Halsey enterprise. (Halsey, Linn County, Or.) 19??-1924, November 02, 1922, Page 5, Image 5

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    Fresh Salmon
F O R SALE
for sale, f. 0. b. Oyster-
Mlle, at 6c a pound
Send order» to W IL M E R KYLE,
Wiuant, Oregon.
50 Blackface Ewes,
from I to 3 year» old.
a
F . M . F rench
S ons <
ALBANY
OREG.
’ J !
WE DO DYEING
HUB CLEANING WORKS (In c )
dyers
t a il o r s
clean er s
hatters
Cor Fourth and Lyon sts
Albany
Oregon
E. C. Miller,
g ,*
fine ewe,
1 Shropshire Buck,
registered. O r w ill let out on share» 25
old ewes, or at »2.50 per head.
2
We make a
Specialty of
Friendship,
Engagement and
Wedding
Rings
S Q U IR T L E S S
Jersey heifers
tra d e
to freshen tb it fall.
I W A N T TO BUY
I Carload
Bat and Vetch nr Clover Hay
and 1 car Cheat Hay
.
R- ” MAT BERRY,
4 7 West Eighth street. Eugeue. Ore.
Furniture
Exchrnge
f. L SFIFF
We have lots of good
USED FURNITURE
to $92
Used ranges $20
to $40, Very good
conditon. A ll at£bargatn pnees.
422 West First st.. Albany, Oregon.
Don’t be a slacker.
The Department of Agriculture it
turning it« attention to the tan­
gerine and grapefruit that in appear­
ance resembles a round orange.
There are two varieties^ according to
the Scientific American, the Samp­
son and the Thornton ; the latter is
less acid than the former, but both
are delicious in flavor, while the
Thornton exhibits little tendency to
squirt when the spoon is inserted in
the segment.
4 DUBIOUS
Candidates g Governor
W hen a candidate for public office m a k e a campaign promising w hat he » i l l a«.
elected, it >* fitting and proper that the voter examine the public record, to n a e J ^
whether or not the candidate’, record sq u are, w ith h i. c . m p ^ p r Z ^ £
■iWTr
-
-----
•Vr. Pierce*« Record
• MALL TOW N ADVANTAGES
“For my part,” says a Kansas
writer, “I prefer to live in a small
town where all the people will sym­
pathize with you in trouble, and if
you haven’t any trouble will hunt
up seme for you.”—Bostou Tran­
script.
N r ' p u L*1“
of
'* « * • for It M ,
ttu . -
»P*xfic«Uy approved of »8.M4.03B.
This is M per cent of the total. M r. Pierce had
no opportunity to vote on the other 8 per cent
“ he was not a member of the legislature when
it was up foe vote.
R H e voted for 97 per cent of all tax appro­
priation b ill. of the IBIS session of the legisla­
ture. and for all the appropriation Ulls of the
special session of 1830.
3. The State H a r x- , Commission now
works without pay
svavv IHUUUUt
introduced a bill
♦rx warn« » L - _ ,--f • —a. • Pierce
to pay the commissoners $13,000 a year
Afr. O lco tt'i Record j
1.
H e introduced a change La the state sec­
retary • report which has saved the state many
thousands of doUara since 181,.
7
*• H i . renovation of the penitentiary saved
the state nearly half a million dollars.
.
He. ,etu r«d funds for a training uchool
S
S
i
i
r
j
,
- * * •
lions of dollar« annually
J L J 1* 2 7 ’ 5cgPon“ w * f<* the a.upping of
junketing trips by state officials at state expense.
effertinJ ,*ecured the P*‘ »«£e of a budget law
ment wWM.“ economies m the state govern­
e d .
n° ‘ oth« * 1“
accom-
il. H e voted to submit a bond issue ol $400 -
000 for a new penitentiary. Governor Olcott
has repaired the old one with convict labor at no
tax expense.
T- The change in the State Sessions Law
recommended by him, saves the state $10,000 a
year.
A H e has been universally commended for
the excellence of his official appointments.
S. M r. Pierce claim» he wishes to r e li t «
real estate of the tax burden; yet he is the
author of a bill submitted to the legislature
which would exempt from all taxation moneys,
notes, credits and accounts.
ed-
•• H »
responsible for changes in the
minatration of the state farms, which thia year
brought returns of »4,1,000 into the ataiZ
8. In the last few year, he voted for 18J sal­
ary increases.
ahown himself, by hla acta g
• X **rv k e “ «>. has warmly sup-
E
?
me“ ure. and has administered
u
t h , ,int£ e,t ° f ‘ be ex-service men
with honesty and efficiency.
h“ ? ken the fir,t rM l constructive
step in the equalisation of the state tax situation
by the appointment of a committee cf experts
to m v w tig .t. and report to the le g is la tu r e ^
•nure scope of the tax problem in this state
change» to be made will*
S v .X ,'.
c.on“ rv« iv* ">d construc­
tive line«, which give far more promise of secur-
ln< rtiuJt» than demagogic bewailing and idle
campaign promisee such ss are being made by
the non-partisan candidate of the Democratfe
party eipecially in the light of his record as
f o a Ch<mPIOn * * * l * ’°^ u<:€r
tho «Ute of Ore-
< u l o 'a
7. H e voted against the bills to consolidate
the state bureaus and commissions.
8. H e introduced a bill providing for the
most elaborate commission any state ever had.
He specifically provided “to secure every citizen
of Oregon an opportunity at all time» to work
for the state, ’ and provided a $8,000 salary for
the head of the commission. This bill was
purely Socialistic.
beU* ai*Ur!ng thM “ T
8. In the 1817, 1818 and 1830 semions of the
legislature there were appropriation bills intro­
duced totaling $10.883,000. O f these Senator
Pierce voted for »10,078,000.
Measured by every standard. M r. Pierce is
the moat constatent little tax booster the state
of Oregon ever had.
th e ir c h ild r e n
<r
•
ent campaign C andida* Pierce p r o f « « , to be the .p o .t k
PAST
"I want to be perfectly frank with
the public,” announced the movie
star to his press agent. “In the
biography you are writing tor me
under my signature should I say I
was once a bus boy in a restaurant ?"
“Sure. That won't hurt your
popularity, but I wouldn’t mention
the fact that you spent two years on
the stage as a chorus man.”—Bir­
mingham Age-Herald.
on hand and are getting inoreeverv day
9x12 Pabcolin Rugs, $11
Beauty Banquet Ranges $65
G R A P E F R U IT
v
.Governments cannot rightfully
take them away
«
Vote for Olcott
1MERICA has always stood for the protection o f natural and Inaliem
ll ll^ ir children™0 "8 WhlC*’ none ** * ° “ Crcd • • ihat of parents over
.1
:
ABRAHAM LINCOLN taidt
_
»•
w
• f n n b h ? i f ^ i,yNU f * corner- ‘one of, «*¡«1 order end the guarantee
’ ¿1 N° Gove,rnmen' c n take the place of the Parent, and
should never be permitted Io usurp it.” (Speech at Quincy, 111»., 1859.)
« J m i
V k * i ‘h e,caniP *‘«n *«ainM the « c a lle d Compulsory Edu-
for GOVERNOR
'
REPUBLICAN STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEE
W A L T E R L. T O O Z E , Chairman.
Pacts demonstrated
Arguments unanswered
T S h. r i ^ F 4 A C
F T T C
n E
r M
IfA
r e S w T n
v r E - e D . , no lo n g «
■ e ,L
S D
O i N
R A . T
•e n o u sty disputed by anybody, are these
J?'W " “ «” *■ » Fafse Title,
to
I TH F. L U T H E R A N ARGU M E N T
I f you
•rc fit to send your child to a school in which your
religion i* taught, not one day in the week, but
every day. and the whole trainin g of the child is
permeated by such religion, the State, under the
C onstitution, must not prohibit you from so do-
iln g
T h is bill is m anifestly unconstitutional
i
n i v J ? / r o R T L A N D d Y lZ E X S A N D T A X -
P A Y E R S A R G U M E iN T
“ I t the number of chil-
«Iren now attending the public schools is 10 be in­
creased by adding those now taught in the private
| schools. ,i is inevitable that overcrowding must
result unless new buildings are supplied, and 11 is
. also certain that taxes must he materially increased -
mis.
, aeaa ttse pubhc and deceive the voters
L T ! '* ’
r e ,P « ’ pretends to im prove the
exis tin g la w as to the Pubhc,Schools. but sim ply
destroys th e Private Schools
7 7
I T h a t nobone cent o f public monev goes to the
support o f a n y private o r parochial ¿ b o o l in this
°r ***! *“ •
ever
und" » • * P '» «
proh ibition o f the C onstitution and laws
I TTiat it w ilt increase taxation at least $1,000,000
each year., and require from $3,000,000 to $4 0 0 0 .
000 mvesWncnt in new pubhc school build.ng». ’ ,
. . That it vests in the C oun ty Superintendents a r-
b itra ry a ed unappealable pow er to Brant special
’ •riv ilrg rs to the w ealthy and in fluential by
V h ith thsry w ill be exem pt from the law
' T h * f.
present parents from educating
their chsldrrn in private schools both inside and
®“ ’ * K j e o l the State, as they cannot even send
«Beir-ehildben elsewhere to be educated
n i
,rOm b , 'nc un" ed
support of the
B ilr. the Masonic F ra tern ity in the State is di-
" d ^ d m any o f the leading Masons are openly
oppoTed t o it and the Grand M aster of the State
G rand Lodge has publicly denied that the G rand
Lodge indorsed it
, T h a t the best elem ent* in the social re lifio u «
educational, and political hie of the State are op­
posed to the measure
, a
T h a t the educational leaders, inside and 6 u t« d e
o the State, are opposed to the B ill D r Nicholas
M u rra y B utler. 0 / C olum bia L 'a n e m ly . says
It
should be called a B ill to render the Am erican
system of education impossible in O regon ' The
Presidents of Y a le . Princeton Chicago. Leland
Stanford and other great U niversities hare cm- »
phatically condemned i t
T h a t the private schools, under the existing 4
law . are required «0 conform their course of stud­
ies to the public schools standards, the E nglish "
langvage is made com pulsory, and they a r t sub­
ject to the inspection and supervision of the State
I
I
,
That it destroys the nghts of mmnnties the most
vital and valuable principle o f Amencannm and the
O«eth>t ho* preserved tht* country from the tyranny
o f Old W o rld CowcnwienM
^
__
’ ___
Upon (be foregoing etatrment^of th r rase we invoke the fair and intrlli.
t o
’ted
° f O r: * 1n rn n ti^
■He‘r « S rir . ,' X " d
iUnJa" enUj y r ie c ip lr . ot reMonable liberty
,0
CATHOLIC C IV IC RIGHTS^ ASSOCIATION OF OREGON
,
» A M u w SUSBw. F o u l.,!
G u s b a m t x x u W obk
L a vm dxv
C IT Y H A L L , 2 P M .
V
", -
’ ’ “" i”
S
Named on the ballot. Compulsory Education Bill
NM
D
C andidate for Governor, and
D
R I B C L I N , Prop.
Before buying autom o­
bile Htipplies of any kind
it will pay you to come to
Halsey Garage
|SAM’l M. GARLAND
and legislative candidates will discuss the
and get prices.
hsudle G O O D Y E A R . F IS K and
G A T E S T IR E S anil are able to sell
you a tire at almost any price you w ith
to pay.
Automobile repairing.
tery service.
W illard
bat­
HALSEY G ARAG E
F O O T K B R O S ., P ro p ».
subject of
Phon»» { 5 ,0P; “ «•’
I Residence, 164
T A X A T IO N
FARMERS
ustiai'y have an
I
.
accumulation of
¡articles no longer.needed, or surreeded
I by better ones, which somebody would
, like to obtain. An advertisement the
i atze of thia, coslipg 2.5c, in iw lit find a
nuyer and covert what 1« T ' A CJ
now only trash into good
LI
V A tjf 1
A d m in is t x a t o «'» S alk
[
Notice is hereby given that by virtue
of an order of the county court of Linn
I c o M ty , Oregon, made October Ifeth,
, 1922, authorizing anil directing the un-
deraigned as adm inistrator of the estate
of W. H . K irkp atrick, deceased, to tell
lots 5, 6, 7 and 8 in E Hayes addition to
Halsey, Linn county, Oregon.
Therefore, I w ill, from and after the
70th day of November 1922. at my resi­
dence in Halsey,. Oregon, sell the real
property above described at private tale
Io the highest bidder tor cash in hand
subject to confirmation by »aid court.
F M O k a y , Administrator.
i
Vote 315 X NO against
School M onopoly Bill
CLXANINO AND PXKtSINO
WALTER M. PIERCE
There
Tlie State CoBfermce of the Methodist Episcopal
Church at u j meeting in Salem last Aujpist refused
to entertam any «nosement looking to an endorse-
in i t ° h « r b,N
,h<
rul,Bi ° * ,h i Piesid­
ing Bishop
THE ARGUMENTS UNANSWEkED aga.nw
•he hill ir e contained in the “V oter* Pamphlet’
issued by the State The ch.el p o in t, of the same
•re a* follow»
• •
for caauinj
______ w . F . C A R T E R
1T mf E st SE- w XTH'DAV
T H F C A T H O L IC A R G U M E N T
in eeaeon
HALSEY,
The Gld Stand Barber Shop
F r id a y , N o v . 3,
ARf
ADVENTISTS’
A K t, l M E \ T .
W e are not at all
eertain that a
•nan educated in the public school is more intelligent
than If he were educated in a private or sectarian
• c h o o K o r have we heard any eonvm cmg argu-
«nent that a person is necessarily more patriotic if
educated in a public school, than if he were edu­
cated in a school not supported by public taxa-
A
F ISH
BEEF
Quarter« of
purposes at canning prices
5 C H O O I-S A R G U M E N T
“ ft is against the best
American ideals of freedom, in that it denies to men
and women freedom of thought and action in the
c lio ic e of environment and influences for their chil-
dreq
vUi"? ‘^ ? “ O" . nOW
'• » ' « 'II estrange
old friends and neighbors, and that will divide our
people .mo classes and faction.
N o greater mis-
li.rtu n e can befall us than movements calculated to
create division« '
r L M P V T P* ESi r r E R i A X M IN IS T E R S ’ A R -
v»L M E N T
In »
on the philosophy of sutoc-
rac y --th a t the child belongs prim arily to the State
it is an unjustifiable invasion of family authority and
Jhrealens ultimately the guarantee of our American
liberty
The foregoing ' Negative Arguments' are as
strong today as when written and filed
They re­
m ain unshaken and unshakable
after three
m onth* of publi^ discussion.
«
' " ’ " " » » '" '» I Convention Ol the Eptaeo
pal Church, meeting in Pbrtland recently, adopted
strong and unequivocal resolutions condemning this
Fresh end Cured Meats
All kipda of
'sdHO fil s I n r l| \ . <r ’v T A L ,S OF PRrVATE
T h a t the proposed law w ill close tip every
orphan asylum, home for defective and dependent
children, and other private chanties, where any
elem entary instruction o f the inmates is at
'
S P E A K IN G
c -|1- mc J v HE v EN'S H A L L ( E P IS C O P A L ) A R -
J U L M t A T
“ h o invidious fact or condition affect­
ing public interest has been called to our attention
that would furnish in the slightest degree an excuse
(or the proposed legislatioii
authorities
tempted.
—
C. E. IN O A L L S , Secretary.
L. L. S w a n , Atty, foe Adwr.
N otick T o CakoiTOKs
istrator of the eatate of W illia m H. I „
M alian, deceased. Any anil a ll persons
having claims against said estate are
hereby notifies! to present the same to
the adm inistrator at his residence, Hal
aey, Oregon, w ithin six months from
| the date hereof, duly verified as by law
req aired,
Dated thia 20th day of September, 1922,
J.
S. M c M a h a n ,
Adm inistrator of the estate of W illia m
H. McMahan, deceased.
W k atm kk fo kd A W v a t t ,
Atty», for Admr,
N o ticr
F. M. GRAY,
Drayman.
All work d o n , promptly and
•Monably. Phona No. 26V. 9
W. J. Ribelin
Office let door south of school boast
Haleey, Oregoa.
Dealer
in
Real
Estate.
Handle, Town and Country Property.
Give him a call and tee if he can fix
you up.
or A p p o in t m k n t o v E x k c u t s ix
Notice is hereby given that the un­
dersigned by an order of the County
Court of Linn Coanty, Oregon, has
been apjrointed executrix of the last
w ill and testament of T. A Powell, de­
ceased.
All, persona having claims
against said eatate are required to pro-
rent them w ithin six months from the
date of this notice, with the proper
vonchera, to the undersigned at her res­
idence in Haleey. in Linn county, Ore­
gon.
Notice is hereby given to all whom it
Dated and first published this 28th
may concern that the undersigned hat
been, by the county court of Linn day of September, 1922. Kos* P o w il l ,
P.xecutrix Aforesaid
county, Oregon, duly appointed adm in­
A m o , A .T c ssin g ,
Ally, for Exrx,
Amor A. Tuuing
LAWYER AND NOTARY
B rowxsvili . i , O rioor
I. 0. 0. F,
W ILDE Y LODGE NO. 6Ä.
Rhgalar maatiog next Saturday
aight.