THE OREGON STATESMAN; SALEM, OREGON V v SUNbAY MORNING, APRIL 22 1923 ; I i' put : V 1 W 1 ' liiG II ISB1I REVELATIONS OF A WIFE CHAPTER 288 WHAT H A PPEUe D WHEN THEY BROKE THE NEWS AT ! HOME." Little Mrs. Durkee and Edith Fairfax crossed the lawn to meet lis as If guided the car up to our side veranda steps. I j ; 1 f "What , luck?" my neighbor ' asked; aniiouslyi f r j ' ' A ) "None at all." I returned, real iaing that I was watching Edith FaiQtax Intently as I spoke. She 'knew that our failure meant that .ie would be exiled beyond j the commuting zone. ' "Would She be ' glad or sorry? .V'ii-T" ; rh" j 'j She has learned to control her j features and her expression since j the days when I first knew her, j and (there' was no Indication ot I her real feeling, whatever It j might be. In her - perfunetory f echo of Mrs. Durkee's -sincere DID n i Oh,fdear! : Whatever shall M 1 ( do?" Her Flo finess exelalmed. i 'It was bad enough losing you ,fj as next door neighbors--I know f I shall (perfectly despise that cat r j who's coming here well! there'll I j be onej comfort, I'll never speak H to her Lor even so much as look I ; her: way if I live here a hundred I I years, land Vm going i to have highi board 1 fence put up be l Xtweenthe two- j places Just as k - soon as. I can get a carpenter L 111 how her a thing or two : i , but I never thought you'd be so i I tar( that 1 couldn't run over to if see youany time I wanted to '' buf mercy!" W t ' V i "Thai's , what li say? Dicky dl r a w 1 e d , Impudently. 'Have mercy on us, and tell us one ! i thing at a time. Jllm sol mixed : up now that I dont knowwheth- ;' ;er it's the high, board fence j ' you're j not , going to speak to, or the cat next door whose loss J you. mourn. V ! Xc News to Dicky, I "Box his ears for. me, Madge Mrs. Durkee begged eagerly, then added casually, "Did you see Atf or Lila? No, you couldn't have seen Alt, it isn't time for his train c.uite,M .. Vi. i -We f saw Leila Dicky re sponded, "streaking it toward the railroad station as If the last train to .heaven ; were j dne, and she ' had no seat . reserved. But we didn't offer to pick, her up or to wait for her beloved hus band. We know' when, we're strictly outsiders,! ; we do, and those two don't want any motor jide. They're in that stage where - every little' blade of grass :has a i meaning o its own, and they want to saunter down the vlllagei street, hand inihand,;tra la la!" :. ;'ii:.lPV!A-' - ; ., V "Honeymooners j are so sappy, iirs. Durkee 5 observed with ' o disgusted a tone and look that Dicky f and I shouted f with ap--preclative laughter. But Edith Fairfax's face waa unsmiling, and X saw Dicky steal a quick look , at her, then abruptly change ine iuDject. . ' 1 "1, wenderif-Katie has dinner ready,?' he said with an air of eagernesv. 1 rm starveai; ana 1 want to ret to bed early tonight. for I'm going into the city with .Alf la the morning," 1 There'll be quite a delegation then." Mrs. Durkee replied, "for Edith and Leila are going In, too.1 Lillian Intervenes. . L, , ..( "'i-t i 't . . .:- y Without reason, for i my belief there came suddenly to me the conviction that v this i announce ment was no news to Dicky, and I had a. vision of the fourLlnnch- ing in the city together. .Por a second or two I 'gaw red, then "my common sensd conquered, my illy Jealousy,' and I spoke casu lly, as if in answer ; to Dicky's - question concerning the' dinner. "I'll- go and hurry dinner, I said, getting out of the car. - r Little ;Mrs Durkee: smiled as ' r , . - Where other remedies fail to produce; the de sired results , I- Cough syrup " and lung balsam gives immediate and permanent relief. - ' .it SCHAEFER'S DRUG STORE 135 N. Com!: Phone: 197 if she 'had; Just come from the cream dish.; . ; . : "Yoxl'X have to go to my kitch en, then," she said. "Now you needn't say a word, Madge.. It's perfectly ridiculous having that girl try to serve meals with all the things as nearly packed' as she has. I went in today while you were gone, and she was in positive tears; trying to' decide what things to leave out of the barrels until the last minute. You know I don't rave over Katie the way you do, but she certainly can't do Impossible things. 'Pack up every last , paring knife;' I said to her, aad come over to my house and I get the meals until they break! up here. She was tickled to death. So you see you have nothing to say." p "Except that you're a dear," I said, trying" to be - properly en thusiastic and; grateful, but heav ily conscious of the fact that every day until we left our home Edith Fairfax would make one of the group at mealtime, that I had eaten my last meal with Dicky n the home T had loved so' dearly. But looming even above this pic ture was tie ; obsession of Dicky and Edith lunching in the city on the .morrow,; either a duex or with Alfred and Leila. I shall never know - whether Lillian interposed jnst then from sheer good .nature, or, a compre hension of my feeling. At any rate, she addressed 'Edith, laugh ingly: . .;' - , "Do take pity on me tomorrow. Edith, and lunch with me," she said. "You know you'll only be a gooseberry with Leila and Al fred, and I positively hate to eat alone." (To' be continued.) The estate of the late llf red T. RIngrtng, one of the Riigling Brothers of circus ' fame netted more than 11.000.000. "s There; is money in the "Hey Rube" game If you know how to play it. When the Ringling boys, John,. Alfred and Charles, started their show. traveling out' of Baraboo, Wis., where theyT conducted a livery q table, a half-dozen, wagons made up the parade: It was a wagon show and - for years never went into the eastern country at all. .It has Just about gotten so that a pedestrian ; will have to arm himsei j with . an automobile in self-defense. - Surely -I some time, ''; why i not nqw? A nations f beauty snow for men Is proposed, i each state to "send its most pulchritudfnous repre sentative. We nominate ' Bull Montana far California. Los An geles Times. - v. r--.- CHICHESTER S PILLS yuim to WU. mad mttutcUO Eva. Aitfcr(-iM nrthTCrS 1AWN JtBAM 1UXS. tor M 5CL3 BT C22GCISTS BimmE ON WASH DAY. 5 ntsner for say J1m2ng Off THIS is good advice for everybody except Laun-j Dry-Ette users., They don't need it. For the; : Laun-Dry-Ette has no wringer.1 It couldn't wring a i " button off if it tried.lh'all its seven years of faithful service to American pouswivo it has never broken? a button nor iniured a snaor fastener. Clothes and I buttons ! are absolutely, safe with the Laun-Dry-Ette.; The Laun-Dry-Ette has never hurt a button lwma ' wiwjcr The Laun-Dry-Ette washes the clothes . jand whirls the suds out it rinses them, and 4rr out the rinse water; it blues them " and whirls them dry Jor tht Unt. You don't have to wring: out the washing a piece af a time you let the Laun-Dry-Ette whirl it dry for the line in one rain utet atttbfulata tme. I , The Laun-Dry-Ette saves buttons be cause i has no wringer to crush them, j It saves your hands because it enables you to do an entire washing: without putting: your hands in the water. It saves you work because it does the entire job both washing; and drying: forthe line. - Get the labor-saving Laun-Dry-Ette. 1 Welch HecltricJIGo. I ; - rillL DROWNKLL, MGR. ; . 1 379 SUle. Phone 953 tfttUi a wrtufir it fa a LwDry-Eft$" n: Ann A t electric waamnd maclilno Si DODGER CREW Ifi GOOD Sll lc Old Timers Who. Have Seen Past Crews Voice Ap proval of Present i BERKELEY, Cal., April 21.-4- Old time sport followers whohave seen the Uniyersity of Washing ton' rowing crews in action "for nearly two decades' have placejd their stamp of approval upon the 1923 Purple and Gold eight which meets the University af California oarsmen on t the Oakland Estuary tomorrow. Coach Russell JtRuj ty ) Callow wound up the prelini inary training season in a pessi mistic mood and has; predicted that the Huskies can';!jwln ; fron ine uoiaen wear; oniy oy tne skin of their teeth." ; As finally decided upon. 1 after a season of upsets in which sey eral of last year's "Wf winners were forced to ifight hard to re tain their seats in the shell, the crew will probably be made up of the? following' men: . Dow ' Wal llngj strode; Harry , Button, No. 7; uapiam sam anaw, iso. e; Pred Spuhn, No. 5; Wright Par kids, No. 4: Charles Dunn. No. 3; Max Luf t. No. 2 ; . Pat Tldmarsh bow; Donald Grant, coxwain. 1. Ot the nine men, Shaw, Spnhn; Parkins, Tldmarsh . and Grant were in the Washington shell that won 'second ; place - in ' the Poughkeepsie national regatta last year. Lttf t, Dutton and .a Wi ling ' rowed with : the yearling eight ' tha t a defeated the Califor nia freshmen by ten lengths over the Lake Washington course in 19221 - ' :- '''!' " Observers who have i ! watched the Washington oarsmen in thhit daily .workouts declare the crew fully as powerful as last year's organization, and that the men have achieved, nearly the same smoothness and perfection of stroke. While times for practice Bpins over the three miles were net given out, it was known that in the tlaat rew workouts the shell covered the' three miles in , near record" fashion. - Captain' Shaw, regarded as one of the best oaTsmen produced at Washington in years Is a; senior awl is rowing his third year in the varsity shell. He is one ( ot the most powerful menr iff the boat Walling, according to crew experts, is a steady and efficient stroke but inclined to be a bit mechanical. Dutton lis noted, for his long reach and powerful pttU- ing ability. , Spuhn has been hailed by sport followers as the best technical oarsmen in the Husky shell. Park ins has maintained his form jt button ,aat when you wash and dry Dries Wrhtger-Dry .Without a Wringer ' Requires no extra tubs can be used i kitchen or bathroom ideal for apart ment use. Simple and easy to operate. Approved by Good Housekeeping Insti tute. Thousand in use. Seventh successful year. lwas wfW4 mm lastjrear and is said to hv-im.i proved hisr pull in some respects. Dunn, despite the physical handi cap toi being the shortest man in the boat, has displayed power and technical ability: Luf t has alter nated at stroke with Walling and is considered a , valuable all around mam Tldmarsh is rangy with a powerful stroke and is a remarkably smooth oarsman. According to Callow, Grant Is a heady coxwain and able to get the most out ot his men in a long, hard sprint.. i The position, height, weight and experience af the University of Washington crew Is summar ized as follows:, . I Samuel Shaw. No. 6. height 4 feet, weight 18d pounds, years of experience 3. ! . Dow Walling, stroke, height 5 feet 11 Inches, weight 175, years of experience J Harry Dutton, No. 7, height feet, weight 173 pounds, years of experience 1. ' Fred Spuhn, No. 5. height feet, weight 183 pounds, years ot experience 2.' ,. Wright Parkins No. 4, height 5 feet 11 1-2 Inches, weight 174 pounds, years of experience 2. Charles Dunn, No. 3. height & feet 10 inches, weight 180 pounds. years of experience 2. Max Lult, No. 2, height 5 feet H iaahee, weight ISO. pounds, years ot experience 1. ! Patrick Tldmarsh, bow. height 6 feet l ineh, weight 165 pound, years ot experience'! 2. ' ' Donald Grant, coxwain j height S feet i 8 inches.! weight 118 pounds, years of experience 2. Average weight i lot oarsmen, 17 S 1-4 pounds. j!V j- Total weight tn boat, including eoxwain, 1, 528 pounds, ; It has been found that i laree printing plant one of the big Industries ot Germany has been turning j out billions of counter felt marks, They i were . thought to . be an improvement on the government iaane. San the wrn en slightly better paper. But it would seem like lost jmotion to make a business of counterfett lngl the German mark. The label from, a i California jspricbt. can Is worth-1000 German marks, as It is.-Los Angeles Times. Anothex artist haa taken" ail records : by dancing 24 -consecutive hours. Wonder what he would aay.lt his wife should ask him, to carry home the neighbor ti washing? : is. -; ' ' , Over in France the authorities have prohibited kissing. Which makes jus feel safe to go over there. Exchange, j ' ,! THIS nrf hat's L private really here to give the men and boys of the Wilia- mette Valley the best clothes that money will buy ; ---at tlJoivt; piM ! vi 'i"-' i f. . ' , 1 - "." That's j bur Iro rdiitJ lW fulfill it (as we have been domg for03 don't need to worry about succe---that, will ' take care of itcelf.V Right now, when vafl prices are moving upwards, ve're striving to absorb the increases. - So id Hart Schaffiier tSc Marx. : It means more volixme for them bigger business you better clothes at less cost YouTI Find NolBetter Qothes Than 1 v-r FLAG FURLED History of f Adventures on Seven Seas More Inter-" "esting Than Fiction ' - NEW, BEDFORD, j Mass.. AprU 21. The firm oft jj and -W. K. Wing has! gone out ' of business. The announcement means little to the present generation, but when the whaling Industry was at its height; the flag of the. house of Wing, a letter "Wl on field ot white and a red ball on a field of blue, was knownlon the. senren sea's. ' y ' : - ;:iJ ! r It was la 1849 that Joseph and William R. Wing nat'ites of the neighboring town of "Dartmouth, opened- a. whaleman's 'outfitting shop In" this- city. In .1853 they acquired managing ownership f their. first whaling1 shfp.' the John Dawson, and -for. more than 40 years '. the firm was one of - th V- CZJC If L STORE MAS A BIG tbUTY our Idea about if., We're not just a organization to make money Vc'rc doaiinaUng. (factors in the roman tic trade,, . ' . . . ..' Many SbJpe Bail . - fn that -period 25. ships sailed under the Wing. flag. Most ,of them met a tragic end. The Joiva Dawson, after making a dozen voyages to the whaling grounds, was lost in a storm off Panama; Strangely enough, the first ship built expressly for the Wings, the bark Sunbeam, launched at Mat tapoisett in 1856, survived nearly all the otbers and went whaling for the (firm until 1910, when she was sold ( and later lost. . The bark Kathleen waa In ser vice from 1857 to 19.02. when she was rammed by a whale and went down off he South Ameri can coast. Several ' other vessels were crushed in the Arctie lee and still others , foundered in storms at sea. : Sailed 100 Yeats. . j,The barkTrlton, ,vetaeran ot aicitinjg ' experiences before the Wings bought " her, was in A the whaling business f r 10 Oy ears be fore the Arctie ice "finally caught her. rn ; 184 6 , she waa attacked by natives of a South Sea. Island at which she had touched. The crkew rallied o the defense with whaling guns, harpoons and lances but five of their number were killed and seven wounded before. for jus and for Those Sold Here . - i two Nantneket ships came u azd rescued them. , :- , . e During the Ciril War there .wsi both perilous and prcfitaJHS wc:!: for the whalers. Confederate cruis ers,, particularly the Cheaindoah and r the Alabama, were raiding northern , shipping.' The Wings were advised to put their ships under the British flag. .Til send my ships -out under the Stars and Stripes if everyone is lost," declared William Wing. ' Burned In Arctic -- He did, and only one of them was captured. , i The Shenandoah overtook the ship Brunswick In the Arctie ia 1885 and burned Wing -vessels then la. the .trais, gave the firm a profit of $200, 000 in the Civil War period, t Joseph Wror-dled xaany years ago. .Later Willisa war kiliad 4's) rtUroad wreck. Tie; estate maintained the Arm naui,:buf in recent years the' only ..i-iinss done was In ready mada e!"'th!-.T. Ins which j . the WJzsa Jfcav 'Jbe.nn pioneers here la connection with thrfr butflttng shop. "T; tht tirm haa . been! dlssdlvfedf a 1 a department" store "hai ever tts ancient home. :-j -t- " The government' has -1:5 uei a circuhtr defininr e rtt2 f," but beyond that nobody, V seenis to be. dotng anything .Zrrzt-lU.:;' i i;: i - T 0. '.V a ... ,,. t 4 ' ...L ...