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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1922)
SATURDAY, iOCTOBEH 7. 1S22. THE OREGON , DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, , OREGON. v Cblktl Wu I , . . BxadScata 'TUT of on other, man must I tell the myth of a "P" or a "strait which waa wld te bring- the-traveler . rrom ue auuiic inu me ; ricuit ; within a few hoars. continued to told its owns amone' the men of the water front ; j ; ' 'There was a. sailor iToyhe name of Henry Hudson. He was born in Eng land, but be is better known as Hen drik Hudson because he made his most t famous voyage in the service of the . Dutch East Indies company.. During those early days before there existed "' any interstate commerce commissions 1 and antitrust, laws, everybody -was forever trying to grab a little monopoly of bis own. the English Muscovite i I company as wall as the others. This ! company contemplated finding a new 'Pole. It bad been tried 20 years before by a ship from Amsterdam which bad got stuck in the ice,' eft -Nova Zembla and bad been sunk, forcing the men to spend a dreary polar winter in a -little wooden bouse. Hudson waa no Heemskerck. his predecessors had been, and the Moscovite company dis . missed him after two very unprofitable "voyages. "But the fame of Hudson bad -spread far and wide and he waa asked to coma to Amsterdam and Jry once more, this time for the benefit . of the Dutch East India company to find the northeastern passage and reach Cathay via Mr. Peary'e North Pole. ... 1 ' , On the th at April of the year 109 he left Holland on board the "Halve! ;Maen" or "Balfmoon." A month later J .ha waa in tbel Arctic ocean. The con ditions of the Ilea packs, however, con- r- j. CHAPTkiA 36 TVr9-s V01 even too much honor i jLS kenonar thieves, Mr. Russell. We don't iellyo. about our tricks against oMe -anotber ' - becacnse v-w-:aiow- it Wouldn't make any' impression OA you The tricks-arent .Played against you. and you have a sof side for cats with lovely manners" "What about your tricks against uaT I . ; , V . "Oh i these" J Allca laughed, "We ! think theire; rather eate" "Bravo!"! he cried, and hammered ! the ferrule of bis stick upon the pave ! ment. ! , . , : "What's the applause for? '"For youi i,What you said was like running up tbe black nag to The mast head." - 1 I tOh. no. It was iiist a modest little sign In pretty flower bed. "Gentlemen,- beware!" , ! "I see I must," be said, gallaatly. "Thanks! But I mean, beware of the -whole bloomln' garden." SJaen, picking up a thread that had almost disappeared: "You -needn't think you'll vr find out whether I'm right about Mildred's not being an exception by asking- bar." ehe said. "She won't tell you ; she's not the sort that ever makes r. confession" ' But Bussell had not followed her shift to the former topic. " 'Mildred's not being an exception?" he sald,i . vaauelv. I don't "An excepUon atot thinking she could - be a wonderful thing on the stage ir; ene oniy cared to. ir you , -asked her. I'm pretty sure she'd say, 'What nonsense l': Mildred's the dear- est. finest thing ; anywhere, but you . won't find out many things about her hv aaki-nr her. Russell's expression became more serious, ss Ik did .whenever his cousin was made theh topic "Tou think not.T" be said. rTou think she's " 4Co- Buti Iff not beeavse ehe isn't -sincere exactly It's only because she baa such a tot to live up to. She has ; to live up to being a girl on the grand tvle to herself. I nun. is And without pausing- Alice rippled on, L"Tu ought to have seen me when I 1 bad the stage fever t I used to play Juliet all' alone in my room." she lifted her arms In graceful .entreaty. pleading rauafcay, 2". hr the atoon. the iaeontaBt moon t wottW ebaasae ia bar circled ort. test thy ton ttwi . .- , She broke off abruDtlv with a utt flourish, snapping- thumb and; finger ei eacn puisiretenea hand.' then iaugnea ana aata, Tapa used to make such run ef me ! Thank heaven. I was e i " fm m over it by the next year;" - ,. "No wonder you bad : the fever, Russell observed. Tow do it beautl fuUy.t Why didn't you. fimeh the "Which one? Lest thy love prove llkea iae vartable'T-Juliet waa saying it to a man. you know, she seems to have been ready to worry about his . -snstancy pretty .early in their . -.fair"- -' - - Her companion w again thought ful "Tea- be said, seerolnr : t be rather irksomely impressed with Alice's suggestion. "Tea; it does at peer .ao.-!. AHe glanced at bis serious face and yielded to jan audacious temptation. "Tot . mustn't u take it so bard. she saldi flippantly, "It lent about you; It's only Remeo and Juliet -- " "See hereJ he- exclaimed. ? "Tou aren't at your mind reading j again, are yowr . xnrere are rumest when it went ' do. you know.. v -- - - She leaned toward him a little, as If ; wpaiaonahly i they were ; walking , Slowly, and this ptnim r v- " 2. hooJar Vat light contact with his for a. moment. x- "Do-yots die nke my mtod reading r" eh asked3 and. , in jusc -loucamg- ahoul- oera, gave , him her sudden look of smiUngly wistfulneta. "Do1 you hate ;itT" , ; ,- - ' ' - -! He shook hia heta. ; No - he eai& gravtry" "It's aulte pleaaant- V Airrun&r-Gr rinced TiXm thai he could net go fur tber eastward. . Ho therefore left the northern region and went to ;the Fare Island, whith are situated, to the north ofi Scotland, for fresh water. Then bj remembered that hi friend Captain John BmSth years .before had given him a, map of Virginia, and adjoining countriea Ha nuU4:ttf bis :creer that tbey too go and visit Vlrglnl and the crew, glad to be out of the cold Arctic, waa all for- the warm dimes of the pleasant land of tobacco. And mo Hudson sailed westward. But in those day navigation waa on part compass and five parts vluckV The com pass did not ruide Hudson to the snores of Virginia, but luck carried him to .the mouth of a wide river which as yet did not appear upon single map. Hudson believed ; that be bad found the strait wfeicn led di rectly to the Indian ocean. He entered the river and went northward. He did not find the Indies. Instead be discovered the site where Albany now stands. Of courses be got discouraged and went back to report to his owners at Amsterdam. ; ., ' Even then the cburas:eous old sailor continued to believe in the existence of a "western passage." He went back tc the Arctic sea in the year 1610.- He entered a wide bay which he called Hudson's bay. He pushed further and further towards the west. But his men grew mutinous. They asked that he return home. Hudson refused. Then bis men took him and i bis small son and seven others who iwere sick and they put them into a small boat and they set their captain adrift in the middle of Hudson bay. They were never seen agaliw And another great leader bad died as a victim of bis own courage. . (To be continued next sunaay.) e'WaiCaW But I think it , says, 4Genoemen, be ware I' - - . She Instantly inoved away from him. wlthjjtha lawlesa an4. frank Jangh of one Vho la' deUghted to be" naught' la a piece of hypocrisy. "How lovely !" She. cried.' Then i she pointed ahead. "Our walk is nearly over. We're coin ing to toe foolish little house where-1 live. It's a queer iittle plaoe,but my father's eo attached to it the family have about given up hope of getting him to. build a real house farther out. He doesn't mind our: being, extravagant about anything else, but be won't let us alter one single thing about his recious little old house. Well!" She halted and gave him' her hand. "Adieu f , . ', . "1 couldn't," he began ; hesitated, then asked: "I couldn't come in with you for a little while V "Not now," ehe said, quiclflyr- "Tou can come" She paused. "When?" ' .. "Almost any time." She turned and walked slowly up the path, but be waited. 'Tou can come in Jit eve ning if you like," she called nback to him over her shoulder, : "Soon?" - X "As soon as you like!" She waved her hand, then ran- Indoors and watched hjm from a window as he went up the street He walked rap Idly, a fine, easy figure, swinging his stick tn a way that suggested exhlllra tion.. .Alice, staring i ter him, through the irregular apertures of a lace cur tain, showed no similar buoyancy. Upon the instant she closed the door i aU eaarkle hut her ; she had become at once the simple and sometimes trou bled girl her family knew, ' "What's going on out there?" her mother asked, approaching from the dining room. "Oh. ; nothing." Alice said. Indlffer ently, as she tamed away. "That Mr. Russell met me downtown and walked up with nje." - - . "Mr. Btissell? Oh. the One that's engaged to Mildred?" - "Well I don't know or certain. He didn't seem so much: like an engaged man to me." And she added, in a tone of thoughtful preoccupation; 'Anyhow not eo terribly ! Then she ran: upstairs, gave her father bis tobacco, filled his pipe for him. and petted him as he lighted it (To be ' continued Monday, eyncsis of earlier chaptera) with BRAIN TEST BT SAM XjOTD Xiaates to Answer Six This - Three jneighbors who shared a small park, aa shown In the picture.- bad a falling: out The owner of the large house at the top, complaining-1 that his neighbors chickens annoyed .him; built, an enclosed pathway from bis door to the gat at the bottom of the picture- Then the man on the right bum a path to the gate on the left, and the man on the left made a path to the -rate the right ' The pusaUag feature of the story is that in building their paths they were so . laid out that ae path creased aapr ether path. . , . , . Can you explain hew they-, worked out .we puxaie? ' f -: Aaswer te Friday's Pessle f- Mise re IPuyetera weight waa 129 pounds before she ate the chocolates, Woman lis' Found ; ; v- Guilty of Forgery Walla "Walla. Waali-, Oct. 7. Grace Tuggle was found, guilty of forgery, in the first decree by a Jiyy In the super ior court Thursday after a deliberation of 7 hoars.' The woman waa caught by a Walla Walla detective, the prose- Icution set forth, attempting; to pass a worthless check at a' local grocery. Witnesses testified that; she is the mother at several children and clem ency waa recommended by the jury. Posse on Trail of 1 Slayer of vlfegrc) -" -. .w Wenatcbee, Wash Oct. T 30e Reed. colored, waa shot and killed Friday by ant unidentified, nearo. -who escaped after the shooting. Police say the mur der waa " the result or a querret in which, the men engaged below the Great Northern track., in a section of posse is on in iarr-s tr&u. raSEM DAYS IS GONEFOREHEIfeEup IS2 WG MUST KTTeflP L MO(2S ! QUITS THIS Tkl06 U M A m. I A av - BRINGING UP FATHER oh: me sOhJMx.-J IT3 tjWrnrrx CiC LONESOME FER ME VflTH CHINA KRAZY KAT lb M 1 . T 1 .CD ABIE THE AGENT ln taW ervcv u wvwre ir ; B0C3 CF OUR. CUJSU Cf. fVSE IDE W A TO CNJC Pw METnNQTHATS ALU - bS . : JERRY ON THE JOB STlWS LCfB lAAfH hxn csfrjsr Bur 1 axtt .V " I . : -. .. ' 4fcTV7EIX." Tr peer tantalized, "ain't you afraid to be out after dark these rainy nights 7r , - : 'What's to be; afraid of T Polly Tl cian replied. "I've N been running around alone. a. long time, and noth ing's happened to me yet. V . "Tou never can tell." T. Paer warned her, "Where's -i that bodyguard you been bavin' with yon here lately"? L "I haven't hed no body guard," Pol ly denied with dirsntty. "I don't know what you're driving at," - "That Ward Heeler person." T. Paer refreshed her memory. "Did you leave him out on the f porch with your rub bers nd. umbrella?" "I haven't seen him all day. Polly said coyly. "I haven't, any strings on him." i ' - - . "He's a hard boiled lookln goat," T. Paer complimented, "but - nave you 5l0C r VDU KAJOO)- AW -OLD PA.L-'rv v qONNy JOLLY HAIE AN' 'bEEL-ir CAN'T tT HEIR TO LE.T ME x OF OU TAKE. YOU Tb TfUS I I I I i 5 SoCwrr to? 3 seen Pat staoe he'teome home to tasagle up with Elton WatkinsJ" - , '-. , rNV Polly admitted. "I went up to see him, but be was busy tryhsf to figger out where to start in at on bis eam-fpaign." - .-: f.K ' j , "If Pat. waits to find out the eajateat place to commence," T. Paer chuckled, "he's liable not to meet many; of his constituents' till after the "election's over, ain't her" - '-..- if r "Oh, Pat's all right." Polly said con fidently. "He ixm't worrying much about cleaning that Watkins up on election day." . "It's a fine thing to be tkat way I guess. T". Paer said admiringly, "When av fellah's ; u-e against a tough proposition 'nd can go to sleep' nd for? get It he's lucky."" "t ain't ealdxPafa gone- to sleep." PoUy corrected, n "He's got .bia eyes HAPG A, UTTUE f I (XteaiMrcd IvIWk t til ill sck oven. the: new op Oi coin TO CHINA- HEWOZ! A iRtACT FRlENO" IflTHE iMtsv actimc HE took; Case. or Uo ill W. ' A.tSST -SC- I . i Jf- I 'C 1 j! tCowright, 192. by InuraaUooal ycatare r . &mnio. Inc.) . (Cdspyrisbt, 1022. by iES, BRUBOEP. OUGHT VUXHE rXTWeXrRUtH FROM -THE BOOVS SHOW KiOTUlNQ WHKC WF OVUESS iCotvxigiSj 122, br f S'lKsetTlMS 60QD Jx&WED O) 1 ASl . v it -ic Am SbwsTwt 2cfr y " 1 open all right," . t . ; -weii, ne v awe ' now, -i: ner grtnned. "Tie s liable to before election a over;: from what folks say." ; : The folks that you -hear . talking." Polly retorted, . "don't, know, what's down underneath this campaign s "Not all at It. -maybe.'.T Peer con- ceded.;but they've got enough Of it to make 'em set up tM Usten.T v ' "You're always . hearing ' things. Polly aaM. -."nd esttally tt'a Just noise.- ' , "MaybeTVr. Peer answered, "but I wonor it Pat's got bis . ear to the ground as well , as 'navin' bis eyes openT? . "' "Pat don't get bis ear to- the ground. Polly Informed him. "He fust stands Jn his record 'nd goes risbt ahead." X don't Just see how be can do that." T: Paer said doubtfuHy.- "Hia record's been more or less stationary, tar's I "can see." ' ' " : "He's pointing-to-what congress end the administration's- done," Polly ar gued, "and that .ought to be enough to make a campaign- on." - ' .j. "Tbey's one good, thing about that scheme." T.'Paer aald. "It won't take him long enough, to get bis arm tired oointfn out whatt he'e tryin to get people to see." - "He's got a whole column of it In the paper,' Polly contended. - "It looks 6V G05H. I SURST To ,S6 S&AE StJXPPY sutetesaue shou 0. S. Fates OfHc) I THINic IT WILL EsREAK HET IF WE. LtAVEL HIM - HATE. TO CE. AWAJT HEAR AHX OAO NEW tfc A600T HltA (5) 19Z2 v iNfu JTcATwa Scnvieg. nc. All RoYtr Vis wcw5 viwhu mis Intarnatioaal FmatafS lit t'A WE QOVtti tD LET OUfCCUB OUR. ViAMES "&SQRAtE0 InternstltiDs! Yastnn ." i .iiii i.i K57 T like a lot to me." y "Tou cant always tell bow fat a pig is," T. Paer said sagely,; "by lookln at the trough." , . - "I eonH know toothing "about that." Polly said, "but I'm. banking on the ad ministration." 'Nd." T. Paer supplemented, Tou can't tell , now much bacon it'd make by llatenin' to the aqueaU - "I ain't no hog raiser. PoHy shot at him. "'nd. you ain't heard Pat squealing- any yet. "Not yet,". T. Paer -admitted. "It ain't usually etlckln' time 'till alone In November." 1 , "Far as aW "concerned."- Polly told him. I alnt-going- to-do no squealing till I'm stuck. . : - "I ain't askln you to," T. Paer said ; "but. I got a bunch that you nd Pat ve got to do right smart between now 'nd election if you don't want to do a lot of squealin' afterwards." - ."What's thatr' , PoUy. -asked cau tiously; "I don't put much stock . in your-hunches usually."-, , , "Boot." T. Paer told ,her. "Root hog, or squeaL". . , . tOC2ffSBT;BT BETCBHS r KT BM Lounsbury, -general freight agent of the Union Pacific system, re turned from Bend Friday, after attend ing the opening session of the Oregon liJCXJLD e. - TO. oh: oon'T 5AY ANY more: Kum, ' a & . 1 t . -a- mi r Ihtt? rATU(Mt Soviee. he-' " 2 M f a His Grief He Should Know What He Is Saying x.-SrVl PfN BON - I'M ESKIMQ He'll I J 1 " I V I - f WHAT 1M& UELJC:E-. I f i 1-. .1 nr inn' w 11 1 1:1. !"r'. L 'StiR-JJ. - Irrigatk i congress, r Lounsbury eiid that there were - about - 125 delegates I from aU parts-of-the state present at thte ' meeting. - , rvr-;. Father of Five M Children, 7ifo :v ". ' 111, Takes Life i f. ....!. ; k X,, Jy Gould,' 46, shot, and! killed him sel with a rifle Frl-lay .while at bis mother's farm home, six! miles south of CorbettL. The ody 'wa brought to portland'by , the coroner!-'-.- r : - . Grief over the illness ef hie wife and the reracval of his five children to Port land by the 'juvenile- authorities so that they might receive i proper care tn the absence of their mother, who is In the Multnomah county hospital., is believed to have been responsible for the suicide. .- V v. Goukl's body was found behind bis mother's house. . hj- . i-. -. i - t Tuesday was the day , originally set for - completing SeatUe'e community chest - fund, but the ',werkeret found they were short nearly f iOD.OOOJ- - 1 By A- Poscn PSToCai-iCie! By George McManu3 We wont f7 Kum, Answer Kwick no vie ,x)cr ta ako v;;ll tEBTTi F ViS HAMS TO o BeEarly Once, Anyway VSSr AS ON UA 0 0' r-O . 1 I l -m t I ' lu AN li