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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 3, 1928)
THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON, FRIDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 3, 1928 TIT- Z " - . , J south of the city. He will spend over $100,000 of his own THE OREGON STATESMAN money-anddoesnotaskacentfromus. JL S Vf A -vr i . , . . it. .Ui,. nf .Cslom should be The btaiesRian oeneves laaued Iai'y tii-opt Monday ljr v T1IK STATESMAN pr HUSHING COMPANY 21 South Coromere-.al Street. S!m. OrrgoB K.J. Jrf 8. 4rtor Hendrieka MeSaerry -C. Curtia - D. Carlton Man fcotelia Bunch Manager Uj Ertitor Rrjorta Editor Roiety Id tar Lloyd F- gtiffl-r Sof.nntn;eB W H IiVnd-rioo. C:r.it:;-a .V:ani"er E. A P-ht-t-n i.iMtok d.tor W. C. Conner - - Poultry KditoT MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PBEBS . ... lt ,rl,..,. .,tit:..l In ti! lit- ft tintcba rradiwd to it or uot otficr is crditd tni "nj local newt pobnahcd hi rein. puD'trattco ol all a;ao u interested in outlining plans tor our iuvure new. r. want more cemeteries within th city or shall we require that all expansions and new sites be located farther out with view of fitting in with our future growth? out. Bod. But noDoay eie. "Very well. I'm going to wait until I see Mm and talk thing3 over before definitely accepting Carmody's offer." (To be Continued.) BUSINESS OFFICES: Umber Salaetod Oreion Kewppar Vacfir Coiat 8tTta.- It--.. Portland. Saturity H it. . San Aocelaa. Cbtmkrr tf Cenuuarce Hllg nDM F. Olark Ct . New York. 1 EUf-rr r.ttia Doty t'raaciacc. 8riroo ; lSlj'w. i.t V ; Ch fito. MariuMi1 B!g. Puiioeaa Offiro ... 2J ur 583 Boeiety Editor 109 TELEPHONES Kawa lVpi...2S cr 10? ,'ob JVpaitir.ai't Cjc ulati n )lfi'. .... 3 Eaterrd at tba Post 0(!ce ir Sa;-m. Or-.in. a i.t' c'aa matter. TVir Trm nd Industrial Magazine Section of the Sunday Statesman will cnotain some articles concerning the flax and linen industries that will be interesting and valuable. We are well on our way to epochal developments in these industries. February 3, 12 But of that day and hour knoweth no man. no. nt the angel Of heaven, but my father only. But a days of Nonh were, so -.al, also the coming of the Son of man be. Matthew 2 4 .".6 3 7. ON THE JOB The OUTER GATE By OCTAVUS ROY COHEN CES1EAL PRESS ASUS.. lac. The World And AH BV rHAttLES b. dwiscoii ,ber of the upper branch of congress-- ....aooaou i Hawley is the ranking member of tneLheRd You have that privilege. "I am much interested in getting allotment in connection with the deepening of the river between Salem and Port land, and will actively cooperate in improvement of the channel. Charles L. McNary, United States Senator.'' The above dispatch was received yesterday by Mrs. Emma Murphy Brown, who was the stenographer at the river im provement hearing on Wednesday. Senator McNary is strictly on the job. He has been on -the job ever since the project was officially given the sanc tion of federal law In the rivers and harbors bill signed a year ago m Janu- The clause in that bill was written by Congressman Haw ley and it authorized the examination by the United Stats" engineers, to determine the feasibility of maintaining a tv,o Willamette river the year through from "Portland to Salem. Both of the members of the Oregon delegation in con.-res who have their homes in Salem are strictly on the job. and both are influential. In several branches of legislation, Senator McNary is the most powerful mem Anrl r'.nntrrpssman ways and means committee, called the committee 01 tu. mittees, and the most powerful committee in either house And the ranking member is the working member. Iso piece of legislation carrying an appropriation gets by the ranking member of the ways and means committee without his scrutiny, no matter how large or how small the proposed ,iotin ninv hP. That is in the line of the duties of . . anrl Mr. Hawley is old fashioned enough to believe in attending to his duties, no matter how ffco tk mav be. And it is exceedingly exacting. Th rivPr imDrovement matter had to originate as it did. i. : rft,orirp Tt is now on the way. with a favor-j able hearing. The results of this hearing will go Wash ington If a favorable report is made by the men in high authority in the engineering department, which is a part t iv,a dPnartment. our Salem members of the Oregon delegation will be on the job, and no doubt the other mem bers, too . And the Willamette river will be improved as it should be. The chiefs of the engineers at Washington have the large ThPv aro nredisposed to the great project, and, from the .oa"t nrn,Prriin. we may well hope for the final con ...L.tinn- thP irreatest one accomplishment that can be had in favor the development of the great W illamettt vallev. TiaptT 17 SHE did not speak. She sat looking at his averted face, the deeply chisck-d profile, the lines of torture about the corners of eyes and lips, the stooped shoulders. then she had begun yearning oveT him because she understood every last agonizing detail of the battle which he faced. His situation 1m presaed her as being so hopelessly unjust. Toward him would be di rected all the Impertinent curi osity which society reserves for the ex-convict; the Inherent dls- TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO o o (From columns or tne riaies- . t , n a , man. t-eDruary , sv- r Sujvivors of the Fir Oregon Cavalry and the r irst uregon in fantry met here yesterday. t -n-niri Ua a fine thine for Oreeon to have a governor's man sion. The E. N. Cooke residence Is suggested. Street Commissioner Grlswold asked the council last nigni ioi another boy and another horse to aid in street work. New York James J. Corbett igned contracts for a twenty- round fight with James jenneb. The purse is $25,000. Within a few weeks the great Siberian railroad which spans six thousand miles of wilderness will be ready for ajl kinds of traffic. thf. MORNING ARGUMENT AUNT HET Bj Robaurt Qnillea iAA rim orf t 1 V Iter Uivr auirj vj .. -..- i j f above the clatter of silverware andjtrust of anyone who has lived in- : voluntarily uc m n u i iha shatter of conversation. of a prison 1 , . u.nlf that tha man trying to tell wouiu rtm.uu Occasionally society "What are you me?" -Nothing." "Are you sure?" "Yes. I'm Just a fool, Kathleen. I'm no good. I can t think of any thing except Borden. I hate the man so deeply I'd kill him If I had the nerve and that's rotten. What right have I " "Stop. Bob please. Iet me something. There isn t dui thing in the world I truly hateand that's a quitter. W hen you tell me that you want to get even with Borden. I can applaud von because it takes a degree of O" Bits For Breakfast - I say one You hate- and only strong men ran hate as you do. But for God's sake do winething. I've watched you, I've suffered with you'. I know vou. And I d rather see you working with Carmody. doing some of the things which he would J was Innocent, that he should never have been in that prison; but the fact remained that he was brand ed for life as different His voice brought her back to the immediate moment. "Vnn would really marry me Kathleen?" She did not evade. "Yes." "Oh " He looked away from her; but whether into the past or the fu ture, aha conld not tell. And be cause she was Intensely a woman, she questioned him: "Do you want me, Bob?" "Want you?" He swung back to her and she taw a flare of wild passion tn his eyes. "Want you? Good God! Can you doubt that? Haven't you known it always? From the moment I saw you In Carmody's office? Haven't you felt it every second we have been together? I can't talk. I have forgotten how but most especial- ask you to do and which tnejly j cannot talk about this you t .i ... vtsri than AAA i world wouiu irumi iivi.. i"-.. ana me She traced on the tablecloth vou continue to do nothing. That is why I am so insistent; u is cause I have thought so much about you. and hoped for you." "Why?" His voice was sharp and direct. "Recsuse vnn re sorry for She hesitated, then with a quick, impulsive gesture placed her hand over his. "Bob." she aid. "a minute ago you were try ing to tell me something. r " it V He looked at her in a panic, ins i .iiinrtofl IDll Ills blurred. "I I" "Will it make it easier for you to say it. Bob if I tell you that I love you?" ABOUT CEMETERIES The erything. into Gladstone once said that the degree of civilization ot any re, pie can be reckoned by their burial customs the manner in which they care for their dead. Cemeteries are recog- n;-ed necessarv. We cannot no wmwui inc.... hlTve suitable ites set apart for the last resting places of Such olaces are hallowed by the most sacred oi t ruder thoughts. Our idea of a cemetery 1I1I.IIIVM 11 v-."-- r..wrilv based on the kind of cemeteries .we have l.,i 'l the last decade many new idtas have been .'.h r,..t And the modern cemetery is very different from first tirue, ,t ca 4un M fA.hionPd "churchyanr of our grandfather's time, perhap, there was The automobile has had its effect here as in many few , , j ,.nmofnn(i! worp neressaiuv horse ana nearse uap ...t..-, . before. close in to population centers now me ...an., wa c. - declaration had sprung un few minutes for an auto- from her lips. She juntas .... ,., . . cities erow and expand u is un- not tnougni oi For a single glorious moment, the world stopped. Bob's heart was pounding, his eyes were wide. he trembled. thine seemed unreal. Ev- j for that matter. b seemed unreal since the day ne hack into the world as unceremoniously as had been snatc-ne.i iron. n. But. looking through the naze the twin stars oi ai'w" i 1 ... - Shannon's eyes. i;od mc ...-v this Instant marked the com mencement of a new epoch m nis life He felt a sense of warm gratitude for that and. for the me to mm mat something of happiness left for him. And be Kathleen knew that he knew the oVl wrniid understand, she IS bee n othev was i .fa w nprpns a nv vcti k'j ne w pnases oi mmC. . - ..Ah-mn haDDV than she had JUV. UIV.W I f F J Those in use for The at oh Kathleen!" he said length. "Oh. Katnieen: That was all. They were oonv- to everytnine in the world had It- -nor welgnea mobile procession. As cities gruv. "j: , it had seemed the common history that old cemeteries are encompai frank" and natural thlng to do ...,f fniinrl LnH eho rltd it without hesitation. Salem proudly boasts of her fourscore y irtory without mock -desty. jithout She has grown from a pioneer settlement on the banks of Me aud her eye9 verjr darU the Willamette to a modern city of over 2-,000. She will as ghQ watched the effect on the eontinue.to grow and her area ill expand accorcH,, Not -. the least of many things to oe coniu future is the location of our cemeteries i j.. ..,,nriari v.v- siihnrhan homes. years are atreauy ?ui ."uuui.u M iimH in rea and must eventually expand or new sites .c ""- ... jjii: loi v-o fnnnd. In fact one cemetery is now planning an auunum thGmselves and this exquisite nf twelve acres to their present site. What of the future? moment-and then his voice Shall we permit additions to the cemeteries rtreaay in .g-r , rme;thal city? Or shall we require mi an no. r 1 Kathleen? iiefnrps out to care for our future needs? , :..t .-ra.A V,t tVtPv are nublic Drop- "Bi Cemeteries are jjhwucij r , - r- . - ialibird. I'm' erty in the sense that every citizen has a vital interest m you nob An1 ,t lsn t v,;- iinn and manacrement. Our laws have recognizeu f&Ir that you 9nould not Kno this in placing them under the zoning commission, which, must approve their sites. . A recent number of the American Magazine contains a most interesting description of a park cemetery at Mar shalltown, Iowa, a city of some 18.000. Their cemetery is a wonderful park of rare beauty. It is an attractive spot uAra riilv visit to enjoy its beauty. Children play there and lovers .troll thresh Its beautiful waHcs. One sucTwaik is actually christened "Lovers' Lane." The place . . xi Au;jaaa anrl HpTiression common to most has lost an me iuuiiu.i0 --- 'Yes, Bob. I mean it." Rut vou couldn't. I'm no good. He bit his lip. "Do you love ... . .-..on 1 nsl me, Katnieen u a 1 J sorry?" "Can't you look at me and an swer that for yourself?" Her eyes compelled him . ii waa gloriously n . ... . A In -i..- r-pmptAries. It Is used alike Dy an ciu. 1 , Tfa pld for the Door. None is needed, for in ere is no ruit a , . the purest can Uy away their loved one, where beauty it . , nmnarfv ff all. bur Chamte o? Commerce listened the other dav to the . -.. . c m.rn mmtleman to establish such f Sark He his f eady esUshed I r . txi-v n.iifArnia. Los Angeles has three, trbS forty acre sit. about four miles and with the tip of her slender finger, and a wistful little smile played about her lips. "I exnect TTncle Todd in a week." she said. "He will be eur prised." "Will he?" The question came naturally, without thought of Its penetration. Perhaps not. she answered gravely. "He loves us botn very dearly." "We will tell him together. "Yes. It will make him happy "It will. Queer man Todd.' "Queer. And lovable. Natural lv honest, naturally decent yet with a mental quirk which occa sionally overbalances his brain. He hinm nerhaDS he will again." Not with us!" He stopped r,nrt pnri etared at her. v nen will we be married, Kathleen?" And now her bravery vanished and it was she who looked away f.ove-making had seemed so saf.e and wonderful in the crowded res taurant. The merest mention o murrla eta her exauisite bod went .old and then hot. For few moments she was Just plai woman. J "Not now. Boh." j "Why?" "We must wait." "For what?" "You. You must pull yoursen together. You must do something I love you. Bob and I wouldn't hurt you for worlds but can't you realize that I couldn't live on mniiov which Peter Borden was ... . . . . j od-tnir vnil" Bob felt himself shriveling. For the first time since leaving the penitentiary, he experienced a sense of shame over his anomal ous position in the Borden home. He was eating the bread and sharing the root of the one person in th world whom he hated. He possessed nothing that was not given him by that man and the fact that the thing was equltame did not alter the situation. "if I did something? If I went to work for Carmody?" "Then when you were able and wanted me. I would come to you." He gazed levelly at her, and she quivered to see the smoldering flames. "You understand one ihinir Kathleen I hate Peter Borden." "I understand." "From the day I went to prison I swore I was living for one thing: to make him suffer. That has been my single idea since I came out. Perhaps that Isn't heroic . . v. , V I V. 1 but it Is tne one iuiug u.v.i shall .do. Much as I love you and you don't know how much that is I could never be happy 'until I had maae uoraen uuuci-; tund from personal experience what It means to suffer. know how I shall do it "Well on its way S Still water In Willamette S A good hearing; then a favor able report, and the Oregon dele gation in congress will do the rest S S It is strange that the up river cities apparently took no interest in the river improvement hearing Do the people up the valley think tht la a Salem nroiect? It cer tainly is. But the improvement will by no means stop at Salem. It will go up to Eugene, and perhaps beyond in time. . S There Is a fine movement on for better community club work in Marion county. - The full co- peratlon of all the commirnitie6 will be a good thing for the whole county. Mark McCallister, corporation commissioner, is to take run harge of the probe at Portland f the smash of the Overbeck and Cooke company. He will have his hands full; and perhaps his nose. too. Prisoner ;Just back from rial) Hurrah, fellas! I m crazy. I do not know what a clean-cut young man is. All my life I have heard about clean-cut young men. and I have lain awake nights hkminir mvself for my stupidity wan I haave never known what was meant. Everybody else nrelv knows, or everybody else wouldn't be using the expression so often. Tn what makes a young mani clean-cut? And iHn't th?re any chance for a clean-cut man? Has anybody even seen a clean-cut girl, old lady, baby or street car conductor? What Is the young man who isn't clean-cut and how may I know him when I see him? Might T oU h.YYl ii.rTV-CUl II Wa X Oil Uia quite the opposite to the clean cut fellow? My own idea is thet a clean-cut young man is one who resembles the young man in tne couar au. Cnder twenty-three, well-dressed, freshly shaved, with regular fea tures, and with a slightly go-Bei-tm Dersonality. Am I right or wrong? And even If I am rigiu. why call the poor fellow ciran- cut? If I have defined the clean-cut . 1 .. Yi Vi a (c young man corrects . u." u lust one of many destraDie anu rleservln rOUDK men. f or many e "I know I'm a sentimental old fool, but 1 wish Pa had kissed my hnitd when we id set an' remember I'm wore out after a day's wash in . t Copyright. POOR PA Bj CUocie Call t.vJ) Ik it whei 02S. rullir.era Pynd:cat. ) . . . . fi . rnj- . !.... to nil u ii w am i iifctia. - was young so ar. u. n i lege tor ioree iuu8 j-.-, sorter talks against too mucn eu id eation." .Copyright. 1928. Publi.hera SypJicat ' FIREMEN TREAT ASTHMA it pulmotor squad Is.t night to CHICAGO. Feb. 2. ( AP) treat a case of critical asthma. Ox Unable to get a physician prompt-' wag pumped into Mrs. Seipp's or i u u. . v--'wv Cheer up! ; Perhaps the popula- lon really isn t as dense as it ap pears at the main street intersec- lons. "- S "Kills son for no reason, says newspaper headline. And so ... . . ... j many ratners naving sum swu cause: Trellent fellows are past 23. have irregular features, and are a trifle diffident. But undoubtedly 1 have envisaged the clean-cut young man incorrectly, for I do not know what he Is. T do not know how to play bridge, who invented the suspen der, whether monkeys ever Lare born twins, how to drive a car how to calm an exited woman at a fire, anything about the fourth dimension, why gold is tne stan dard of money values, who killed Rasputin, why I continue to pay tribute to hat-snatchers at res taurants, who invented tne mea that Mary Garden is a great winter, how the mother whale trains her babies to swim, how to tell when Easter comes withoui looking at the calendar, how table- tinners make the tables tip, or why astronomers so often fall to predict comets accurately. I do not know whether Rich- mend P. Hobson ever ememuer the days when he was being kissed by moia wrfmen than ever kissec any other man. I do not know whether the women who kissed him now .ell' their daughters about how they fought madly for that kiss, and whether they now consider that i was worth while : ; ; SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County or Marion. Department No. 2 Paul R. Wandrey, riaintur, vs. Bertha Wandrey, Defendant. To Bertha Wandrey. me aoove named defendant: In the name oT The State of Ore gon, you are required to appear and answer the complaint rneci against you in the above entitled court and suit, on or before the 2nd dav of March. 1928. and if you fail to so appear and answer ;aid complaint, for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief prayed for iu such complaint, to-wit: for a de cree dissolving the bonds of mat rimony now existing between the plaintiff and the defendant, and for such further relief as may ne equitable; and you will take no tice that this Summons is perved upon you by publication thereof in the Oregon Statesman, a news paper published at Salem, Marion f'ounty, Oregon, for the period of onee a week for four weeks, pur suant to ah order of the Hon. L. H. McMahan. Judge of said Court made at Salem. Oregon, on the 3rd tfav of February. 1928: and that the date of the first publica tion of this Summons is the 3rd dav of February. 1928, and that the laRt nublication thereof will be on the 2nd day of March, 1928 JOHN BAYNE. Attorney for Plaintiff F3-10-17-24M2 T do not know what to do for mv rold what to say to my chil dren when they tell me there is no Santa Claus. how to make fire iih Hr utirks. why so many buildings have loose windows how to Dut a ribbon on a type- writer, how to thread a neeaie why anybody wants anybody else to go to the South Pole, or what iv.o trnin-r-nller is saying at any s;iven moment of time. Care of FARMER WOMAN IN OKL Krause Assorted Chocolates 60c Quality 32c a Lb. Two lbs. 60c Week End Special Only at Schaefer's DRUG STORE 135 X. Com'l St, Phone 107 The Tenslar Agenry ORIGINAL YELLOW FRONT Thu hahv has never had a dav'Biwhy physicians tell parents they ,JnLbfd never a cross or fret- may use It freely with chlldr.n o ful epell that lasted an hour. And any age the youngest miani. what do you suppose is responsi- nu mcy Jle o! Vis "healthy, happy condi- One word lhZ ,ion? Not diet., for he haseaten pure real C-torl- Fletcher Just about anymmg auu "'rctr. And with thtnsr a child COUlU eai. nu aiuu r , . rgV ?orChedhas not been dosedlevery bottl t comes a boo. o. with opiates; he has never u. ; ------ .d tft Anv drop of paregoric. isor nas mother. So. sensible mother ever maae "1. 7; HrM,Ist vou ,., castor oil Yet nis nervea .remrujuc. . -. arfsound and his little bowels arejwisb Fletcher's Castoria .i.n. ond when he does seem . a the least restless or wakeful, o out of sorts or likely to be his. mother has him all serene agam ""vv.vvNyv in ten or fifteen minutes! .fr ' c- i th aoret nf this comolete free- vi I . . Z dom from the many His and up sets so common to infants? Plain old-fashioned Castoria. A million and more mothers swear Dy . a torla. and no wonder! A few drops and an approaching fever. rQlic. diarrhoea or constipation stems to vanish in thin air. Cas- oria is purely vegetable; that is. Children Cry for AHOfilA fl She vivid: I don't 1 don't Praises Lyd E. PinkW't Vegetable Compound Because It UaTe Her Health and Strength In a sunny pasture In Oklahoma, a herd of sleek cows was grazing-. They made a pretty picture. But the thin woman in the blue checked apron Elghed as she looked at them. She was tired of cows, tired of her tedi ous work in the dairy. She was tired of cooking tor a houseful of caring for her BylTiraSimtto SanFrancisco Try Our 35c Dinner SOUP, MEAT, VEGETABLES, POTATOES, BREAD, BUT- "TEltdiOFFEE arSiDESSERT Included Sandwiches, Pastry. Hot Dinner Sand wiches and Coffee served 8:00 A. M. to 6:30 P. M. PEERLESS BAKERY 170 N. Commercial St. eyes and hair of midnight lip when. But lf tnere is a sin- coral and cheek, of rose WJ .mblon in my soul, that 1. it. there was In her whole attitude wouWn.t be fair to you- the manner of a woman who wr- And underBUnd uniiart to the man sue Iiva. Kathleen was too strong a cnar acter to regret what she had done: too sure of herself to harbor petty feara that she perhaps had over-.t-nr,d the bounds of contention. . v And, most important or au. m knw herself. She lored Bob Trrv: she realised now that she had lored him almost iron. v noment when he had stepped Into he Carmody offices, pallia. oro ,n and bitter. The maternal In stinct had flamed Into life, and ) boarders, besides own family. The burdens or ure: seemed too heavy for her failing health. She had lost confidence in herself. One day she began talcing Lydla E. Plnkham'a Vegetable Compound I, j t0k ana ner im 1 OO, BOO. l !. ftillv Knw Y.s-1 do. That. too. ;r ETSka. "S heVVrVwTthoutVny a nopeieij nu j tronbie, sleeps wen ana is no ioagr But I must he nonesi. i i w",cblue and tired. In your place, i snoum cn same way." The bond between them was ce mented moTe firmly. They were in.. in this thing. The girl did not quibble. She accepted nis hatred as human and strong ana natural. "We'll tell Todd when he comes TV.. . nrnm an Tra Cora Rhort. Tt- ft 9, Box 887, Oklahoma City. OKla.. writes: "Everybody now says: 'Mrs. Short, what are you doing to your elfT I weigh 1S5 and my weight ; before I took It was u&. i nave taken seven bottles of the Vegetable Compound.' Are you on the Sunlit Road U Better Health! Senu tton m Ily lw w wmy Special Trains every Sunday, Tuetdsy and Fri day. Warmth; comfort; speed. Diner and lunch ox; free ob crratioo lounge. )0 pounds frc baggage ilkrwince. Leave here . . '11:43 a.m. Arrive San Francisco 10: 50 ajn. Connects with day train to Los Angeles ; ooly o night enroute. IPa City Ticket Oftire 184 N. Liberty Phone SO KBd 41 3utdo Hoj-Anaie Mf Life.-farter BECKE & HENDRICKS 180 N. High Ttdepbone.161 FREE VOTING BALLOT Thia ballot is good for 200 vQftillr.inHcandldat6 In The Oregon Statesman Subecrtjitktt Ctuhpaign, whose name is written oil it. Do not lold. Trim.- Name 1 Address ? VOID AFTER MARCH 10TH, 1928 ANYONE CAN VOTE 6fcFRIENDS