1500 feet of tile this year. We predict tbe experiment will be profitable, and n may lead to many other owners using tiles and increasing the value of their property. Th«^v is room for much profitable use o t tile near Halsey. Last wee < Wednesday flight about 5 o’clock the electric ligi |< gays two or three spasmodic flic k ­ ers and -%nt out. Jo-hn Standish, the En»e’ prise compoidtor, got a coal oil 1 4oap and “ e tita k ” t>pe till 10:S,j , then went horn « in time to see \b e eleotrio bulbs co me back to dp.iy at 10:40, But the paper did not get into tbs postoffice until • f ’.er closing time next day. Io tbs contest for the office of sheriff papers published in towns where candidates reside are pre­ dicting tbe election of their home men. If there were a paper pub- lish-d at Shedd, Dunlap's home to»ro, it would probably expert his electioo. Io Halsey M r. Wa.’ ton Will probably get tbe bulk of t he vote and tbe prospect is good ih t t fis will run well in other towns, for' be was a good co-operator with Kendall in enforcing prohibition, and the enforcement of that law is an issue in the election. (3: 17-20). 1. Watched by the Pharisees and Doctors (v. 1). Jesus' fame spread abroad, and this only Incited Jealousy on the part of these men. 2. The Paralytic Brought (vv. 18, 19). This Is a fine lesson In Christian service. They could not heal the man. but could bring him to Jesus, who could heal and restore. They had faith In Jesus to heat him. No effort which Is required to bring a sinner to Jesus should be regarded as too great. 5. The Man's Sins Forgiven (v. 20). Jesus looked back of the palsy to Its cause—sin. All disease and death Is the result of sin. Jesus saw the faith of those not only who brought him, but of the man himself. Jots and Tittles A large and sympslbotic audi­ ence beard tbe address in favor of the compulsory education bill by V. K. Alliron of Lebanon at tne Mrs. Flitters — That man over Rialto Thursday night. I f everv- there is trying to flirt with ma I body ceuld foresee tbe effects it would have, and could he free from wish you d speak to him about iL Her Husband—What do you want prejudice caused by its advocacy me to say to him— give him your or the reverse by other*, it would probably be approved. telephone number? (Ocntiaosd oa pare 6)