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About The Turner tribune. (Turner, Or.) 19??-19?? | View Entire Issue (March 12, 1925)
« THE TURNER TRIBUNE VOL. TUIINKII, OIIEUOX, T IIU U bD A Y , IX . E OF CURRENT WEEK DRY AGENTS FREETOSEARCH Warrant Not Daily News Items. In Stopping Autos Haya Supreme Court. Waahlngton, It. C. tion agents Briet Resurre Most Important Required Federal prohibi may lawfully atop auto mobiles and other vehicles and search them for contraband liquor without a warrant, the supreme court decided Monday In a case from 667.000 CHILDREN WED Result of Marriage Survey Is Startling Michigan, COMPILED FOR YOU Klro. In another liquor rasa decision, Kvrnta o f Noled I'eoplc, Government» anil Pacific Northwest. and Other T hing» Worth Knowing. the constitution, make unlawful the SITUATION SERI OUS Conditions Attributed In 1‘srt to States. before enactment of the federal pro hibition act. Itellef w orker» were buay over the week-end aniuni the FamlUea of the 12.000 m iner» of dlatrlrl 24. United Mine Workera of America. who went on alrlke Friday n l*b l at Sydney, N H IIjr the eiploaloti of a hoi of dyna mite Sunday morning »< a rharga waa being aet under a etump. Perry W ar ner of Olytnpla, Waah . waa Inelantly kTlIed and W illard Alveraon. alao of tnyuipla. waa perhape fatally Injured Poatal employee throughout the country will receive In their pay en velopea March It an additional chock covering the Im rauaed pay voted them In the new poatal pay and rate bill. The pay Inrrraae waa retroactive to January 1. Ire. gorged In the Mlaaourl river about Niobrara, N eb, waa at III holding faat Saturday night The Jam la aald to extend 30 mllea above Niobrara and bottom land on both eldea of the river la Inundated to an average depth of a ll to eight feet. Suggeatlona made during the recent aircraft controveray that Inadequate reaulta have been obtained from the eipendlture of 1433.000.000 on avia tion In the laat five yeara were de clared In a etalrment by the National Aeronautic aaaorlallon to lie "vary unjual." t hief» Standing Hull. Antelope and Hollow Horn. Yankton Sioux Indiana, held a council fea»t Friday at the ex rlualve Metropolitan rlub, Waahlngton. contending for rlghta In the lllark llllla The gueata. who numbered a hundred or more. Included many high officiate. Declaring that ‘‘It would be Intol erable and unreasonable If a prohibi tion agent were authorised to stop every automobile on the chance of flndlog liquor, and thus subject all persona lawfully using the highways to the Inconvenience and Indignity of such a search,” Chief Justice Taft asserted that “those lawfully within the couutry entitled to use the public highways have a right to free pass age without Interruption or search un- leas there Is known to a competent ufflrtal. authorised to search, prob able cause for belief that vehicles are carrying contraband or Illegal mer chandise.” It was the Intent of congress, how ever, to make a distinction between the necessity for a search warrant In the searching of private dwellings and of automobiles, the chief Justice stated, and that distinction was con stitutional. There Is no provision In the constitution which denounces all searches or selxures without a war rant, he said, adding that It prohibits only "unreasonable searches or selx ures.." "T h e guaranty o f freedom from un reasonable searches and selxures has W e n construed practically alnce the beginning of the government,” he ex plained, ‘‘as recognising a necoaaary difference between a search of a store, dwelling house or other struc ture In respect of which a proper of ficial warrant readily may be obtain ed. and a search of a ship, motor- boat, wagon or automobile for con traband goods, where It Is not prac ticable to secure a warrant because the vehicle can be quickly moved out of the locality or Jurisdiction In which the warrant muat be sought.” The carcaaa of an elephant of un uaual alxe waa waahed aahore on the ocean beach below the C liff houae In Pacific Trade Growing. San Franclaco Friday. Myalery la at tachrd to the Incident, aa no report» New York. — Am erica's trade with have been received here of any ele Asia, Oceania and Latin A m erlra has phant» being loat from any veaacl In Increased largely In the last 10 years, the Pacific. statistics compiled by the National A Chicago robber attempting to hold City bank showing that Imports from up a drug atoro Sunday abut and futal Asia and Oceania had expanded to ly wounded Archibald F. Murchle, un I9k0.000.000 In 1924 compared with art atudent and aon of a wealthy tea 3129,000.000 in 1914 and front South merchant of Vancouver, It. C. The America 3403.000,000 against 1221.000,- drugglat aald the eame robber held up 000. the atom a week ago. Murchle died Kxports to these countries also at a houpjtal. showed striking gains, those to Asia The town of Ijivoye. Wyo.. waa lit and Oceania being 3871,000.000 In 1924 erally wiped off the map of Wyoming In contrast to 3197.000,000 In 1914, Friday und Ita H im realdenta deprived and to South America 3315,000.000 of their home» by a ruling of Federnl against 3125.000,000. Demand for silk, Judge T. make Kennedy, who ordered wool, Jute and hides swelled the Im that the entire village and Ita populace ports. muat be moved In order to make a clear path for a giant of indualry— Portland Gats Veterans’ Hospital. petroleum. Washington. D. C.— A bill to appro Nut a wheel waa turning above or below ground Saturday night In the priate nn additional 310.000.000 tor Capo llreton area, where 12.000 em hospital facilities for world w ar vet ploye» of thu coal mlnea of the llrltlah erans wns passed Monday by the Ktnplre Steel corporation left the pita house and sent to the senate, which Friday night In conformity with a later passed the measure. general atrlke order iaaued by the of In urging passnge the house veter flcera of dlatrlct number 21, Halted ans* committee pointed out that ap Mine W orkera of America. proximately 335.000,000 thus far had With 1.1 enta grouped about him and been expended for hospital facilities Di Social Kid, hla pet dog companion, for veterans of the world war. licking hla cold hands, Joe Keeaey, rector Hines of the veterans' bureau 4k, waa found denil In hla homo In requested an additional appropriation Selection of sites Utica, N. Y „ Sunday night. He waa of 313.k87,500. a victim of a heart attack. Whining' would be left to the veterans' bureau of the dog and odd nolaea of the cata director. attracted tha attention o f relatives who discovered Keoaey’a lifeless body A publicly-owned giant power sys tem, which, by an Interlocking system of transmission lines will be able to bring the benefits of a cheap and plen tiful supply of electricity Into every city, town and hamlet In the United States, In prophesied by Senator (leorge W. Norris of Nebraska, aa be ing Inevitable and essential In the future. The late United States Senator McCormick left hla entire estate of more than 32,000,000, accord ing to the estimate of his attorneys, to his widow, Mrs. Huth Hanna Mc Cormick, for her lifetime. Mrs. Mc Cormick was named solo executrix and co-trustee with Vice-President Hawes, the other trustoe, It was dis closed at Chicago when the will was filed. Linen Mill Contracted. Salem, Or.— The contract for the construction of the new H. C. Miles linen mill to be located near the state fair grounds was nwarded Monday to A. A. Slewert. The plant, upon com pletion. will represent an expenditure of 3125,000, and will be the first plant of Its kind established west of Min neapolis. Machinery for the plant hna been ordered and la now en routo to Salem from Liverpool, England. Huge Meteor Reported. Han Francisco.— An enormous me teor waa seen to fall north of this city Monday night. The distance could not be estimated. There waa a flare of light similar to that of a skyrocket, hut many times larger. Several per sons reported seeing It. NO. 25. MX the young lady, but I cu ; 1 1 go -nrl keep my principles." "Why *«4. alrT” "Because we are all of s mind wl h oar Mr Patrick Henry. We put III. arty above happiness ead even above life. So I oiu»t stay and help flghl her bettlee. aod when I aay It I aw grinding my own heart under my heel Don’t think harshly of me. I cannot help It. The feeling to brad la my Eugene.— Mrs. Jane Grant Rennie, 92, pioneer of Oregon and a resident of the W illam ette valley for more than 50 yeurs, died at the home of her son, John M. Rennie, here F ri day. total of 3107.923 35 was New of a York.- M ors than million persons two-thirds living the slate land department during the month of February, according to a report prepan-d here ty Goor:;e O. ilrown, clerk of the state land hoard. Easy Law s for Weddings in Many possession of liquor acquired legally Chief Justice Taft delivered the Mr» Krad Ihxllna. 21. auil four amsll opinions In both cases. Justices Mc- rtilldrrn of Wlllleuiaport, Im l. and Iteynolds and Sutherland dissenting M l»» llurd. 21. Maryavlllr, O . w ire klHi (I Friday. Their automobile wsa In the former, und Justice Sutler In the latter, atrurk by a freight train. 1985. turned over to the state treasurer by brought from Georgia by Ulg Samuels, the court held that slates may, under 12, STATE N E W S IN BRIEF. S a le m .- A brought by (Jeorgo Carroll and John M A ltC il In the United States today have been child brides who were less than 16 years of age when they married or have bi-in married to brides under that age; the great majority of these, con trary to popular belief, are native white of native parentage. These are a few of the many startling facta re vealed In an extended study of child marriages, a preliminary report on which was made public here Sunday by the Russell Sage foundation. This situation la due In large meas ure to two causes, aaya the report: The fact that many states require no better evidence of age than the af fidavit of one of the candidates fur a marriage license and that the legal minimum m arriageable age la still only 12 years for girls and 13 years for boys In New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania. Kentucky, Ixiuislana. Virginia. Florida. Maryland. Rhode Island. Tennessee. Colorado, Idaho. Maine and Mississippi. The serlouaneaa of the situation be comes even more Impreaalve when It Is known that the foundation's re port classes aa child brides only those under 16 years old; that It docs not lake Into account the many marriages of children over 16 but under 18. and lhat the total of 667.000 child brides and husband* of child brides Is In creased each year by thousand* of additional child marriages Nor hare the foundation’s Investigations Includ ed In their estimates boys married at 17 or younger to girls or women older than 15, because the number of such marriages Is relatively email. The Investigators, working under the direction of Mary E. Richmond, nationally know-n authority on fam ily w elfare work, have visited 90 cities in 2k slates; their field work was followed by exhaustive statistical studies, library research and extend ed Interviews and correspondence with representatives of social agencies. Jurists, public officials, phy siologists and other authorities on the many phases of tha problem. The study, which Is still under why. rovers not only the child marriage problem hut the whole subject of the admin istration of marriage laws. Million Gift Reported. New York.— John D. Rockefeller Jr. has given 31.000,000 to the Hampton and Tuakegee Institutes for negroes. It was announced by Dr. Anson Phelps Stokes, chairman of the Hampton- Tnskegee endowment fund. Mr. Rockefeller's donation was made unconditionally and brings the endowment fund now being raised to 31.500.000. Dr. Stokes characterised Mr. Rocke feller's gift as marking “the union of all those forces whose co-operation must be secured If the negro is to be given an adequate opportunity In our country and If we are to have Increasingly Interracial peace and good will.” Klamath Falla. — A ll lands within the Klamath Irrigation district will be reclassified, according to a de cision reached Saturday by the board. A classification committee will be named to undertake the work at an early date. Hood River.— The busy season for orchardlsts has arrived and growers In all sections are engaged In pruning and making ready for application of early sprays. Robert Green, here from the upper valley, stated that pruning crews were noted In every orchard. Salem.— The condition of Mrs. W a l ter M. Pierce, wife of Oregon’s chief executive, was reported by physicians Sunday as slightly improved. The physicians said, however, that the rally was only temporary and that the patient could not survive more than a few days. Mill City.— At a recent meeting the Bohemian band, which has been prac ticing for about a year, formally or ganised. with the following officers: V ladle Dvorka. 1 order; Ed Drape la, president; Antone Morvarec, vice- president; H oward Fenner, secretary; Frank Rada, treasurer. Salem.— H earing of the wool rate case has been set for March 23. ac cording to announcement made at the offices of the public service commis sion Friday. The bearing will be con ducted by representatives of the In terstate commerce commission and will be held in Portland. Sweet Home.— Gene Greene. 7. son of Charles Greene or Pleasant Valley, was pinned under a heavy log for one half hour Sunday before mem bers of a crew could be summoned to release him. He suffered serious internal Injuries, according to reports from the Lebanon hospital. Salem. — Announcement waa made here Saturday that the Mountain States Pow er company will start with in the next few days construction of a line for heat, power and light from Independence along the county road to Drunks corner, and thence along the slate highway to Salem. Salem.— Out of a total of 30,630 pu pils in the high schools of Oregon 28,787 are studying English. 19.464 mathematics, 14.717 science and 19,676 history, according to a statement is sued by the state superintendent of public Instruction Saturday. A total of 6345 of these students have chosen American history. Newport. Frank C. Bram well, su perintendent of banks, has announced that the first dividend to the depos itors of the W estern State bank will be paid W ednesday— 20 per cent on commercial deposits and 65 per cent on savings deposits, the total aggre gating approximately 375.000. The W estern State bank closed its doors Novem ber 7. 1924. Salem.— There will be no Increase in federal grcxlng fees before 1927, according to a letter received at the state department here Saturday from Howard M. Gore, secretary of agricul ture. The letter was in reply to a memorial approved by the legislature Eighteen Robbers Shot. at its recent session urging congress Mexico City.— An ordor has been Is not to enact any legislation which sued by the w ar department to treat would tend to Increase the groxing all highwaymen and robbers operating In the Interior as rebels. A s such they fees at this time. are liable to execution Immediately Rend.— Hopes for the safety of when captured In the act. In con Charlie George, trapper, who has been formity with the decree 18 robbers missing for five weeks, were virtu were shot Saturday In Justlahuaca. ally abandoned Sunday when three state of Puebla, en masse as a w arn men. J. O. Gerklng. C. A. Adams and ing to others In the town and neigh Clyde Short, returned front a three- boring towns suspected of protecting day search In the snow-covered Cas train holdups and highway robbers. cades of central Oregon. It Is pos Insane to be Beautiful. Chicago.— A beauty parlor, Install ed at a cost of 32000, will be opened In Ihe Elgin state hospital for the In sane. Three beauty expert* have been employed and they are to be assisted by a number of women patients. There will be no charge for services which will Include hair bobbing, manicuring and facial treatment. Plans for the funding of a nattonnl college of art*, with the expenditure of 32,500,000 for buildings and an en dowment fund of 3L800.000 were an nounced by the council of the National Academy of Design after a special meeting In N ew York Sunday. Es tablishment of a 3700.000 fund to pro vide an Income to enable 25 students of the school to go abroad annually for study also Is planned. sible that the body of the missing trapper la In Crater creek cabin on the broken top plateau, but this cabin la hurled under snow, which averages 30 feet In depth. Salem. — Governor Pierce Sunday signed a bill Introduced by the Joint ways and means committee of the houae and senate providing for a 10 per rent tax on cigarettes, smoking tobacco and snuff. The tax la baaed on the retail prices. This bill, aa orig inally reported out by the ways and means committee, provided for the levying of a tax on all tobarcoea, but this waa amended in the senate by eliminating chewing tobaccoea and cigars. It has been estimated that the new tax will return to the state approximately 3800,000 during the current biennium. COOYRJ&KT <T « V I N O B A C H C L L f R. IRVING BACHELLERj C H AR TER X V I— Continued. — 1fi— T h e man has ■ great heart In him. ■ » »very great man muat.” he wrote to bla father. "I am beginning to love him. I can see that these thousands In tha army sra going to he hound to him by an affection like that of a son for a father. With nun like Wash ington and Franklin to lead us, how can wa f a l t r The next night Sir Henry Clinton got around the Americans and turned their left flenk. Rmsllwood'i com mand and that of Colonel Jack Iron* were almost destroyed, twenty-two hundred having been killed or taken. Jack had his left arm shot through and escaped only by the swift and at- feetlva use of hta pistols and hanger, and hy good luck, hla horse having been "only slightly cut in the withers" The American line gave way. Ita un seasoned troops fled Into Brooklyn. There waa the end of the Island. They could go no farther without swimming. With a British fleet in the harbor un der Admiral Lord Howe, the situation waa desperate. Sir Henry had only to follow and pen them In and unllinber hla guns. Tha surrender of more than half of Washington's army would have to follow. At headquarters, the most discerning minds saw that only a mir acle could prevent It. The miracle arrived. Next day a fog thicker than the darkness of a clouded night enveloped the Island and lay upon the face of the waters. Calm ly. quickly Washington got ready to move hla troops. That night, under the friendly rover of the fog. they were quietly taken across the East river, with a regiment of Marblehead tea dogs, under Colonel Glover, manning the boats. Fortunately, the British army had halted, waiting for clear weather. For nearly two weeks Jack was nurs ing his wound In Washington's army hospital, which consisted of a cabin, a tent, a number of cow stables and an old aheil on the heights of Harlem. Jack had lain In a stable. Toward tha end of hla confinement, John Adams came to see him. “W ere you badly hurt?” the greet man asked. "Scratched a little, but I'll be beck In the service tomorrow,” Jack replied. ”You do not look like yourself quite. I think that I will ask the commander In chief to let you go with me to Phila delphia. I hare some business there and later Franklin and I are going to Staten Island to confer with Admiral Lord Howe. W e are a pair of snap pish old dogs and need a young man like you to look after us. You would only haTe to keep oat of our quarrels, attend to our luggsga and make some notes In the conference.” So It happened that Jack went to Philadelphia with Mr. Adams and. after two days at the house o f Doctor Franklin, aet out with the two greet men for the conference on Staten 1» land. He went In high hope that he waa to witness the laat scene of the war. In Amboy he sent a letter to hta father, which s aid : "Mr. Adams it a blunt, outspoken man. I f things do not go to hla lik ing. bo la quick to tell you. Doctor Franklin la humorous and polite, but firm as a God-placed mountain. You ■uay put your shoulder against the mountain and push and think It la moiing. but It tsn't. Ha la established. He has found his proper besrlngs and Is done With moving. These two great men differ In little matters. They had a curious quarrel the other evening. W a had reached New Brunswick on our way north. The taverns were crowded. T ran from one to another trying -to Biel entertainment for my distinguished ti h ml» At last I found a small chamber with one bed In It and a tingle window. 1'he bed nearly filled the room. No better accommo dation waa to he had. I had left them sitting on a bench In a little grove near the large hotel, with tha luggage near them. When I returned they were hav ing a hot argument over tue origin of northeast storms, the doctor asserting that he had learned by experiment that they began la the southwest and pro ceeded In a northeasterly direction. I had to wait ten mlnutea for a chance to apeak to them. Mr. Adams was hot faced, the doctor calm and smiling. I Imparted the news. “ 'God of Israel r Mr. Adams ex claimed. “Is It not enough that I have to agree with you! Muat I also sleep with you 7* “ 'Sir, I hope that you muat not. but If you must. I beg that yon wilt sleep more gently than you talk,' aald Frank lin. " I went with them to their quarters carrying the Ingrage. On the way Mr Adams complained tliat he had plckad up a flea somewhere. ” T h e flee. air. It a small animal, hot a big fact,’ aald Franklin. 'You alarm me. Tw o large men and a flea will he apt to crowd our quarter*.' "In the room they argued with a depth of feeling which astonished me. as to whathar the one window should be open or cloned. Mr. Adams had dosed It. " ‘Please do not doee the window,* aald Franklin. ‘W a shall suffocate.' “ 'Sir, I am an Invalid and afraid of the night air,' said Adams rather testily. ~ T h e air of this room will be much woiee for you than that ou of door»,' Franklin retorted. He » » then be tween the covers. 'I beg of you to open the window and get ln:o bed and tf I do not prove my case to your sat- Ufsction. I will consent to Its being cloeed.’ " I toy don n on s straw-fllled mat tress outside their door. I heard Mr. Adams open the window and get into bed. Then Do tor Franklin began to expound his thi >ry of colds. H * de clared that colii air never gave any on* s cold; that -aspiration destroyed a gallon of air ■ minute and that all (he sir In the room would be con sumed In sn hour, lie went on and on and long before be had finished hla argument, Mr. Adams was snoring, convinced rather by the length than th* cogency of the reasoning. Soon the two great men. whose fame may be said to fill th* earth, were asleep In th* sam* bed In that little box of a room and snoring In a way that sug gested loud contention. I had to laugh ua 1 listened. Mr. Adams would seem to hava been defeated, for, by and by, I heard him mattering as he walked th* floor.” Howe’» barge met the party st Am boy and conveyed them to th# landing near hla headquarters. It was, how ever. a fruitless Journey. Howe wished to negotiate on the old ground now abandoned forever. The people of America had spoken for independence — a new. Irrevocable fact not to be pat aside by ambassadors. The colonies were loet. The concessions which th* wise Franklin hsd so urgently recom mended to the government of England, Hows seemed now inclined to offer, but they could not be entertained. "Then my government can only maintain Its dignity by fighting." said Howe. T h a t to t mistaken notion." Frank lin answered. "It will he much more dignified for your government to ac knowledge its error than to persist In It." “W e shall light." Howe declared. "And you will have more fighting to do than you anticipate." said Franklin. “Nature to our friend and ally. Th* Lord has prepared our defenses. They are the sea. the mountains, the forest and th* character of our people. Con sider what you have accomplished. At sn expense of eight million pounds yon have killed shout eight hundred Yan kees. They have cost you ten thou sand pounds a head. Mesnwthle. at least a hundred thousand children hava been born In America. There are the factors In your problem, n o w much lime and money will be required for the Job of killing all of us?” The British admiral Ignored the query. “My powers ere limited," said he. “but I sm authorised to grant pardons and In every way to exercise th* king’s paternal solicitude." "Such an offer shows that your proud nation ha* no Adhering opinion of us," Franklin answered. "W e, who are the Injured parties, have not tbs baseneaa to entertain It You will for give me for reminding you that the king's paternal solicitude has been rather trying. It has burned our de fenseless towns In midwinter; It has Incited the savages to massacre oar farmers In th* bst-k country; It has driven ns to a declaration of Inde pendence. Britain and America are now distinct states. Fete* can be considered only on that basis You wish to prevent oar trade from pass ing Into foreign channels Let me re mind you. »Iso, that th* profit of no trade can ever be equal to th* ex pense of holding It with fleets and armies.” "On such a basis I am not empow ered to treat with you,” Howe an swered. “W e shall Immediately move against your army." The conference ended. Th* ambas sadors and their secretary shook hands with the British admiral. "Mr. Irons I have heard much of you." said th* latter as he held Jack's hand. “You are deeply attached to a young lady whom I admire sod whose father Is my friend. I offer you a chance to leave this troubled land and go to !.ondon and marry and lead a peaceable. Chriattan Ilf*. You may keep your principles If you wlah, aa I have no use for them. You will find sympathisers In England.” T,ord How*, your klndneo* touche* me," th* young man anawered. “What you propoa* ta a great temptation. It la like Calypso's offer of Immortal happlneaa to Ulysse*. I love England. J Lot* jjetcti *tul m gr« than Uto lordahlp smiled politely aad bowed aa the three men withdrew. FraBklln took th* band of the young man and prsaaed It silently a* they were leaving the email houae la which How* bad established hlinaelf. Jack, who bad beau taking note* of the fruitless talk of thee* greet mea. was sortly disappointed. He could see ne prospect now of peace. "My hopes are burned to the ground." h# said to Doetor Franklin. "It U a tima of sacrifica." tit* good man answered. "Yon have th* In vincible spirit that looks Into the ro tor* and gives all It has. You aru America." "I have been thinking too touch of myself." Jack answered. "N ew 1 am reedy to toy down my life ta this great canee of ours." "Boy. I Ilk* you." said Mr. Adsnta T bsv* arranged to have you safety conveyed to New York. There aa or derly will meet and conduct you to our headquarters." Thank yon. sir.’ Jack replied. Turning to Doctor Frankiln. be added; I “One remark of your* to Lord H o w * < Impressed me. You s s lj that nature waa our friend and ally. It pet ai* la mind of th* fog that halped aa out of | Brooklyn and of a little adventure of mine.” Then be told tha story of the spider's wrh. " I repeat that all astare to with ua." 1 said Franklin. “U was s sens* of In justice In ha man nature that sent us serose th* great barrier of the sou Into conditions where only the strong could survival H er* w * have raised up s sturdy people with 3.000 mitos of water between them and tyranny. Armies cannot cross U sad succeed long la a hostile land. They are too far from bom*. Th* expense of trans porting and maintaining them will bleed our enemlea until they nr* spent. The British king to powerful, but now be has picked a qoarral with Almighty God, and It will go bard with him." CH AR T ER XVII Hew Solomon Shifted the Sheer. , la the spring new» cam* of a great force of British which was being or ganised In Canada for a descant opua New York through Lake Champlain Frontier settled la Tryon county were being massacred by Indiana. Generals Herkimer and Schuyler had written to Washington, asking far th* services of the famous scout. Solo- moo Blnkua. In that region. “H e knows (tie Indian an no other man know* him and can speak his lan guage and be also knows tbs bush.” Schuyler bad written. " I f there to any place on earth where his help to needed Just now. It Is here.” “Got to leave ye, my son.” Solomon said to Jack on* evening scon after that. "How so?” the young mao asked “Goln' hum to fight Injuns. The Great Father has ordered It. I'll Ilk* It better. Gtttlo' Isay hero. Summer's cornin' an' I'm a born bush man. I'm kind o' oneasy— like a deer In a door- yard. I ain't had to run fer my Ilf* since w * got here. My hoofs are com plainin'. I ain't shot a gun la a month.” A look of sorrow spread over tbs face of Solomon. T i n tired of this place," said Jack. T h e British art scared of aa sad wa'r* scared of the British. There's nothing going on. I'd lov* to go buck to the big bush with you." “I'll tall th* Orset Father that you're a born bash man. liehbe he'll let y* go. They'll need ua both. Rem, Injuns an' the devil have J'lned bands. Tha Long house will be tha ceutar o’ ball on' Its lln* fences'll taka la the hall big bush. That day Jack's name was Included In th* order. “I'm sorry that It la not yet possible to pay you or any of the men who have served me so faithfully,” said Wash ington. “If you need money I shall be glad to lend yon a sum to help you through this Journey." T ain't flghtln’ fer pay.” Solomon answered. " I ’ll hoe an' dig. an' cook, an' guide fer money. But I won’t fight no more fer money— pertly 'cause I don’t need It— partly ’cause I'm figbt- ln' fer myeelf. I gut a little left la my britches pocket, but If I hadn't, my ol* Msrier wouldn't let me go huo- S TJ." (T O BB C O N T IN U E D .» A Seriout Case A notoriously nbaent minded uisa was observed walking down tb* street with on* foot continually In th* fatter, tha othar on th* pevamant. A friend meeting him said: "Goad evening. How sra you?” “Well.” replied tha • been t a i In tied one, T thought I we* very wail when I left home, bat now I don't knew what'« the matter with me. I've limping for tb* last half hoar." PaMting th « Back The new cook gave some perk chops to n relative who called while th* lady of tb* bouse wan out paying a few calls. "The missus will mtos them.” warned th* parlor maid. “Oh. I'll blame that an tha cuL* “W * have as e a t” T h e n be a good girl.” nrgod the new cook earnestly. ”»n d to* lb * < Ml ft “• * • » "