PAGE FOUR THE DALLE DAILY CHRONICLE, FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1921. WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE PAYS BEAUTIFUL TRIBUTE TO DAUGHTER WHO DIED IN PLAY:; 8HE WOULD HAVE SCORNED PRESS REPORTS SAYING SHE WAS KILLED IN FALL FROM HORSE, HE DECLARES; JOYOUS. VOICE STILLED. By United New EMPORIA, Kan., May 20 In an editorial in his paper, Tlic Emporia Gazette, William Allen White, the famous editor and publisher, pays beautiful tribute to the memory of his only daughter, Mary, 16, whose death followed an accident while she was riding her 'saddle horse. "Press reports carrying 'tho news of Mary White's death declared that it came as the result of a fall from a horse," tho editor and father wrote. "How she would have- hooted at that; slio never fell from a horse in her life. Horses have fallen on her and with her 'I'm always try ing to hold 'em in my lap,' 'she used t: Bay. Hut she was proud of a few tl ings, and one was that she could ride anything that had four legs and hair. Her death resulted not from a fall, but f;om a blow on tho head which fractured her skull, and the blow came from the limb of an overhanging tree on the parking. "Tho last hour of her life was typical of its happiness. She came heme from .a day's work at school, topped off by a hard grind with tho copy on the high school annual, and felt that a ride would refresh her. She climbed into her khakis, chat tering to her mother about tho work she was doing, and hurried to get her horso and bo out on the dirt roads for th'o country air and the radiant green fields of spring. As sne rodo through the town on an easy gallop she kept waving at passers by. She knew everyone In town. For a decade the little figure with the long pigtail and the red hair ribbon has been familiar on tho streets of Emporia, and sho got in the way of speaking to those who nodded nt her. . "A Gazette carrier passed, a high school boy friend and sho waved at him, but with her bridle hand; tho horse veered quickly, plunged into tho parking where tho low hanging limb facol her, while Hho still looked back wrving, tho blow came. "Sho was I he hr.ppiest thing in the world. Sho was happy because alio was enlarging her horizon. She loved to rollick; persiflage was nor natural experience at home. Ilor humor was a continual hubblo of first meeting of the women's city council, which sat with the men s council, every woman was present. say if the women are good enougl run the, home, they're good enough to run the city. Cooked Food Sale. The ladies of St. Paul's Guild will hold a cooked food sale at Docherty & Barnett's Saturday. 20 Dance at Elks tomorrow night. inv Shu sppmnrl tn think In hVOCl bole and metaphor. She was mis-1 Ca'l the Hotel Sal,ea Beautv 8hi' chievious without malice, as full of your hair needs attention or color faults as an old sltoe. No angel w3 Ing. Telephone main 4051. 24 Mary White, but an easy girl to Wg8c0( Moro, G'ra Valley Stage, 'e with, for she never nursed a Mntnr ,, nra.e. 7:30 I a. m. daily. Arrive Wasco, 9:15; Moro, 1 10:00; Grass Valley, 10:30. Leaves Grass Valley, 3:00; Moro, 3:45; Was. buckskins and the most luxurious robes were made for their lords and masters. The frames of their wickiups were alder poles; the roofs were of ce dar bark, brought down fm near the sources of the streams. Some of these naked trunks can st.ill be seen. The Wasco Indians were a superior tribe as compared with their neigh bors. As a tribe they never took up arms against the whites but a few renegades at different times joined the hostile bands. Billy Chinook, as live grouch five minutes in her life. "Within tho last two years she had begun to be moved by an am bition to draw. She began as most SOCIAL HYGIENE FILMS WILL BE EXHIBITED Who rinlloa R n. m. UJHIUiUU UU US Dtilluiuife iu"J ' 17tf lures in her school dooks anu mis year she tasted the first fruits of success by having her pictures ac cepted by the high school annual. But the thrill of delieht sho got when Mr. Ecord of the normal an nual asked her to do tho cartooning for that book this spring was too 'beautiful for words. Sho fell to her work with all her enthusiastic heart. Her drawings were accepted and her pride always, repressed by a lively sense of tho ridiculousness of the figure she was cutting was a really gorgeous thing to see. No successful artist ever drank a deep er draught of satisfaction than she took from tho little fame her work was getting among her !5chool fel lows. In her glory, she almost for got her horso but never her car. "For she used tho car as a jitney bus. It was her social life. She never had a 'party' in all her nearly 17 years wouldn't have one; but sho never drove a block In the car in her life that she didn't fill the car with pickups. Everybody rode with Mary White white and black, old and young, rich and poor, men and women. She liked nothing bet ter than to fill the car full of long legged high school boys and an oc casional 'girl, and parade the town. Sho never had a 'date' nor went to a dance, except once with her broth er Bill, and the "boy 'proposition" didn't interest her yet. But young people great spring-breaking, var nlsh-cracklng, fender-bending, door sagging car loads of 'kids' gave" her great pleasure. "A rift in the clouds in a gray. Two motion pictures dealing wltn social diseases will be shown in The Dalles in the near future, under the 'auspices of the Oregon Social Hygiene society, J. E. Waggoner, field secre tary for that organization, announced this morning. The first picture will be shown Tuesday evening in the circuit court room and will be for men and boys over 16 years of age. Two 'exhibitions of this film will be given, one at 8 and the other at 9:15 o'clock. The second picture will be for men and women, and will be shown in about a week. This picture Is en titled "The Gift of Life." These pictures are part of a general state wide campaign of education regarding social diseases, being put on by the Oregon Social Hygene Society and financed by the state. The following persons will serve on a local publicity committee: Rev. Ernest Goudge, Dr. F. R. Brazeau, Dr. Fred Thompson, B. C. Tatro and R. L. Kirk. The Pageant Story Day by Day The Wasco Indians. The Wasco Indians were the origin al owners of the land upon which The Dalles now Btands. Wasco county takes its name from this tribe of- In dians. The village of the Wascos was UMnnimff which ntrptched alone the day coffin as her nervous energetic , ... hmlu anntr In ita lnqf RlftAtl TV.lt' .... Jl .... ..... fQr whch QueneUe Tne wo,.d the sou of her, ho glowing, gor- geous, fervent soul of her, surely ti t 1 n..Mn 1ai imnn cAmn t ...... was iiauuuK in kukui j"? oum other dawn." Believes In Women In Politics: Appoints Seven On City Council, HIGHWOOD, ILL., MAYOR NOT ON LY WANTED FEMININE VOTES, BUT THEIR HELP ALSO; MORE CONSCIENTIOUS THAN MEN, HE D ECLARES. (Writ ten for th o United News.) By T. E. Welch, Mayor of Hlghwood, Illinois. IIIGIIWIOOI"), Ills., May 20 I'm nomowhnt like Will Hayes I believe In women in politics. Women know more about things than wo give thorn credit for. Thoy are big helps if you givo them a chance to help. . Tho Indian tribes from this vast territory gathered here for fishing and trapping and the Wasco country or Wascopum was well known even to i the Rocky mountains. A dusky, pop ulous nation, years ago, inhabited the little valleys which we know a Three, Five, Eight and Fifteen Mile creeks on tho south, and Mill and Chonowlth creeks on the west. For many years circular depressions, sim-" liar to miniature circus rings long abandoned by the sawdust troupo, marked tho background of rolling bunch grass. Here formerly stood the picturesque topees of the Wascos; in after years tho plow points dulled on the round broiling stones in the Often th uhlckenpox and things along that line. Tho women are making Hlghwood, everybody's town. "Too many mayors adopt a policv long-forgotten hearths of concealment. Thoy 'are afraid or deadly arrow-head fashioned from tills eloiuent and that element. They fijut was picked up and curiously in- I don't lot tho-people know. I don't try , spected. Here In the .long ago the Most men office holders don" look to run the city alone. As a result no , tribal youths rounded up their fleet nt tho matter of women In politics 'one is asking 'why don't you do thh ' ost steeds and tested their endurance In the right way. All thoy wai.t Is and why don't you do that?' J boforo matching them against the their vote. ) The Woinen tell them why I don't. ' champions of rival bands. Under tho a wanted more than that I wanted j vomon understand city finances and , pines, tho hides of deer nnd shaggy their help. j politics, if you let them in on it. And 'coats of bear were beaten by strong I got It freely and gladly got la tm,y ,wnnt to bo in ,m ltt WnV( a( tlu, anrod squaws until the finest of thinking of my own wife, She is liko j other women, tue huh nor or live children. I've seen the way she v. raised those children and handled inv pay for these many years, :v-' I can't say anything too good for her judg ment and ability. So when I was elected mayor re-' cently, I determined to glvo tho wom en of my town who had shown sueh Interest In politics a real chance. That is why I have named seven wor.un In each of our three wards as oin' wom en's city council. What has been the result? I Enthusiasm, civic betterment; co operation. Woinen get action. Appoint j them on a committee and you never i hear from them again. Why" my city! council of 21 women are staging a "big patriotic and community w-lf.uv show tomorrow night. They've mmln every woman In town a member of the welfaro committee. We'll hivo -the Great Lakes Jackles, and the war veterans on parade, the school kiddles out and an array of civic speakers. These women are doing It to tioot. the town. They're doing other things too -seeing that each ward has health in speetors, Insisting that other woinen have tholr husbands keep tho lawn up and that their children are not cent to school with tho mumps or the 0 Base Ball IUNDAY, MAY 22 THE DALLES ' -vs.- GOLDENDALE OLD BALL GROUNDS 2:30 p. m. a chief stands out prominently. He was intelligent, honest and trusted by his tribe. He accompanied Fremont to Washington, D. C., in 1843. While there he learned to read and write In English, and then returned to his own "illahee.'' He finally removed with the other Indians to the Warm Spring reservation and ended his days llierc. His descendants still live there. The descendants of the original Wasco ilndians are educated and Americanized now. They dress as we do and the men do not wear their alr long. About 100 Indians will ap pear In the pageant, from the Warm Spring reservation. Most of these are not of the Wasco tribe, but since the long-haired Indian Is more typical of the past they are preferred. Carpentering and building. C. H. Merryman, telephone red 5741. M30 Dr S. Burke Maosey, dentist, Firli National bank. roomB 307-308. Tele phone main 3911. res. main 1691. 8tf I The Most Convincing Test Everything that can be said of a J. C. Penney Co. Men's Suit is said of many other lines of men's clothing. But the feeling a man has when he slips into one of our suits only J. C. PENNEY CO. clothing can give. It tells its own story as no advertise ment can. 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