PAGE 2 H A W 6 ¥ K M K K r K IìL H ALSEY E N T E R P R IS E An In d ep en d en t—NOT n eu tral— newt* paper, p u b lish ed every T h u rsd ay, by WM. H. and A A. W H EE LER . W m . H. W h eeler, E d itor. Mrs. A. A. W h eeler. B u sin e ss M anager en d L ocal N ew s E ditor. HUNTERS and FARMERS Views of the Egene Regis ter and a Ruralist fill heifer break away a n d , Early in the g in « Charles Hall rample a flower garden and the koquetted with the kls.gles and vail that would go up from the , kowmaodera of ths KuTClux Kian own could b. heard across the aud w„ konquered and k.rflum- umuntuiuK The town provides its j j u • i . . . koop out of the sight of man. And the Tawny One himself, wbtte-fanged and long-clawed and powerful as he Is, never gets farther than certain dread­ ful. speculative dreams. .-«mveniences for the specific us.- ,a“ ‘ ed ,n d ko™P»**1J kick«d But none of these was true of the of tl^ise who come there to buy, oi politics. Killer. He had already shown his Wllilfft flip fn rriiiT Jiuiun't l i i i 1.1- ■ ■■«»■• ■ ■ while the farmer doesn't till his »corn of men. Hla very stride showed that he feared no living creature thut flt-lds for the specific purpose of Pierce’s tax talk etruck a rs- shared the forest with him. In fact rawing pheasants -for the city eponeive chord with ths votare. he considered himself the forest mas­ •port to shoct. There's a differ­ ter. The bear la never a particularly ence. timid animal, and whatever timidity ’Rah for Aody Gamp I the K iller possessed was as utterly gone as yesterday's daylight. Bruce watched him with unwtnklug eyes It might be that the Killer would Author of “The Voice of the Pad“ fall to discern his outline. Bruce had no conscious knowledge, as yet, that tt Is movement rather than form to which the eyea of the wild creature» Illustrations by Irwin Myers P H O N O C R A P H S are most receptive. But he acted up on that fact now as If by Instinct. He was not lying tn quite the exact spot where the Kilter had left hla dead the •Y N O P a iS preceding night, and possibly his out­ line was not enough like It to attract CTIAPTER I.—At the death o f hie foster AJ I a few of th :;e Timnbirs to your collection. the grixzly'a attention. Besides, tn the father, Bruce Duncan. In an eaetem city, receive« a m ysterious m essage, sent by a Intermittent light. It was wholly pos­ Mnu Roes, sum m oning him peremptorily - - - i I hree Oclock in the Morning, violin solo sible that the grlzsly would try to find t> aouthem Oregon—to m eet •‘Linda.'' ‘ ’-“ « m e , v io lin ................................... Frederick Fradkin the remains of hls feast by amell CH APTRR II.—Bruce has vivid but baf- 7kt f M.c Bac^ ,,al ° ’ Mine, tenor and baritone ittag recollections of hie childhood 1 b an alone; and I f this were tacking, and o n , ' Jr> >Car ..................... ........ Billy Jones and Male Quartet orphanage, before hie adoption by New« Brnee made no movements to attract to« Duncan, with the girl Linda. hla attention, he might wander away y o rc tr In search of other game. C H APTER III.—At hie deetlnaUon. ?fc4 ! b' ,,eS; ................................. KraeP r Orche.tr. Trail's Knd. new» that a nieseage hoe For the first time In hls life, Bruce been sent to Bruce la received with marked displeasure by a man Introduced knew Fear as tt really was. It Is a 72 c 9 { True ..............“ a ^ aret Young to the reader ae "Sim on.” knowledge that few dwellers In cities C H APTER IV.—le a v in g the train, can possibly have; and so few times has “ ¿“ i Bruce is astonished a t hie apparent fa ­ It really been experienced In these days m iliarity with the surroundings, though to h is knowledge he has never been there. o f civilisation that men have mostly G ive R.cords this Christmas and select them now. forgotten what It la like. I f they ex­ CH APTER V.—Obedient to the m essage, Uruce m akes his way to M artin’s cross­ perience tt at alL tt Is usually only In roads store, for direction a s to reaching u dream that arises from the germ- Mm Rose* cabin. plasm— a nightmare to paralyze the CH APTER VI.—On the way, "Simon*’ muscles and chill the heart and freeze sternly warns him to giv e up his quest and return East. Bruce refuses. a man In bis bed. The moon was strange and white aa tt slipped tn and CH APTER VII.—Mrs. Ross, aged and infirm, w elcom es hlrn with em otion. She out of the clouds, and the forest, mys­ hastens him on his w ay—the end of "Pine- terious as Death itself, lightened and Needle TraU." darkened alternately with n strange C H A PTER VIII.—Through a country effect of unreality; but for all that, puacllngly familiar, Bruce Jeum eys. ana Bruce could not make himself believe nods his childhood playm ate, Linda that this was Just a dream. The C H APTER I X .-T h e girl tells him of dreadful reality remained that the wrong» committed by an enem y clan on her fam ily, the R osses la n d s occupied Killer, whose name and works he br the clan were stolen from the Rosses, knew, was even now Investigating him and the fam ily with the exception or Apnt Elm ira (Mrs. Ross) and herself, from the shadows one hundred feet wiped out by assassination. Bruce's fa ­ away. ther. M atthew Folgor, w as one of the victims. H is mother had fled with Bruce The fear that came to him was that and Linda. The girl, while sm all, had of the young world— fear without rec­ been kidnaped from the orphanage and brought to the mountain*. Linda’s father ompense, direct and primitive fear had deeded his lands to Matthew Folger, that grew on him like a sickness. It but the agreem ent, which would confute the enem y’s claim s to ths property, has was the fear that the deer knew os been lo s t they crept down their dusky trails nt C H A P T E R X .—Bruce’e m ountain blood night; It was the fear of darknesR responds to the call o f the blood-feud. and silence and pain and heaven C H A P T E R X I .-A giant tree, the Sen­ knows what cruelty that would be vis­ tinel Pine. In front of Linda's cabin, seem s to Bruce’s excited im agination to ited upon him by those terrible rend­ be endeavoring to convoy a message. ing fangs and claws. I t was the fear .C H APTER X II.—Bruce se ts out in that can be heard In the pack song In br™ Trdti° ^ Y / ’ With C° ,UfOrtabl8 Chlir*' wid« w indow , and M arch o f a trapper named Hudson, a the dreadful winter season, and that w itness to the agreem ent between Linda'* father and Matthew Folger. can be felt In strange overtones, In the - „ . r y Win add to ,he plea.ure of X ^ r . “ P* tU" ‘ <“ " sobbing wall of despair that the coyote C H APTER X III.—A gigantic grlssly, known a* the Killer, 1* the terror of tha utters In the half-darkness. He had vicinity, because of his size and ferocity. been afraid for bis life every moment CH APTER X IV .—Dave Turner, sent by he was In the hands of the Turners. ■Imon. bribe» Hudson to sw ear falsely concerning the agreem ent, if brought to He knew that If he survived this night, light, he knowing its whereabouts. he would have to face death again CH APTER XV.—Hudson and Dave vi*it He had no hopes of deliverance alto­ the former’s trap*. A wolf, caught in one. Is discovered by the Killer. Disturbed at gether. But the Turners were men. hie feast, the brute «trlkee down H uieon. and they worked with knife blade and Bruce, on hie way to Hudson, shoots and wounds the Killer, driving him from his bullet, not rending fang and claw. He victim. Hudson, learning Bruce's Iden* could face men bravely; but It was tlty. tries to tell him the hiding place of lhe agreem ent, but death sum m ons him. hard to keep a strong heart In the face CHAPTER XVI.—Simon, believing Bruce of this ancient fea r of beasts. rdowi where the document Is concealed, The K ille r seemed disturbed and lays plans to trap him. CH APTER XVII.—Dave decoys Linda moved slowly along the edge nt the and Aunt Elmira from their home. The moonlight. Bruce could trace hls man Insults Linda and is struck down Por Iow rou°d trip fares, sleeping car reserve* by the ered woman. Elm ira’s son has movements by the Irregularity In the tions. train schedule, or picture books inquire of been murdered by Dave, and at her com ­ line of shadows. He seemed to be mand, after securely binding the des­ agents or communicate i vith moving more cautiously than ever, perado. Linda leaves them alone. C H APTER X .. V III.—Returning, Bruce now. Brace could not hear the slight­ est sound. flnde a note, presumably from i Linda, Mnaa, i« u. tell- <^rei on A rural subscriber sent so mt S u b scrip tion s, 11 BO a year In ad van ce. T r a n sien t ad v ertisin g , 25c an inch; p er­ comments on an editorial article m a n e n t a d v ertisin g . 20c N o d isco u n t fo r tim e or space. under the caption “Hunters and Jn “P a id -fo r P a ra g ra p h .," 8c a lin e. Trespassers” in a recent number N o a d v e r tis in g d la g u l.ed aa nawa. of the Enterprise. Our friend II U S S Y , Linn Co., Ore . Nov. 9, 1927 uses more words than this paper has space for, but the gist of his CROSS AND CRECENT article may be leurned from the The Angora government of T ur­ extracts below. Register, key lias formally deponed the su*., The Eugene — •.----- » which ------- lan and declared the poaition 14,88 “ h“*5*6 °f discussing snbjec:« stand point of safety and elective instead of hereditary. frorn a -*-™* RECORDS FOR NOVEM BER sanity also has something to say Mohammed the Sixth denies their authority and refuses to abdicate, on the subject, which will bi N o w on S a le found further down in this but he appears to be powerless. column. Other Mohammedan nations de­ From our Correspondent. clare that if a sultan is to be I am greatly puffed up with elected they must have a vote. pride to learn that all those How these developments will pavements and sidewalks and affect the world relations between electric lights in the city were T {& J ?." O ^ ' * Mohammedans a n d Christians provided for the farmers to enjoy. remains to be seen. Should the I had ignorantly supposed that moselum world be divided over the city people provided .those the sultanate, as the Christiana things for their own benefit and are over a thousand quesijona, that any good the farmer might there may be leas, danger of Mol derive from them was only in hammedanism overwhelming tbs cidental. W hat fa beautiful thought it is that all this has 8 0 0 R e co rd s to select from world as a sequel to the surrender been done for the farmers! Per the allies have made to the Turks, haps in gratitude I ought to take Meanwhile the Turkish nation­ down all the trespass notices and alist government at Angora has tear down .my fences to save Albany, Oregon sma^ht‘4 tlip treaty it eutered into hunters the trouble of doing If at Mudania after it declared itself and keep my live stock in a bullet’ not .bound by previous treaties. proof inrlosurc during the open “ Men’s hearts [are] failing them season- Perhaps! for fear and fur looking after those But I have a business propo sition to make to my sportsmen tilings that are coming on the friends: If they will guarantee to eartb. ’’ pay me tliie actual amount of damage done by hunters to It, ,liae been, jokingly claimed farmers property, animnte and t.iat when equal rights are folly- inanimate. In Linn county in a enjoyed by the s.xes the men will year I will give bonds for pay­ O n Y o u r W in te r J o u rn e y to do their share of the childbearing. ment for all the damage done in Now comes a dispatch half a town to grounds, sidewalks, etc, column loug from Springfield, by farmers Ithrough the driving Mass., oyer Chicago Tribune leased of stock or otherwise. I am aging, but have not saved wire,-stating tbaf an autopsy an a enough on the farm to warrant man Killed by un automobile dis­ me in retiring from hard work. If covered iu bis abdomen a baby, such an agreement as I have fully formed* except tbs head. Of outlined were made and curried co ir.s, there pre no liars writing out lu good faith I believe I news stories ! should make enough profit out of Jt to enable me to go to town Albert Gutniess, speared a to reside and help to provide side­ giant devil .fish /jpou*r a rowboat walks and pavements and elec near Gig harbor and the creature trie lights for the benefit of farm V ia the S cenic S h a s ta R o u te dragged ,hiin ,o.vwboar * looking something. The farmer, In the English elections tbs la­ this citiien writes, comes cheer­ lik™ * “ • ’>r or rather the girl who bor party, which has had things fully tp ta p n and grails him likes can < iy, „ everywhere. Her oppo­ seif of the privileges of sidewalks. "II Us owu why, was orefwhelni- site woiu.d be hard to find. And if she rets her t , ndy from us she knows that ingly defeated.' Beggar, or kiog. I “Dd Btrvet ‘W 8 shsgr t . t h . best confect loner, is town » ..ii 8 B,us’ iia n d on occasion dm even driv. ws all are apt, if we get power, to through the streets of the tow U a V A r ’I 1? r ‘ h* “ 7‘ ’ “ * ,ure ” d souse it «ml consequently to lots animals which trumplc law ns' Sol’, drinks, too. it. aud destroy flowers and gener ’ ally raise Ned. Hence, he says, We sell Oroiron has thus far paid $1(. why should the fanner object 288,19V S t -for education of ex- When the town man comes out soiiliers, ¿ Republic« are not un- and pots a pheasant or two, pos grateful all instance«. »it’ly at the- same time spraying ( tone is sad bear it p l.y With bird shot such animal’s as A ll phonograph records aud nestles Ihe riffirl Fascii^ have come in his line of fire* out oa tup »ftfi'dw kla>t heavh.fif,' lbi8 ^nterprfce retorts I ' politics ’in itaiy. Probably the ' 8eU8ibl.’r enough,) flmt Individual ‘ — ----— next wiil^submerge tbsoi. grievances cannot be s e tt le bv jF ' ’ ***'********< ^ -s~ —— "ny 8,K'*‘ g<>nt'ral rule of re '» . You can ’ ' • I'lnrodtv. ,,- whose I. ? '»«nt a Id irD d " XS-I clprotlty. Thp The farm farmer I l e i it at th . 1 w en t/ thousand desr have bsan cAttle tram ple the city man's I , M O F » J S ^ |N W E G S T O R E . kills ! by hunters during the «ts- lawn, it says, may not have a son, also nmre tuFti than all ths pheasant nu his place, and tin J C R F • A M ^ X ,e» ^ \ a ’‘ , P L O W S ‘ h a r r o w s , d is c s , deer outdoor« Were wqrth. man whose lawn is marred bv i-ient i,n, ‘ S C P A R A 1 O R S in fact, evarytluor in th . iaiple- brvwsiug cows might not S jxc.sl prices on D R IL L S while th .y last Dlcotl Atould have fared belter I know wbii’b ‘‘ml of a gun to i , „ . R i '’ Se“1 B A T T E R I E S . Fresh stock. Call aad n t price, on »nplev.em ,. The store for qual.ty sod ; -romptses. !f he bad b-ft Tom 1 Kay and h i s T ““ * the Wrd ‘f he ’hoakl mud si .’home when he weni Hence the opportunity The - Strength o f the Pines B y Edison M arshall ► » » » » » » » » » X 'X h* Llttia. Bxowa A Ga. WOODWORTH DRUG CO., Service Counts— California Ts? S pin‘ wi,h “*•'— Through Standard Sleeping Cars ing him she has been kidnaped by the Turntr» C H APTER X IX .—Bruce fells into aso* a trap, and is made prisoner, CH APTER X X .—Charging Bruce with attem pting to reopen the blood-feud, the clan, after a mock trial, decides to leave him. bound, in a pasture on the spot where the Killer had slain and half eaten a calf the night before. They look for the return of the grizzly and th« slaying of Bruce by the animal. CHAI*TER X X I.—Bruce, helpless » wa its arrival of the Killer and death CHAPTER XXII -S im o n m akes Linda marriage The girt refuses, telling him she loves Brucs. Enraged, the man brutally strikes her, and leaves The girl is confident he will go to Bruss *knd she follow» him. the Claxton ola I N a rk ’s Confectionery Fairbaf^-Morse Scale (o r $21.50? . . . . . . .. c a m p a ig n in g , \ v Tl./V « a^Ta t o * e t ’‘ TCn I I . i * '» ’ king. - — True enough, and in addition it ’tx? Wt‘l| to p oillt hose who claim the school set another spot whew the h out .«unconstitutional will rto„ hsvs ‘ mentioned dtiaeato anrum. a cliaqce to find out. leaky. So far as the farmer i — ‘ . I coftoerued, the d ty hunter« cat rtített *r« «xa.p.iated. «od "t8.T •< hon' ’‘ tor the n, xt oen Ths f«rtf)pti , flir v sn«1 w ill V they votcP k F far f a » funner for got tnyy «nd there will ho neither «offering nor sorrow In the rural srnor. districts. But just let the farm lY h is «l'-irti» n e in o the Oregonian tbst era of the Halsey country stuy at Andy Ut.uty ha* been elected rot - home and refrain from using th eit.v sidewalks and lights and ern»’r. «»en occasionally letting a fret G. W. 1 Mornhin weg -MfJtfJb lomoohle Insurance birc' t i- cpllisien. p ro p erty damage and I liability. ; L ,...» [ P,:ott *ct yourself against C P' STAFFORD, Agent, f ■ * * * ^ * -i r. ..»estHkegkh rftrnsta « •> «■ - a ■____- - CHAPTER X X III The shadow that Bruce »aw at the edge the foreat cottld not be mis­ taken as to Identity. The hope« that he had held before—that thta stalking figure might be that of a deer or an elk—cottld no longer be entertained. Men. as a rule, do not love the wild and walling eobe of a coyote, as he look« down upon a camp fire fro » the ridge shove. Sleep does not come eas- U» when a gaunt wolf walks In a slow, Inquisitive circle about the pallet, scarcely a leaf rustling beneath bis feet And a few times. In the history of the frontier, men have had queer tingling, and creepings In the scalp when they have happened to glanee ever their shoulder« and see the ayes ° f • great, tawny puma glowing an odd blue In the firelight Yet. Bruce would have had any one of these, or all three together. In preference to the KUler The reason was extremely simple. Ko words have ever been capable of «pressing the depths e>f cowardice of which a coyote Is capable. He will whlae and weep about a camp, like a aoul tost between two worlds, but tf ho la tn his right mind he would have •och one of his gray hairs plucked out eoe by one, rather than attack a man. The cunning breed to which he belong« has found out that It doesn't pay. The wolf Is Sometimes dlsqnlettngty brave when he Is fortified by bis pack breth­ ren io the winter, but m such a season For an Instant he had ah exult­ ant hop« that the bear would continue on down the edge of the forest and leave him ; and hls heart etood still as the great beast paused, sniffing. But some smell In the a ir seemed to reach him, and he came stealing back. In reality, the K iller wag puzzled. He had come to this place straight through the forest with the ekpecta- tlon that food— flesh to tear with hls fengu—would be waiting for him. And now, as he waited et the border of the darkness, he knew that a strange change had taken place. And the K iller did not like strangeness The smell that he had expected had dimmed to such an extent that It pro­ moted no muscular Impulse. Perhaps tt was only obliterated by a stranger smell—one that was vaguely fuimiisr and wakened a slow, brooding anger In bis great beast's heart. He was not tim id ; yet he retained tome of hls natural caution nml re­ mained In the gloom while he inmla hls Investigations. Probably It was a hunting Instinct alone. He crept slow­ ly up and down the border of moon­ light, and hla anger teemed K> grow and deepen within him. He felt rtlmlv that he had been cheated out of his meal. And onee before he had lo-u similarly cheated; but there had been singular triumph at the end of that experience. All at once a movement, far across the pasture, caught his a tten tio n . It seemed that some one had come, taken one glance at the drama at the edge Ot the forest, and had departed. Braes himself had not seen the'fignre; end perhaps It wos the mercy of Fate —not nsaally merciful— that he did not. He might h a v e been caused to hope again, only to know a deeper despair when the man left him wlth- ont” giving aid. For the tall fonn had been that of Simon coming, as Linda had anticipated, for a moment's In­ spection of hls handiwork. And see­ good, be bed depart ing that ed again. The grlxzly watched him go. then fumed to hls question'n; regard It wee heck