Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1923)
THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON SUNDAY MbRNING. SEPTEMBER SO, 1923 &. a. HT-DKicKa CARLE A BRA ItS crtry J. L. BRADT Vie-Pr4at .. . iiutu4 Dally Except Monday by- ,v. , TMK STATESMAN PUBLISHING. COMPAJIT t 21b a Commercial St, Salem, Oregon -(Portland Office. 725 board of Trade Building. Phone Beacon lltS) O gift of gifts, O grace of grace, ' ; That God should condescend To make thy heart His dwelling place, And be thy daily friend I Then go not thou in search of .Ilim, . But to thyself repair , Wait thou within the silence dim, And thou shalt find Him there." ! the prohibltor ylaw be enforced against the rich. It Is all a mat ter of "Let Georgedo It." - A re- TlTal of law enforcement Is badly neededneeded. - "1 r- : - SACTtEDNESS OP CONTRACTS AJKMHKP OF THIi ASSOCIATED PRESS S The Associated freer is exclaalvaly entitled to the nse for publl- NO. 10156V j . Recently Myron Sinclair, cash- eatlon of all news dispatches credited to It or sot otherwise credited I er of a bank at Ilwaco Wash la tb!a paier and aluo the local news published herein. - ' I ..,..., . . H. J, Hendricks . La I Brady -1 rank Jaskoskl Manager - - : - Editor Manager Job Dept. " TELEPHONES: . . k . . 'Cosiness Office , - f it r News Department , . '" - . . 23-10 i -Circulation Office - - - - IS3 Society Editor ; - -; , . Iff ' I ; Job Department:. v- . 881 , ,; ntered st the Poatofficela Salem, Oregon, as second class matter. z OREGON'S WAY WITH R0AB3 confessed to looting the bank and wen to prison, willingly and quickly. ' Ilia parents are both un der arrest and are . ruined even If never actually punished. This young man was an exemplary cltl sen. apparently, but hie double life, his other self,, got. him, Into trouble. One of the best thlngt we hare seen In the way of moral reflections .come from the home paper of the man who Is paying an awful penalty for his misdeeds. The Ilwaco Tribune says: ."1015 only a number the final mesns of Identity for a young man who betrayed the trust and confidence of his friends. It" is to this number that Myron Sin clair must answer to the armed guards who watch over him as he labors In the prison shops at Walla Walla while be -nays his debt to the state for robbing old men and sunsets; gaunt cactus, hidden rich es, bronchos, blue bases around wee cabins and men and women whose : pasts are rosily hidden. There Is a something about Har old Bell Wright's hidden pasts which' gleam' with lurid anticipa tion. You fairly "est up" his kid napped heroines, his daahing he roes whose prison records event u I BITS' FOR BREAKFAST I It any; and every test." lost a battle. ONE EXPLANATION The Oregon. way, of securing money for permanent high way construction is the best way; as has been said in these col . umns many times , - i . - - ' '.-' i Providing for the raising of the necessary funds for build ing the roads and keeping them in repair by plaeing the burden on the people who me them most; through automobile licenses and pasolira taxes. : : i i '' .-v - : . Thirty-live .states have adopted a gasoline tax; but only !!;ree besides Oreiron have made this tax as high as 3 cents a -lion. They are Idaho, Florida and South Carolina. In fifteen elr life-long savings. ( f th statea the lew in hnt 1 cent. : ; I " betraying the friends who The Vasoline tax for California will eo into effect, today. ; trusted him and who honored him It 2 cent? a callon. and-accordinff-to 'Dreliminarv estimates I few men of bis years are hon- t i tax will yield a revenus ot approximately. $7,200,000 the IbredV : : t ye-" twice as much as in any other. state in the Union. I 1 "It is the number to which be ij w.-u i;eT"York, IHinoi3 and Ohio do not levy a gas- I would answer should one of his .3 tax, .:ij tLe rate m Fennsylvania is but 1 cent. Call for-1 little gtr is present herself at the i uses more gasoline in a week than Nevada does in a year; J prison door at Walla Walla and re ia a month than Arkansas does in a year: more per capita I ask to see her 'daddy." It Is not n any other state, and is also the greatest producer of all a number that he selected, for he i Oregon ia the besinning, no doubt her paved highways will would probably have chosen one ' ? itatc.. ' - 1 with more Individuality. He was .N'ow that California has come tip to the right way, adopted a man who believed In individual extended, and the old ones that were rapidly wearing out Ity to obtain which he was will- f in Vor'ni Ins t t a.alffAA Met fflnn A m nnAti a a m& : nv evi sa w aav a a w u va is yvu the altar of bis greed. (Copyrfsbted by the San Jose Mercury) I must answer until he has finally r r.IS CREATOn, L3 we f re told, has made man after His own J atoned to the state for his revolt- likeness not of course after His physical likeness since He tor crime and finally turned loose pirit but like II1.3 spiritual image.'. Han is so unlike the a dishonored 1 man, who for all ator in his conduct, power, wisd,om and life that many doubt time to come must bear the stigma t hurnity have any similitude to God or any relationship of being an ex-convict. No pardon Hi infinite life. Some have concluded that men, being but or parole, will ever remove that vc: jticn from the lower forms of life, differ in degree only stain. There Is nothing, however, i th e rocks, trees, and animals that occupy .the earth .with pathetic In the situation. He i. There is, at least, as little ground for the hypotheses and knew ... what the consequences nir-r cf the materialist philosophers as there is for the ideas would be. He knew the awful pen- ' ckl theolo-un, that man is axpecial creation of God and alty demanded by the law for such ' 1 ta kin ia a way different from all the other individual-J crimes as his and yet he went j t! .it lie bz3 made. ' a - t . . '! . 11 . 1 forward deliberately and commit- A I.ttla child may be the image or ha great father, but tnatUed it. . - ; r. . i 'u hard, perhaps impossible to distinguish until the little 1 "'Perhaps the law can make him 1 rows.to msnhood, While he is. a child he is puerile, I realize the 'enormity of his crime, rant, Lzpukuve, but 3 he develops, the great and wonderful it is for that we send men to pris- ..t.M cr tu father Lcia to show themselves, ana by tne 1 0n. Perhaps arconscienca born i La ha3 reached fall matiyity he may be worthy of his I dnrtngr the lonely hours of night :r Ly equalling, possibly exceeding, the strength, self- No. 1015 6 sits on his cheerless trcl, wisdom and all the qualities that distinguish his parent. cot and peers through the cold expressing themselves in life and character, were all in gtee, bart of nla j, into the semt- Lal3 ia gena, bat it took activity and effort resulting in darknesa of the prison corridor at Icrent, to enable us to see and recognize them. . a plctare of old men and women ..u:san;ty are as yet only spiritual babes. As yet they have ln mlser7 and of Men&B r' vprv littlw nr tntk niritnl tna HivinA lifo thnt ig in ... . . Tr f-,. , , i i 1 t I :r weir trust in man destroyea; :. It u still-largely germinal or dormant. But that it is of t lltUe rIrl j ahamedand companions; may realization of the price he has paid for his unsatl- able appetite for. wealth and pow er. : "10156 only a number taken willingly ln lieu ' of as honored name that be might revel In luxur ies bought with stolen gold. Such la the Ignoble ending of Myron Sinclair: Samuel Compera Is continually must bold Its own and make its! emphasizing that labor unions la ally (WDr not now) glare. way in aaauion. iz u cannot l oraer 10 noia tneir place must re- . in the Mine with the Iron Door stand criticism, if It cannot stand j gard contracts as sacred. Mr. be has taken a grim Indian, edu the acid test, then It ought to givejOompera has placed his finger on tested In white men's schools, re- way to science. But it does stand I we ' greatest danger : that sur- turning to his people but . not to It never bai I rounds union labor.. No employer I his former home and stalking the can afford to carry on a business whIe man In every .way, day by hn hA knnw th.t w- i. day (like Cone) to watch bim suf- ..-.wm. :.- 'er. Tills Indian talks like white for contract on the other side. In Whi eo.,ntrv m t t. Of course It la unfortunate that lcl- oa9 W4ne CB,ei reasons wny ot hla wrath. the democratic candidates for con- nT employer or labor makes a Tne love story Is that of a little gress was elected in the Spokane contract with - union Is to set nameless girl whose early ;kid- distrlct bnt It was because of po- tbI tabulty, to be able to know napping Is a source of delicious Iltlcal lethargy as much as any- tTom a week and one month to moment to the villagers and her thins; else. Next year there will "ower -that the same manning love for a youth who comes out r!,.f!U,.T.te "d.then ro? bIa stability the employer can manu- Lochinvar wooing her in secret.., e aoing. course k no Ucture nls products with a reas- The descriptive momenU of this excuse tnaa, republicans remained enable cerUinty that thercan be book, are true to the writer's in- away from the polls, neither is It marketed on , time. One big ad- tinitable style when he tries, beau- to their credltbut we know they vantage that union labor has over I tlf ul pictures of the Arizona waste never are as keen to vote as the non-union Is stability. Employ- lands. He writes of a country opposition. .Judge Hill was elect ers are willing to pay for this, and which Is pictured In the movies ed to congress by a small martin, do pay in every contract that is as God's country, but in which He received a total ot 25,000 votes j not only sound .but it is essential many chance -visitors tail to find mau., - Air. . uompers aavice is i cuubcuuu ueiweea ma una to the life of the unVans. last year and was defeated by 2000. This year running again he received 18,874 votes and ras elected by 00. While there is no question of the legality, ot this election It Is at thevsame time a severe indict- dJIBRALTAR . and Him. . . ' . " The mine of course must be found and the Indian knows all about It. "The i Mine with the Iron Door" ia aDtlv comnared Forwith lives i whose iron doors' shut out pasts 'of discomfiture and un . The ' world does change. centuries England looked proud ment of, the republicans of the "Pon cnai great noes oi uio- pleasant memories . haunting the district that they could not get raltar,and then went to sleep, at present. Vr" :v- thelr. vote out. In addition to night in. security. , AU this is The story Is in Wright's usual this Judge Hill annexed every dls- cnangea. Tne great rocs: no " - -- -'i"" " l" longer protects. w" The protection of the world "lma!.terp!1ec. "erd ? . . c . . the Hills," and "Dan Mathews." . has undergone a marked change; doea a man reacn hIa xen. a rea. reTo.uHOB nas sen piace. ltn and then never again return? Whereas the rock was a never- Ia H commercialism or Is It lack failing source of protection, now of the divine spark which made it Is a menace .and England Is I him great In one tense moment? contented vote in the district. Hill stood for every Ism that would get him a vote. ; Next year . he cannot do this and the result will be the regular, republican victory. A POOR STICK .2 end will manifest itself when men have grown to, become gcorned &y tneir j Cons of God," Paul knew and declared, as all men do who Drjn- to a 2 thriven to actualize their divine relationship and to come - i cc:n reunion with the Great Spiritual force of the Universe. k:.evr that we are Ilis children in this actual, spiritual for he declares, "The Spirit itself beareth witness with 1 1 ;nt that we are the children of GoL So can all men say a tkey have corns to recognize Ilis Spirit in themselves. : In publishing' the last letter of Market Master Spence theOregon Statesman omitted the last para graph. It was a silly attack on the press so untrue that any man fit to hold a township office would not make it. It Is seasy to see why there Is so much objection to Spence. He simply will not do. It , Is recalled In this connection that once upon a time Gov. Withy combe had. an office to fill which. under the law had to be given to Spence. The governor called the newspaper men before hlm and said, "Gentlemen, 1 am announc ing the appointment of Mr. Spence to this position. Under the law I. have no alternative. It I had my way I would not appoint this man a dog catcher." Spence Is doing his - best to vindicate the former governor. ? 1 1 ' Spence charges' that the wheat situation was manipulated by the newspapers at the behest ot high erups. Any man fit to exercise the privileges of citizenship knows this is not only untrue, but it could sot possibly be-true, ready , to trade it off. Warfare has . been revolutionized and a rock, no matter how big, is no! protection. For our part we lost Interest In . the . rock when returned trav elers dispelled the legend that an Insurance advertisement was not a part of the rock. - ' The public would like to know! . ' v:;'"? The music at the movies may not appeal to you, but at least it drowns out the gum chewing; Only one man has made the sun stand still, but anybody can make the moonshine still. , - was beat ever : . -w s , But the next fair will be still better.- - W . .The state fair grounds will look ' like a banquet hall deserted today. :y ..-. ', : - - ' The ; mint growers will get very; fair . price for their - peper mint. oil. y This industry is a com er. -Salem Is going to get a pep permint oil refinery. A Salem man - says Europe seems to be back In the muddle ages. . He, says, "too, that what the world needs is less use of monkey glands and 'more general use of sweat glands. . V S i More use should be msde of the state, fair, grounds and its build ings for , community and state good. Secretary Fred "B. Currey has .that kind of an idea In hla system, too, and will try to work It out. - : ' v.-;.':::", ' There is no other place on the round earth where such crowds as attended the state fair could be gathered with less disorder and they were on the average the best looking people of equal number the world could show. There was a recent printed statement that 'the men ln the Oregon penitentiary do not want to work : In the flax plant: that they object to this class, of work because It is dirty work. They do want to work in the. flax plant. There has all the time been 'a long waiting list: ot men who want to be transferred to the flax pan: work. On this account the morale of the men working in the flax plant has been high, for pris on laborers, because they were satisfied and because it has been easy to replace an undesirable laborer with , one better suited and more likely to contribute to the morale. .The arrangement in the new flax plant building and with the new machinery: will be much better -"Oi an was possible in the futu;;s C.K- Octobar 1, Komlsy .".U eprn. October 8, Todiy r' October 28, Saturday IV . , day. Ortotor S. Fturday Foott ', ttf v ashiDrtoa, t CrtbT IB, TiU7 AtnuiU tSi daar at tb aruivry. OeUbr XO, Saturday roo!" ,. mrtta va. Wt. Aor-1 mi . October 33, 24, k.i, 23 u l anal ahw at atala paitt! i r ?. Ortotivr 24 and 25. . fXhnraday Complftioa . of ptt. cifie bighway from C ;.,.- ' Vancoavar, B. C, to b Olympta, Portland and slm. October 27, Saturday i- matte va. . C'henwa, at ; October 81, VedaeJ ; Bmtalo of UnWarmity f V. a addreaa Eotary club. Noember 8, Saturday Tim,Hp' . motto Ta. College of l'ugct . Taeoasa. November S to 10 1aci.' I tlonal Uvaatork epoUioo, a . - Koverober S, Saturday ru, lorn hlfb acbool and C'ctuii Oru at Palem. Novomber S, Toeaday fpec.'U OB laeorao tax referendum. NoTomber 10, Hmtur 1st Fu ; lent bi(h and Kiif-ne bigh, at Kmbr 10, baturday F. lamette ea. Linfield. at . November 10, Friday lot tnette e. wbitman, at ; Koeereber IS aad 17. Fn.i, ' ntday Flrt Annual Wiiiaiucn l. aity Home-Cominr.- NOTember 17, f-atnliT F,' ' lent high and Vfiford bi-H t Aoeember 23, Friday i o' ., o-iette Pacific, orcibai,' i laad. November 53. Fri.Ur F. .,' hifh and Albany Mh, at A. r - ftovraibar 20. ThiTiJiy i-o lem hirh and Com l In fciv'. at t November 19 Thuraday h. Iamee e, lnllf f 1t old building and with t: . chlnery, and this will r very materially to LctL i' sirabllity of the workL tlons and to the efficient workers. - .3ermany Severe cm Ts LEIPSIQ, Sejt. JO. ( highest court shows i:i for men arraigned I Tc; treason in the great v srv Gerhard Etrey was given a ;llfe sentence f betrayed hia comman I ' 1916. The evlvl-jice j' he deserted the Gin i went over to the Frtr, ' . time later concentre' : artillery fire against tl, ments where Ctrey ha ! ing showed that l.e 1 all detail, of the po :;". enemy. A dispatch from Indianapolis from one of those numerous cor respondents who go about fore casting public sentiment says that Indiana Is doubtful next year. In diana is! always doubtful for that matter. This correspondent" says that Harry New Is lukewarm an ready i to - fly the coop. .Not so. Whatever else may be said of Harry New is be is always loyaL He would not have taken a cabinet position and then been disloyal. Boys and Girls Newspapz V The Bluest XJtUe Paper fa the WorlJ l- gopyrlght. 1023, Associated Editors. I. CartoonRIagic The Football Player. ' Last year the Fascist! went in to office on the platform of abol ishing the strike. Over in Italy they are striking whenever they take a notipn: CzJ t"3 made ns and tlie world so that we can not acquire .Lir. ? Trcrth wliile without conscious, directed, personal ef : .. Only thr.i c:i r;e acquire the prizes of the world with : :':! tij daveIopr..ent. Only so can we possess knowledge . the cnmtn of the mental powers that the quest of knowl 3 Lrir.-i. Only so can we come into possession of the knowl ? cf Liher things and secure the spiritual development that 'tn-l effort alone will bring. The man who has made no i cTfcrt can not, of course, say that he knows that there is Irit within him that allies him, to the Great Spirit of the . crs?. And for such a one to declare that there is no spirit zn j roves nothing. He is not a competent witness in such . Thousands cf vitnC3 who have not seen and known In eny inirartial court be wholly discredited by one witness if ,!tfij rn!tivlv fmm lila ntrn Trvr5n anI lrn nwl a A rro f v ....... , .. -j i - - . . " i Mr of his own personal, spiritual experience is. competent witr.e. ? to nullify the negations of all the agnostics in the U who have had no religious or spiritual experience, who ' not even desired or tried to have any. ' ' ' y.cht intellectual knowledge La not really knowledge to us i we have assimilated it and it lias become a part of out Tal tcir:. It is not only a part of the rubbish of the mind :.l we r:ake some practical use of it;; unused it soon becomes ju foreign as ifwe had never known it.. One might study try out cf a book forever without becoming a chemist. NO CONFLICT The mere mention of science In connection with religion causes cold' shudders to go along ' the backs ot many people. They think there is a life and death struggle, and they . fear for. their religion. We once knew a little Jewish, girl who replied to the taunts of her tactless companions . by saying: if we did kill your Cod. you could not kill oars." ' But thst Is another story. . Science Is not the enemy of religion any more than It Is the - enemy of truth. We have bad both some centuries, and religion' has . not been damaged while science has established Itself. :- , The difficulty lies in a failure to understand just what Is meant RANK WRECKING BooK Review 1 By VESA BRADT 8HXTBUV There Is considerable, sympa thy expressed for. the president of a bank closed by failure In the state of Washington - whose son has - shouldered the responsibility "NORTH OF . 36." By Emerson . Hough. Published by D. Ap- pleton Company, vNew York i City. Price $z.00. . of the looting and gone to prtson. bleadB tory with entertaining cympainy is a ooa ining, sai i nctloni( Emerson Hough gave the It must not be carried too far. A j reading public shortly before1 his oaus: is a puoiic institution, ana i death a. novel or we Texas cow like Caesar's ! wife. It must ' be I country, and driving herd thru above suspicion. The public has I from central Texas to Ablllne.l come to look upon a bankt as a I Kansas, Wen the only stockyards clearing house for IU financial I ca"ie west oi Kansas vy. li is a story oi an orpnau uauu- ter of a murdered pioneer, a young sheriff avenging the mur- af fairs. The banker Is more, than a bank official; he is the counsel lor and friend of the public. He tl.a chemical laboratory, actual, practical exDericnce. that I B? cence. - So much U done in ! c!.?nists. And m spiritual knowledge and develop- these days In baphasard fashion, so . i::fcrt, experiene- in the spiritual laboratory of the mch taken for granted, so many ' I :-i heart are the tLlr.-i that Lake real Christians. Hear- initmentM formed on superficial -lout Cod and Christ, reading of them in a book, even the PPf or utterances that. In will never make us Christians in the New Testament dally course of living and do- , the rel sense. Nothing thort of bringing our own spirits lnr we ,0 g,bt of tbe trtln ;i c )r. iou:;:w.i and harmony with the Great Spirit of the 1)01111 ot cleaT "inking and . villi the Spirit of Christ, .will make us V heirs and proper et'n correct spprais- h Irs" of the heavenly kingdom. al of essential facts.. And that. In - its general, application, Is what: Is e reason, perhaps the chief reason, why humanity have xaean' y science, r ? yet 5 j little progress in the spiritual life is that they Science, no matter In what field learned where to look for it. It is not to come to us thft term mT he, employed, v is Mi from n far away heaven, nor from the Calvary of two "owing more nor less than defin- 1 ye.-.rs nor from the ri-ht hand of the Father sit- ,te and ceurate Judgnenta based i.i far corner cf the universe, but it is to come from jon e,ear knowledge ot facts and i ourselves,- from the erowth of His snirit in our ownlan PPrecistion of their sequence lie who seeis for tJoJ or Christ anywhere but in him- der of Weir resnectlve fathers, i no longer sits In seclusion, but fn tne struggle of driving the rather offers his services freely I immense herd north, love avua to the public In", matters relating lens. , : . to finance. He does not exact It is rare.studjrof the soatn- a fee. but he gives his counsel I west - ln the early days. The i as a part of the aervice Cf theOhiaholm trail up thru Oklahoma. bank to the public .iw w8 a. vu.,u earir &uuu aaoaueu, - iwuuiu mwtA oiiniiiltr arm nvntArflnn I to betray a trust .and according ... M,.f,t i a. to their opportunities a surpris-Lnd w the rule of Belt j THE SHORT STORY, JR. j ingiy smaii numoer ao so. - nerw i preservation. must be Uwa to , punUh this I . "Talsle" Leckhart. twenty-two j sacred betrayal and to protect the J and beautiful (as twenty-two so thousands of honest men who are often Is. and always in story civina- Invaluable advice on fin- books) rich In cows and land but ancial affairs every bout In the Impoverished In purse, leads her The football conies hurtling through the air, while the" bleachers shout. There's a wide-awake player who gets that forward pass and makes the dash for a' touchdown. You can change the football into the player who caught it,' if you put in the lines shown in the two key pictures. - . , A RADIO TIM": c At an In m i i transralttJaj static .n i. Berlin, Cernany,.. J fr the sending c; : : the time of day, err' other cities cf tta -r cr'. ; radio messages nay I s stop and calculate waater, as well a$ a to do at times. A clock has teen C Indicates the time rf C Ha and shows t .: v, . !. the time In other ;t world where there trs radio stations. TI : V tor was nada t ti'..: j flat nap cf tha. t, cr! placed la a glass Clil outer edsa were two t scales graduated it I interval. Oa t.La C : of the circle 13 tto'v i : Clockwork cLas- i area of the worn nt!?i gresses In its cocr.:. ."rr tend from the static-s , to the ede cf tLe : . are Indicated tta r hours and. niaatcj et t eat cities ca the t' .. "nat- CU Ai ? I, . A fortune-teller v-? t' attraction at a fair. A we her son in and asked 1 t him his fortune. After at the boy's pain, iha Madam, your boy will t-a noted man If he i:vt i enough." . , The mother aslei. ; he be noted for?" "For his old are." tv f teller replied. ' t:. t i i a v AN OLD MAID'S TACT day. 1AW EXPO RC7EJ LENT WEEK band In bringing her cows to mar ket, accompanied by, her negro mammy and her Mexican, -woman and her band of twenty-odd cow punchers. - Worshipful., they guard her dearly and the story is one of Said Susan, "Those terrible hoys! They ran la our yard with their - toys; . Oh, dear, I declare, I simply can't bear Their nerve-WTecIOs tricks and ' their nobse;n . "Oh, dar, there are those awful boys again!. I declare I don't know what I can do to make them stop ill never find either. The purified, spiritualized spirit of , t!.e thrcr. cf C I. TLerc we may mate the heaven Ir it I fir 1 realms cf rpace and relative signitcance. Bo, In this sense, the scope of science extend quite definitely and fun damentally into the ordL-ary af fairs cf lite, and the application of its metLods and tenets to tbe so ! clal, fccacmts an J rolll'cal af- .fi'xs cf t.3 comncawc-tth i-i trt r " ; -- r : r? V . 1 tvr Constitution week was whole. some for the country- To have it followed by law enforcement week ufai protection for the young running on our lawn. -1 told them is still progressing. Few of ustlrl ner inevitable love af- J yesterday I was going to call the know much about the : eonstltu-1 fair, with the dashing but severe j police, but they dont seem to care uon In a dennue way. we ibow young menu. In a general way that it stands for You will enjoy the story wheth- cerUin things of which we ap- yon kcow the Countryor not. prove. But when It comes to law Jf r It Is told in Emerson Hough , . enforcement all of ns are for that JJlJSVLS -for the? other fellow. We all for anything." Miss Susan tapped on the window and shook her bead crossly at the three boys running across her precious trass ; after their balL . , "Oh, Susan, please, they have to get their ball." 1 Miss Jane was much smaller and ; less angumr than her sister Susan'.' ? -Susan sniffed. "They have no sas -the Cimarron, the Smoky mil tfiM ranntrv thru . Caldwell want the law enforced against the d on n0rth to "Aberlene" you other fellow. - J will feel that you have found a . The greatest menace in America I picture ef home sweet home, tor today la the laxnes of enforcing IgucbT Is the picturizatlon of "North business. playing ball put in front the laws. The. breaking of laws of 36" by a man who knew. roriir hii TifPn tn ppnpral ' For the first time It extends to all "THB'MINE WITH THfiIRON classes and conditions. The rich 9 T Harold Bell " Wright. , . , . . ,v,t. . Published by the Appleton Com- Gciy 11.3 ww tu mu., .,- ..v r-!T. Prf Jf. t!r.a e.tzliz'S It'll c: ! v.-. - - --. . :-sn and letting it come Into our yard all the time. I declare I just dont see how I can go away. .You'll let those awful boys run all over the place., You- couldn't frighten a mosquito away. If it wasn't that Mother Is so sick there they are again! Now watch and 111 show you how to settle them." , Jane watched ber sister Sail out the door in pursuit of the terrible boys..' "And the very next time I shall call the police," she beard her shouting at them. "I mean what I say, too." . . Aw, "wo got to get our ball." grumbled one of the boys. "We didn't hurt your old grass. Call the police and see if we care. Hell Just tell you you're an old crank." Jane gasped. ' To think of any one talking to Susan like that! Che felt a little admiration for the boy, and wished she were as brave. Jane waa worried that night when Susan left for her mother's. There were so many things for her to remember, and above all she was to be firm with those awful; boys. -It was bard for Jar T 3 j firm; "I'll do the best I c- , ; 3 promised. "Don't you wor -t the lawn. I Totter rr ' r it's yor Czty ti z there, where at tha t a Could keep her eye on Lt r 1 lawn. She would t .r; r! who woald be glad t o f a 1 again to take tLe r t . ; 2 : The very reit day r turned with her v.. It. opened the door of her 1 gasped at the sound of toy s' floating la from the HicL rylng through the hot. stepped dumfoanded st V en coor. The tfcrea tirr, were there eroupei arc- : : one vigorously cr&akl . cream freezer, one etjrr!r the other bel:Is J: doughnuts. "Please, Miss Jane, r the bowl?" Mla c, : nised the little Ubw t called her . a V: wouldn't ever ta?a t: your grass if we La I : nice you were. Uia-n-r Is good. We can i- f 1 , back yard, can't we r I lick the F-ocn, tec: r