i . .. t "Greatest: Co ton s- SECTION TWO ' " Pages 1 to 8 Society-Gla3difiect Better Homes . V CL'EAN A N:D VIGOROUS SEVENTY-SIXTH YEAR SALEM, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 2, 1926 , J PRICE. FIVE-CENTS : Child Born ' imMptJkei-, in Oregon St wte ' Hospital me mm to Charles Bobbie, a Great Collie Story of Dog Who Found Way Back Home Unaided From Middlewest Declared to Have Been Told : With V Charm, Equal to Greatest Books Written f r . V t t I periewea oy CoU-B. Hofer,, President Oregon State Humane Society Oregon is not only the home of the greatest collie dog in the world, but has produced a writer of dog. stories who will be come famous in the canine literature of the world Charles Alexander of Albany. His book, "Bobbie, a Great Collie," published by Dodd. JVlead & tk.. New York, was released to the book trade on April 24, and, in the opinion of the Boston Transcript, de serves to be placed side by side with Kipling, the creator of Mowgli and the Jungle Books. Mr. Alexander is already widely known for his book, "The Fang of the Forest." In the story of Bobbie, the Silverton dog, who, at th6 age of two and one-half years, was taken on a motor car trip to Indiana by Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brazier of Silverton, Oregon, to visit their relatives, was lost, and made his way back to Silverton, 3000 miles, unaided, in mid-winter, the author has presented the most remarkable animal performance in the history of the world. -, , Bobbie overcame tremendous obstacles in mid-winter, crossing plains, deserts, rivers, the Rockies, and several other mountain chains, unguided but by, his instinct and his sub-i conscious devotion to his master,-returning to the little res taurent in the little city of Silverton within six months, to a day, from the time he left on the trip east. Mr. Brazier, assisted by J. G. Crossley of Portland, a di rector of the Oregon State Humane society, established be yond question the identity of the hero shepherd dog soon after his return home. . In Mr. Alexander's book the, story is told with all his dra- -V matic'and entertaining. literary ability., like. all lovers of f J ' animal nature, Mr. Alexander is a student of animal psychol- ogy, and indicates the deeper qualities, the poise, dignity and f personality of this wonderful dog. He traces the final appearance in the dog's inner nature v . of that marvelous instinct which led him to follow a direction i west, to the home of his master, as faithfully as the mariner's (compass does the polar stan : . i Its dawninir thus described, after months of groping in - his subconscious toind: ;- V, f-r-; '.'V Something had stirred in the dog. , Faint it was, and m ' deflnle, like jvagovblur lonav-desert horizon. .Bobbie clungYo it. In hU mind he gazed and gazed at this blur, Istfaming to round it inta something he could see and under stand, Idoggedly clinging to it, paying only half-attention to the ouiside world he drifted through." ; ' - 'Thus he went westward across the entire state of Illinois, nrt Ti1nTiw1 dwn into Iowa before he stoDDed. He loDed on, J deserted pavements at night, he skirted villages with an eye sidewise for trouble in the shape of men or dogs, he avoided bridges, and pulled himself, panting, from the swirling clutch of streams he swam. f "And he drifted on, in all these days, his head low, and ' with no eye for whither he drifted. Always he- groped deep t in ancient unused reaches of his instinct for the blurred vision there that tantalized him." (It should be remembered v -j . (Continued on pafe 1 it' 10 SOL' MIXES WITH W STORY Rev. E. H. Shanks Writes Another Juvenile Story for Sunday r .:.-, Five Hero Medals Mark Brave Acts of Dead Man Fifteen Other, Acts of Heroism Recognized at Spring Meeting of Carnegie Fond Commission, Following Careful rf , Check on Deeds Recorded 3i PITTSBURGH, April 30. (By Associated Press.) Five tof the heroes recognized by the Carnegie Hero Fund commis l"pn at the spring meeting here today, lost their lives in the ; commission of heroic deeds. Fifteen other acts of heroism were cited, a bronze medal being awarded in each case. The dependants of those who made the supreme sacrifice were awarded pensions aggregating4 $3,840 a year, while one was given $500 to be applied as the commission sanctions. In addition, ?100 was appropriated for educational purpos es and; $11,000 for others worthy purposes. Mn all twenty cases bronze medals were awarded. "-' . Those who lost their lives Were : - - s 1 ' : Stanley C. -Delanoy, 16, student, died attempting to save a girl fr,om drowning at Grassy Point, N. Y., J July 22, 1924. J The medal jvent to his father, Delbert A. Delanoy, 121 Ship H pen St, Weehawked, N. J. : J. Stuart Kieffer, 1212 Miller street, Utica,,N.;Y., died in an attempt to rescue a man from drowning at Eaton,, N. Y., Ausrust 22. 1925 : the medal and $75 a month with S5 addi- . tional monthly for a daughter, was awarded the widow. William John Crawfordr Box 65, East Jordan,Mich., died ,; attempting to save a man from drowning at East Jordan, ,f Mich., June 27, 1924 ; medal and $65, a month, with $5 month ? ly additional for each of three children to the widow. E. Hale Elston, Rural Route 8, Newton, 111., died attempt ing to save a boy from drowning at Mason, 111.; Aug. 28, 1924 ; medal With $65 a month and $5 monthly additional for each . of three children to the widow; f ?: s Robert W. Gibson, Mason, III, postmaster, died attempting . to rescue a man from drowning at Mason, 111.,5 Aug. 28, 1924; ' medal with $55 a month and $5 a month additional, for each Vof five children to the widow. - - - .One woman received recognition. She is Mrs. Helen Gert- ruuo Dickey, 35, 1515 North Delmont avenue,-Springfield, ' Ohio, dairy farmer. She was awarded a bronze medal for -rescuing a farm hand from an enraged bull; at Springfield, !Jaiiis19,1922, t, t -.V. , Vtv-''h'i" . Kie other heroes are:. ,-..;....-!' Eddie G-LIathews, 124 West Elm street, Hillsboro, Tex.; saved a woman and child from being killed by a train at Hills boro, October 28, 1922. " 5 S. Ellsworth Lewis, Upper Economy, Nova Scotia, Canada, farmer, saved a fellow1 farmer from drowning at Upper Econ omy July 19, 1924. : William G'. WattcnMilford Station, Nova Scotia, Canada; BY REV. SHANKS Solomon Engleman lived on the farm adjoining ours on the south. He was not the oldest man in the, neighbor hood, by any means, but we all called him "Old Sol." As far back as I can remember that was his name. "Old Sol" was one of those happy, jolly, good natured men whb always saw the bright side of things, always had a good story to ten, and always had his little joke to play on any. one who came along. Some times the joke turned on him. Then he was good natured enough to take it, and laugh about it, too. We aU liked "Old SoL" It so happened one time that a report got out about that a lynx was in the neighborhood. Several people had been re ported to have seen the wild bob-cat or whatever it was, and because a lynx had never been seen by any. of the people in our part of the country it was" supposed to be about the wildest and most -terrifying and dangerous of all the wild beasts ever heard of., ...I, t:i I i3o &f coursereTerytwdy iwa a bit afraid, and especially at night when such animals are supposed to 'prow! about.' It was late" autumn: Dur ing the afternoon and evening a considerable fall of snow had come. The night was pale moonlight, which with the snow, gave a sort of ghostly look to things generally. "Old Sol" had been at one of the neighbors some dis tance from home and coming home he saw the lynx. He was sure it was the lynx. It was over by the rail fence that ran along the side of the road. He could see it standing there on its hind legs with its head up over the fence; eyes shining, and ready to spring at him if he should attempt to pass. ; a He could see its ears stick ing up and the little tassel-like tufts of hair hanging from the tips of its ears. No mistake, it was the lynx alright. i i Now to tell the truth, I sup- V (ContlntiM . on tr 4.) Tragedy of Human Seen In Eastern Criminals THE STORY UP TO DATE Eve Maclurie, young, beautiful, thrifty, passionately satis fied with life, loved both her employer, JOHN INGATE, thir ty, president of John Ingate's Sons, Inc., one of the largest firms in Central City, and CLAY Vv ALES, an employe of the Ingate concern. She rejected John to marry Clay because she believed that the latter, weak, irresponsible, fiercely jeal ous, needed her more. . Once they were wed, however, she had her doubts about the wisdom of her choice. On their honeymoon in Chicago, they enjoyed guest privil eges at the Mohawk country club through the courtesy of John Ingate. There, "while playing tennis, they met a MISS JOHNSTONE, violet-eyed, mysterious, and her escort, REG RIE WHITE, who were immediately very friendly. Eve and Clay had no reason to suspect that the pair were blackmail ers, Utilizing Miss Johnstone's powers of fascination to en trap wealthy men. The following day, at their hotel, they ran into John In gate, who, he explained, had been called to the city on busi ness unexpectedly. Although Eve, with Miss Johnstone in mind, perhaps, ,had decided she didn't want to go back to the country club, when John Ingate proposed a trip out there to the two of them, they went along. Now go on with the story : TWENTY-FIVE When John Ingate was away from Central City he enjoy ed himself much more than his mother and sister, or his bus iness associates would have suspected. In Central City he was something of a .figure of importance, with a position to keep and a dignity to preserve. But in New York or Chicago, or in other cities to which, the demands of business took him he was a person of no importance, and he enjoyed himself as, a man does when he rids himself of tight shoes and rasp ing collar. He spent money for pleasure with careless aban don; ate in the lively restaurants; saw the peppery shows; gambled and drank, with moderation, it can be said, at the club. Such things are unseemly in Central City iti a business leader and church goer and at home John Ingate observed the code. In the big city, he was a different man. ' The can in which he drove Clay and Eve Wales to the (Continued on page 5,) Sabbath -School Lesson Arranged From the Improved Uniform International by r. J. toozb Lesson for' May 2 "God's Covenant With Noah." Les son Text: Genesis 8:20; 9:27. Golden Text: I do set my bow in the cloud, and it shall be a token of a covenant between me and the earth. Gen. 9:13. of God's covenant should be clearly in with the In order to grasp the meaning Noah, the whole story of the flood mind of the teacher and the Dunil. 1. "The Cause of the Flood" 6 :l-8. It was an apostasy from God. The .two types of men we saw in Cain and Abel (thesone of proud self-will, the other of humble faith), de veloped on diverging lines, but as they multiplied they came into contact and intermarried. 2 "The Ark the Way of Salvation" 6:14-7:24. Al though all flesh has corrupted its way before God,, in His mercy provision was made for such as would avail themselves of it. Christ is the ark into which all who enter are eternauy saved. As aU outside of the ark perished, so all outside the redemption of Christ shall perish Mark 16:16; II Thess. 1-8, 9 ; John 3 :18, 19, .36 ; I Pet. 3 :18-22. Observe in connec tion with this judgment and provision of salvation: 1 The long-suffering GodHe Waited 120 years. 2 Noah a preach er Of righteousness HPet. 2:5. God not only waited long, but through Noah sounded forth intelligent warnings. 3. (Continued on pkf 5.) J. Workings of Mendel's Law Seen in Hereditary Tendency In Confined Oregon Family and in Eas Where Four Brothers Are Jai Four Brothers Iti Peri Set New Prison Record i n I - iTV'h4 u t IP1 The lour Under hill brothers (1) George, (2) Wilbur, (3)' Charles, 4) Earl Underbill. The Busy Reader's Newspaper VOLUME L Published in the Interest Of those seeking foil and accurate surrey week's local developments '. of the .NUMBER 16 Greeting yoii on May 2, how many days of last week were you able to read a daily newspaper thoroughly ? By spending five- minutes here, you can be well informed on all important local happenings. -f ' h 1 - Monda, April 26 " Salem Heights, realizing; that it could easily block any at tempt to place a city dump there, protested strenuously; City .officials had previously declared no dump would be placed there.; The protest, however, ended all controversy, i ; Opposition which met the advent of buses into Salem $treet transportation system apparently dwindled away for, only Wednesday, April 28 -X) All existing heat records for April, in the history of Salem weather bureau, were broken here when the mercury in the official thermometer reached 93 degres. - . Anothr chapter will be written in the case of Tom Mur ray, Ellsworth Kelley and James Willos, convicts under sen tence of death for the part they played in the prison break of August 12, 1925, When arguments on their appeal to the su premecourt of Oregon will be heard on May 25. - The date was revealed on Wednesday. .. ,' t Eleven hundred students gathered at the Oregon Electric eight citizens were present when the public hearing was held! station at 4 o'clock to bid a last farewell to the group of four on Mohday night to consider plans calling for. complete cessa- been tion of street car' service. ! Adequate' bus service has nromised. -.;' . -K' V i s;::::.-"" a True summer weather hit the valley, opening a hot spell which 4 inally took the official thermometer 'well abpve 90 degrees, before cooler weather set in. y . Tuesday, April 27 " ' - " Taxpayers of Salem on Slay 19 will once more have the opportunity to say whether or, not they are willing-to have $120,000 of, bonds transferred; from the: Lincoln school dis trict for the purpose, of a new school site and the erection of a school unit on the so-called Tuxedo Park tract. A special election to be held just two Idays before the May primaries was called by the Salem school board after Dr. J. O. MathiS, president J of. the South Salem parent-teachers ; association, had presented a petition beating over 150 signatures of tax payers asking for the election. Only ten signatures are re quired to bring about such an election.- School directors 'ex pressed, the. hope ..that, taxpayers .will realize t this .. time; .that bv voting ves they do not .vote for more bonds: but merely students who departed for Salqm, Mass.to meet the high owiwi kuu ui ,uai ciujr m luo xurab ugxi eciiuut cruss-contin-ent interscholastic debate on May 7. . - Despite political promises of tax reduction and. a state wide clamor for termination of government fads, a summary of the laxes levied in the state of Oregon ;f or-the year 1926 based, on the tax rolls for 1925 showed a total of $44,795,048 or approximately $2,314,700 in excess of the amount levied in the year 1925 based on the tax rolls for. 1924. ' The levy for 1925 was $42,66038. The. state tax for the year 1926 is approximately. $291,000 less than in the year , 1925, while the county levy was reduced from $336,298 in 1925 to $3,540, 596 in 1926. The state tax levied in 1925 was $7,492i76ras against $7,200,830 for the year 1926. Total tax' levy for Mar ion county for the year 1926 is $1,869,966 and for Polk county $565,114. 5 . ' Thursday, April 22 ' The Oregon; Statesman issued its anhual'crude drug slogan number. " - Pollution of 'the -source of Salem's drinking water the era Case ed 15 chance from! opened their The 15th' child was born to a mother who if or -three months has tjeen an inmate of tbe asylum, (jommonly known as the statd hospital, : here Wednesday, j . , ; .u-Jii-The late "jTheodore Roose velt, great advocate of large families, did! not have '.this kind in mind! when he spoke of the responsibilities of the strong husband and the strong wife. By the birth in the asylum .Wednesday, the state's list oij potential wards was increased by one. Six teen members of the same family had Already been de clared incapable of living nor mal lives and had been con fined, to be supported by tax payers of the northwest for the remainder of their exist- ance. Ihese 15 children had no the day they leyes. The fath er was given a cell in the state penitentiary. He was trans ferred later to the asylum where he die. The mother's confinement proves how little she had to contribute to the mental vigor jof her offspring. Each . parent contributing weakness, of the 14 children preceding, the one born Wed nesday, one is in the Oregon state penitentiary, one is . in the Oregon state training school, one is in the Oregon Girls' Industrial school, one is in Jthe Oregon state institu tion for the! feeble minded. The remaining unfortunates, having entered the world without a chance, are in state institutions of Washington and Idaho. J Science has ended the pos sibility of continuation of this living tragedy, yet else where, unhindered, the same black story is being written by the intermarriage of hu- Witness this from Jefferson, man derelicts striking story! Missouri (By Cen ral Press.) JEFFERSON CITY, Mo April 25. (Four brothers, serving terms in the peniten tiary here, furnish criminolo gists' with j an interesting study. The Ibrothers, mem bers of the tJnderhill family of Neosho, ftewton county, Missouri, are serving .terms f Continued! on tg 4.1 Bible Supplies Prize film idea e ''( h.'X h'J i v ivX ' AVI V , : : '.;t - - - I j s , - - - ' l -J- - ' ' - ? Miss Catherine Comstock. 28, Long Beach, Califs Sunday school i teacher, wins first prize for having suggested Biblical story of the deluge for the themeibf a motion pic ture spectacle ' She made the suggestion in an international contest in -which 33,000 com- - . . i; .. J jr- -. ' - AT? THlS BEATON w v.44 z ftri ?.zyj-t-i -' " - NO NEWSPAPER COLYUM is complete , . , I . - , ... .I.'- WITHOUT SOME : REFER ENCE to the advisability, of r changin' froni winter to sum- ' mer lingerie. .-j'aarH i BM-ABJtoI think ; of any. wise-cracks on the sub-, ject and not . carin'. whether you change yours now or later I'm goin' to leave the matter entirely to your individual judgment. Let your consci ence be your guide, " - NO PARIONG" signs have proven effective , on our city streets. Why not "NO SPARKING? signs for the country by-roads ? i.i-r. WHICH LEADS me to- re mark that there's more atten tion paid the girth of a nation than th6 birth of a nation. . e'- :: " REPLYIN' TO IRENE; no my dear, a diva is a grand opera singer and not a sv.'im mingexpert. U- I IIAVE OFTEN wor.d-rcj if the man who calls the ti J.t.3 in a union station also nair.c3 the Pullman sleepers. 'STOP HOT to - wrfc i THIS WEEK'S prize winning ' I dumb-bell is the geek whos told the j census taker that his vo cation .was the last twd weeks in-August. ! . I "ONCE NOCED this sign near a cuspidor in a cigar . store: ."Don't Spitattit, SPIT. , INITi" : j " THEY USED TO SAY certain things would "spring up . lik : mushrooms." Now: they say i "Spring up like barbecue lunch stands on the highway." i . . . . . . . ." . . ' . fALSO . . . People used to "en- - joy" certain things. Now they "Getta Kick outa it." : Helpful Hints for Housewives i At this season of the year ' ; the busy housewife faces the problem of. providing ! dainty : dishes to tempt "the jaded ap petites of her family. The following recipe is recom- ; mended aa being particularly ' " suited to' spring, diet as it is rich in nutritive elements yet. tasty and appetizing, t It .also : contains a high percentage of Adenoid "A," ' - v j Spring Delight Take a loaf of soggy bread' and isoakt in- hot water over , night (see that the water is kept j hot' all night) , in the i -morning baste with vinegar and sweet spirits of ammonia," make a cream dressing of cod liver oil and powdered alum, x add a touch ' of garlic then throw it out the window and open a can of salmon. . . .ivfe-r .' 'S i FUNNY- thing, .but some of these? politicians never take the trouble to speak to -you until' they are' runnin for of fice 't . " "- THE REASON SOJIE men are hard boiled is because their :: wives keep them in hot water - most of the time, - - " .i i - A LOT of these candidates who are makin a big chatter about tax reduction would swing a big percentage of the wimmen's votes if thev wnnM Lcome out with a plan for waist reauciipn. . r V " . . i ( I sots is? Xte tnmtesss cf tlm&z isiQsi - ; ir iiujiiity la uwi ua au investigation pi tne iSalem r. .