I 8 THE OREGON, STATESMAN. SALEM,. OREGON SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 15, 1925 I I (Continued from Page 3) ; j " M i n Mrs. Ora?F. Mclntyre -wm a guest yesterday in Portland. '. Mr. and Mrs. Newton? McCoy have returned to their home- in Portland. They have made many friends In Salem, whose best wisn? es fro with them. Mr. McCoy was a rerent meTnber,afthe state pub lic service commission. . The 80 th birthday of - Mr. S. Levy will be celebrated today at a family dinner at the Levy home, 563 Court street, this afternoon at 2 o'clock.. Mr. and Mrs. Ben- Levy of Portland will be in Salem for the occasion. An elaborate birth day cake, bearing 8 1 candles, will center the table. Mr. Lety is re ceiving ; congratulatory i messages in .the form of flowers and in a cablegram from - Antwerp,5 Bel gium. A beautiful, mixed bou ; quet was presented to Mr.. Levy by Mayor Giesy la the name of Herman Van Straaten, a brother of Mrs. Levy In Antwerp.;- Mr. and Mrs. AN. Moores has had as thoir house guest during the ' pact week ''their son, Ralph Moores, of Portland. - .-.,- . . The formal closing of a splendid season by the Salem MacDowell club will come on Thursday when Royal Dadmun appears at the Grand theater under the club's auspices. The MacDowell club was first1 organized in 1921 by Mrs. Vf. K: Anderson and at that time was known as the Woman's club chorus, lender the able director ship' of Paul Petri,' and with Miss Dorothy Pearce, accompanist, the club gave Its first', concert in the antumn of the same year,- present ing Mabel Garrison at the Grand theater as their soloist. 'The club has given many successful bene fit affairs, including three for the bid People's Home. Others have been ghrefl" jat the Girls Industrial School and at the State Tubercu losis hospital. The club has ten tative dates for a tour to differ ent valley points.' ; New. officers for the year have bfepji elected as follows: Mrs. W. ! I Original in name ' Original in design and Original in its exquisite contents LiggettV Original Package ; cotitains all ! the ' favorite '" nieces of Handv-lovers. '. i; All are generously :eoaied; with the I rich Chocolate s that has made r Liggetfs famous i throughout the : i country. $1.00 pfr KUU1 j ; in half. one. two, three i and five-pound, sizes. Perry Drug Store i r si---1 -j;it.i:i - . OREGON II H ! : i l l : l . r,C4j. : . ; : : r . . '.. .;-... t . . ..... . - ... 1 - ' ' :. ' '' ";- 1 - f i ' -- ; ' ' ' ; -' " ' ri ' - ." r'L ' i ' " "' -?'.:' ,t ; 4 :r. ' Revenue Officers Wage War With Liquor Traffickers Off Atlantic Seaboard F IVE miles off Long Island ; midnight; gray fog on the bosom of a sea almost as placid as a lake. Utter silence around the vaguely-defined power-boat in which three men were but indistinct shadows as they crouched forward, eyes suiiuuuuiufi vynuy, cua SOUnd.- - : -- ' Oat of the . night came some thing different than the, , lap. , of water against the hull a - -putt-putt.' rhythmic and swelling the unmistakable noise of an approach lag motor, if : i "..!.:-., -; One of the trio in the- power boat stirred and whispered. "Off to starboard I I make It. I think w can- head them. , Sudden activity then; a motor spun; - the roar of an . exhaust: a white foam kicking suddenly forth beneath the bow. and the. powerboat- wa racing toward th tell tale sound. : There was no further need for silence. ! the staccato pounding of their own motor would carry at once to the quarry beyond them-in the foggy night, y A few minutes of tense pursuit, with the noise of the motor ahead growing more distinct, though at times al most lost In the closer crackling of the power-boat's rapid exhaust. Quarry Overtaken s At first something faint, scarcely- an outline; then a i darker blotch In the , foggy night took shape ahead the other.! motor boat, fleeing with .all the speed that could be coaxed from its motor. Bat the .pursuer, was faster, was overhauling with certain! ty; Let 'em have jit.- came t the terse command ! and a dazzling gleam of light shot athwart the Quarry, disclosing! every detail with - the brightness , of day. : It showed a light motor launch, low and rakish:, built for speed." with a crew: of two. and in .the hands of each' of these two. as they faced the on-coming power-boat, gleamed metaL They were armed. ; " Gun Playl ' ' ; ; ' lie light beam came from the, bow of the parsuen where one of the. three men stood with an elec tric flashlight in his hand, his arm extended far to his side a wise precaution for he' knew that the desperate pair ahead would shoot direct for the bull's-eye. There was not ' fifty feet I of open water between the boats when the quarry i E. Anderson., Honorary president; Ada Miller Harris, president; Mrs. Phil Newmyer, vice president"; Mrs. Joe 'chambers, secretary; Mrs. T. IL Galloway, treasurer, and Mrs. Donald W. Riddle, audi tor. , ; i Miss Dorothy Pearce, club ac companist,, who is spending the winter in San Diego, will resume her place with the club in the fall, with Professor. W.J H. Boyer con tinuing .with, the directorship. , i i - & Dr. and Mrs. Mark Skiff are spending: the week-end in Port land as the guests of Or. and Mrs. Mark Skiff, Jr. V I SlLVERTON? SOCIETY M , : : Mr. land Mrs, , Si K. Ostergaard were hosts .at a: clever "Friday 131' partr at their home Friday evening. Stunts of a superstitious nature and examplifying the oc casion furnished j diversions for the evening. Guests were Mr. and Mis. SL E. Richardsen, Mr. and Mrs.1 Q. A. Nelson, Dr. and Mrs. R. : E. j Kleinsorge ' Mrs. Reorge Jacobsen, Rev. and Mrs. ; S. Hall, and Rev. and Mrs.- Howard Mort of Independence, j Merl Larson was host to a group at the younger high school set at a dancing party Friday evening at Men of Proven Judgment In choosing his bank, there is one additional thing that the prudent man wants to know in addition to its safety equipment and facilities.. It is the men with whom he can talk over his affairs and receive sound advice upon them. The executives here at the United States Na tional are men of proven judgment. Their exper ience coversj many years in serving the business and agricultural interests of Marion County. Your experience can be1 combined with theirs if you are a patron here. . v I Xe v United States National Saleni.Orcgon trying in vain to pierce the f siriumug xor me urst auen ' " ; ' open ed . fire. It was the . fellow In . the stern, his arm rising and fall-; ing as he Damped his automatic,; The shots rang louder than the ex hausts, but " the bullets went wild. He was either a poor marksman or the blinding light in his eye in terfered with his aim. . No . response came from the ! power-boat, but the steady light never for a moment failed to cover : the! fleeing craft. And all the time ' the distance lessened until not ten feet of water ; separated the two boats. Then resistance ceased. Gnns dropped from ; the hands of the pir and, as the power-boat slid i alongside, two disconsolate figures slumped into their seats, knowing the game was up. ! A scene from a "movie"? Not at aHV Just' an Incident of nights , along Rum Row; another bootleg-1 giag craft fallen afoul of the Rev enue. ' There were" fifty cases of Scotch in the captured boat.- - The cargo, - a staunch motor launch confiscated and two indictments for violation of the ' Eighteenth Amendment, made ' not a- bad' night's 'hanl for the Prohibition1 Enforcement officers, t Smuggling in its rosiest English days and gun-running Into Cuba before the Spanish-American War fade- Into mediocrity when com pared with this twentieth century battle between the United States Revenne service and the ' rum runners. Nights of desperate deeds off shore find their, way but seldom into the press. Regula tions forbid the Revenue man de tailing his experiences, and seldom is 4 the rule violated. Only oc casionally is the ban lifted and then, like war censorship, thera is deletion of names and places. Such is the incident desciibed above, an accurate account, but with Identities; perforce, withheld. . 'And just such incidents com- the: home of his parents, Mr.and Mrs. Walter Larson. The rooms were attractive in a yellow and white color scheme, a huge bou quet of. daffodils and greenery forming a center piece In the din ing rom. Small tables, each ac comodating four were placed about, the room. At these the guests were served, . the color scheme predominating In favors, napkins and place cards. Guests fori the evening were Dorothy Neal, Isbel NaGinis. Thelma Gor doa, Orfa Nofsker, Sylvia Larsen, Ida Ross, Ethel Larson, Grace Younce, . Nana Cramer, Arthur Clark, John - Jordon. Lawrence Carpenter, Reginald Clark, Arthur Johnson, . Ernest Larson. Oscar Johnson, Clayton Benson and Or val" Larson. r""!,!! T ! SCOTTS MILLS T w ' ' ' w Mr. and Mrs. Harvoy Rrougher were in Salem Saturday on busi- necsi- j-- ' j . ;' : - " - 1 . Mrs. Gladys Perd of Seattle vis ited i her mother, Mrs. Hugh Ma gee, last week. Mr. and Mrs. M. Flanders and daughter' Kvelyn are , visiting In Roseburg. - , I Mrs. W. T.- Hogg and daughter Doris went to Salem Saturday to visit, with her daughter. Lorraine, Bank Prise the nightly life for runner plies his -trade -along the Atlantic Coast. Speed . launches range the coast within the twelve mile limit, for international law prevents the molestation of ' the suspicious craft which lay to be yond the danger mark. Revenue activities are within the law the penalty which government must pay In enforcing the laws It makes. The - prohibition enforcement offi cers, in their speed-boats may poke Into sheltered coves, intercept any landward bound cargoes.' take any action deemed necessary, just so long as they do not trespass be yond the twelve mile limit. During the day it is peaceful along the coast, but as night falls !um Row takes on feverish ac tivity, .Craft of all description, from lumbering tramp steamers to rakish yachts, rouse out of day time drowsiness. Case after case of : wet goods come up from the hold to be piled along' the rail, there to await the speed boats of the inshore smugglers. If it Is a who has been quite sick, returning home Sunday. j Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Taylor went to Portland Monday on business, returning home Tuesday. IMr. and Mrs. Fred Howe moved to Mill City the first of the5 week. A number of members of the Oddfellows attended the rally at Salem Wednesday evening, taking with them two candidates to be initiated. ; ; A reception was given Mr. and Mrs. George Van Amman Satur day night, at the Jake Van Am man home on the Abiqua. Mr. and Mrs. Van Amman were mar ried February 28. Mrs. Van Am man was formerly Miss Harriet Parks of Molalla, and a teacher of the Brier" Knob school. 1 Mrs. Nellie Lawrence has been ill at the Silverton hospitarseve ral weeks. Her many friends hope she will be able to be taken home soon. - . . Tho C;reat DivMe Little four-year old Freddie asked mother to comb his hair. I She hurriedly combed in with out, however, parting it. : Whereupon Freddie exclaimed: VTou didn't put a crac!c In it, mother." . ; Mrs. X. L. Smitham LE ra coupe - bytlctxni warn against ngletlBg eougaa and cold and tell of the aerloaa tang complication i that any rasalt. lead ing paytlcUm new prascriba BAZ.SAMEA for all bronchial affections. BAX8AMZA a . pare vegetable - preparation nada from a newly diaeovered plant. Dr. Ben). F. Crab tree. Anderson, Ida., wrltaa: "I Be it exclusiTelr for my practice and my lanvlljr. . It ia quick,-eoxe -end. safe Is ta action. UXe notaing elaa."- . Toward the -end ot the influenza epi tenlc a goverament physician noticed that a tribe of Indiana in Nevada, by the use tt oils from a native plant were immune from the ravages, of. Jnflnenxa. Ue naed. these oils among his white patienta and then in 'a hospital overflowing -with "death" eases. News of the results swept the world and for some ' time it waa sot possible to- supply the demand. BALSAMEA has now been standardised and gives uniformly miraculous results in foar wars: 1. It soothes the inflamed membranes and relieves irritation. 2. It increases secretion of mucous and per mits easy expectoration. S. It stimulates pores of the skin, in throwing; off body poisons and . It strikes at the can ae, checking germ action immediately. : Do not eonfusa.it with ordinary balsam tough syrups that are only soothing syrups-and do not go to the base of the trouble. - Unlike other cough remedies BAX.8AJIEA is free from" coal tar and p the harmful narcotics. -Pleasant to. take aad absolutely safe to give to children. rse sura rou get BAL-SA-ME-A with the picture of the Indian an the paokage. Guaranteed to relieve any cough, no mat-. It fremvwhat eaase, or jer mo bsek ' I, ji .I, i' mil. n . i for , Chronic Cooshs ' Perry's Drug - Store it is t OS t n n i j r STARTS aark night and i a comparatively calm one the chances of active trade are good, r , -.Desperate Stakes The old lure or gold ill-gotten gold, but gold, nevertheless will assure , brisk activity. The rum runner is a desperate gentleman and the pay ia high.. The Revenue men. on the watch, know that; know well that they must be ready to fight for their lives at any time. The rum-runner may surrender his carf o of liquor without a battle, but he is far more likely to Indulge in. a desperate gun-fight rather than see bis boat and his profits fall Into the hands of the govern ment. ' -. , Smuggling by Air - Nor. 13 the smuggling confined to sea craft. Not long ago. a sea plane was caught in the trade. The machine had slipped out to Rum Row under cover of darkness and had taken aboard twenty-five cases of whiskey. Then, still pro tected by the night, it hummed its way shoreward and came to rest in a secluded snot near Blue Point. 1 vi i ia I t I even THEY SAY: m t Let Us Drive Kitchen Gloom Away For You Instead of a gloomy. kitchen -full of shadows and, darkness you'll .have a beautifully lighted , kitchen where the illumination is softly diffused and even ly distributed. There will be no shadows. This Daylight Kitchen Unit is installed in many: thousands of the mcst modern homes throughout the country; "It is the bes unit obtainable for its pur-' pose. Long Island. But a Revenue launch had caught the hum of the motor in the air and had followed on behind. Locating the landing spot, the word went forth" to the coastal watchers. Just as the whis key was being transferred from the seaplane to a waiting truck, the : government men arrived. They surrounded the quarry in si lence and then, at a given word, p. glaring ring of flashlights pierced the night. " The smugglers, blinded and startled, offered no resistance, and whiskey, seaplane, truck, pilot and several huskies were corralled by the law. Another big raid -was pulled off on the Long Island coast not long ago when- a Revenue squad "on shore surprised a gang of rum runners at work loading contra band liquor Into two trucks. Circling through the darkness, the, officer in- charge of the squad, placed his men at strategic points, and, at a given signal, the beams of a half-dozen flashlights were thrown upon the perspiring work ers. " .- In the glare of the light, the THESE Me the wwte THey Vill Daylight Your Kitchen ror Pays PORTLAND ELECTRIC PGWEp GO. 237 ISfbrth Liberty Street, Salem, Ore. smugglers were taken completely by. surprise and surrendered with out a shot being fired. In the space of the few seconds, the Rev enue squad had six' men in cus-. tody and had seized 5,000 cases of liquor. '.. Bribery Stopped Night after night, as the' prohi bition force combs the coast line, the rum-runners are beginning to realize that the business Is grow ing riskier. The old days, when whiskey-smuggling was merely a matter of getting the cargo off . the coast, loading it into any sort of a tub and taking it ashore, are gone. . : Members of the prohibition en forcement squad who made small fortunes "by accepting bribes from the bootleggers are rapidly' being weeded out., and under Director R. Q. Merrick, Federal Director of Prohibition of. New " York, and other divisional directors, the per sonnel of the prohibition force is toeing the mark with, a discipline reminiscent of war time days. . "It is a real wr on a small scale men with the rri' -A mm -m. ' : The Convenience Outlet' ' ':. . . ; - ' i . -' ; .... . ... permits your iron, toaster, percolator, .vacuum or other electrical appliance to be connected at con venient height and used with the light on or off. FREE For a limited time we riil install these tinits for a 7-day trial without cost to you. -.. I..-'.. Of .a month for ten months .is all - you have to 5D C pay . for this DAYLIGHT , KITCHEN UNIT . . -. . ... .,.., . ... .-. ... ..... " : . . -.v , - 1 : .. .. : Telephone or drop u a card-onr Tepresen tat Ive will call and Know you the unit. Order yours XOWl ; ' :M 111 In which our forcr is engaged," uays Director Merrick ,?Rum Bow has become a -strong-hold of the enemy, but wo axe striving to be a determined 'defending-army nf dry officers. , It Is no unusual thing for. our men to take four or five truck-loads of contraband liquor 1 a single night. . Sixty-five to sev. enty trucks seized a month Is no unusual thing." ( -t Flashlight Him First; . . "The prohibition enforcement of" fleer's life is a' hazardous one. ' He is dealing with desperate me: criminals Kho will not hesitate to use their weapons to escape. ,Thy know they face confiscation of their cargo! and" their property whether, a power launch or a truck and imprisonment. ' . Naturally they WiU fight- . "Fortunately we are seldom called upon to use our own- guns. We blind the rum-runner first and generally can bind him Afterwards before he has had a chance to open up on us. There is a certain amount of psychology in that. Every "Re ven ue man . carries - flashlight as well as an automatic He uses the , flashlight . first.' A beam of light, coming out of the darkness and enveloping a fellow who is trying to escape from the law Is disconcertirgj It momen tarily blinds him and it plaees him at the disadvantage of not knowing how numerous are his assailants or how soon a pistol shot will fol low the light beam. He is nex-, cellent target ' and he realizes it and generally gives up. , 'Flash-' light him first,' is the motto which we follow." - , ,1.1 ' - ' ' ' ' ' ' V ' ' r r Ha. y