The Oregon St a tesman Imi4 Dally Iiwpt KTy THE STATESMAN PL" BUSH ISO COMFAXY VSIt Saats Careil Btmi !. OttfN It. J. Bwcttaks Irl ft. MeSaarry -Rl C. Oartia - - 'Hmr O. Cartaae Vaa.far nTsaaatac Eaitae . - Clljr Mitor Apart E4tMr SacUty Z4mw K.lfc H KUtalar. A.rtitBf Xaaar w n HmJ.tms. Cimla.U.B litMM K. A. Mwui - LI ktita or aUteaa raila M tool mi alia. A MAAIlnA la wlMily awtlae' t tta aaa 6n peeaaatfee Ji5 U r Mt at.arwiaa araalwa t tab 9 w to tt ParUaa. SnarUy 1BI1IIII ITTOBi BJac.; Cm l rraacuca. a 07 B44.-. 1 niMt f. CUtt Ot. Maw Taw, lit 1S W. tl(t Ft.; CVeC. Jfrtt BMa. BuhNf Offtea St r M Sacirty ftwM 1H TSXxvBonA leva Pa2 w 1M gataraa at tfea.Paat tftea to. Ortfaa. aa' W-rteto 5. 12S Then .hall two U la the field; the on shall be UUn. and toe other left. Two vodms ehall be grltKlnt at the xuill; the one .ball be ukn; and the other left. Matthew 24:40-41.' THE DANGER OF A BIGGER NAVY JoSffifi tt rTftl Bargain Houeo U America is in danger of being committed to a course away from constructive efforts for world peace, tbe ultimate ef fects of which may be. to place upon this country respomu bUity fjijiur.;Sfcon believes that even the moat ardent r bigjawj jatneiiU mre diabolical enough to have any such ndiaTiewSr - , " : r VBut H iaevident that they have little realization of the ' - lutrrowness, darkness and ignominy to which they would commit America at a time when she has opportunity for an unusual place of leadership and responsibility in constructive effort and example in behalf of world peace. What are the plans? In brief, this is the big navy pro gram: , . '"" ." The bill before congress now proposes to buiw iu,uw ton cruisers, 32 big submarines, 9 big-destroyers and 5 air-, plane carriers a total of 71 ships at a cost ofJT40,000,000. This is the first of four five-year programs, the total to cost $2,600,000,000 x .. . And the building and manning of the new ships would raise the annual cost of our navy to more than a half billion dollars a year and increase our federal taxes by more than 1200,000,000 a year. . The program is, definitely competitive; the plea made for Xit is an effort to "attain parity" with the British navy. Then- if the British navy increases, this program will in crease. The criminal "race in armaments" will be on. tv. aott, nrnvoeative. It win challenge Great Brit ain and Japan to build feverishly, to the point of bank- nrntcv. or to form another Anglo-Japanese alliance It is a denial of our national will to world disarmament . r TT.tmnA riioarm while We 8X111. It ana peace, we uijjc - is hypocritical. It harks back to the stress of the Napol r. to the ambitions of the holy Roman empire ' ,. i t rrr a n hoW nor an empire i back to wnicn' wna cjwic 4U v.iwiv Hava nf the dark tast. . . . ... . iji - i tv.. Jnfltionpo unn A crisis in relation to wona peace, m.u - THE OREGON STATESMAN. SALEM. OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY S, 1923 wtVM im mw thm other itMjsttnz connaittee of that body T la thA eommittM ox comxnltttea,- - - Aid It ITthe most"p6werfulcommlttee In congresa. lt doM hoth orifffnate or naaa on all revenue measures, and it does have the last word In all lesgialation carrying appropria tions. Consult the shades of Uncle Joe, Cannon. Keaa tne m a - MT -AMMMafl news 01 me proceeaiuKs . . Uoin. fin asanu T x- Mr. Hawtey is actually one of the most powenui memoerai u at lvS u 14l center, cor of congress. More than this, ha is one of tht hardest work- w.ur T -J ing memDers 01 eixner nouae. yuc r w t fet. ThU was a warehouse the best posted member of either Drancn m me Wl lB ,mi,r d.y., and it ha. aMAaanaMa ' Ha WB ATI U1I UUUZCk 1 mMlClilT riOlllU. reYCUUW Hiranima. . I' " . . .v i. , 1 tZ Um W conunitte-nd nunjr otter re cu- u - mittees. fa on the retet committee ol tne iwo nou. 4 h, blxk we ot r-nn nMvliirino nrairram I Or I ; . vi.ii rtiimnd In unow, aevising a wnuw new -.---- . . --, - tne COantry ana vue - nr.wv. .ronrletor. . has The great majority of the people or ws ouwkj 2Z" i W it Van. He w Congressman Hawiey ; but m-jpeat niany of them do not i part ot cUrB uf.. Many peo- appilste his abiUtr and industry ana mgn snu w -J. extent-they actually, observe. ateinbock would start p aain. V - ' " ' ' .. He flUs a need. He buy ererytliUif There is printed in another part of The Statesman ol tms from a needie to a .tea engine -r M.n.i mvtncrlR. u nf m tbomands of talnai morning n article written oy non. v.. - ' - ; Taat Wd otherwi so to was. the inside story of the struggle to secure the location oi xne KrtTrtAlng u under one roof at Salem United States Indian training school at Chemawa. tb4 Baw pUc,. u to Just north ot "Afl of which I saw and part of which I was," Mr. Moores the big bridge. The ..me phone AU Oi wiutu a w tr" ,. namber as before, 398. mizht say in historic language concerning the struggle out amnerj ; " ... . . a . tATTlA O T I Mesa. of which came the, institution to its now Bpu " RUM BARON GOES rntc rn. csr, -maill hMrinnlnsrs. it grew ana uma. all the intervening years done splendid work for Indian oimatead ReieaMd Temper- youth, and it is now the oldest Indian training sca.u a, " " the service, and tne nest eqmF 7 ""l 8EATTLE. Feb. 4. (AP). By OCTAVUS ROY COHEN heat, and gradually it is increasing its lead in the last namea Roy. olm,tea4 former mm baron -Tv.....llW W to the traditions Of CarUsle, which nf the Pacific northweat was a .vwiuuw--". - ;otimied dtrrinir the free man tonight. He was re- the . Oldest SCUOOi anu V " heaaed from the King county jail The first lnter-school debate In which the Salem high school par ticipate, will be a dual match with the CorralU. high on February IS With only a week and a day in which to put the finishing touches .nmnti. members of the teams under the direction Bailey, debate coach. The question for discussion is wo . u v,n-,rnrMnpnWiMl. That Oregon should guiding Of humanity in right airecuons, uc " V' Ldopt an integrated system of ex has never faced before, is involved m these proposals ior I Te adminUtration reorganiza - KWpr raw. tion along the lines of plans re- was World war. READ THIS FIRST: Bob Terry la releaaed after .erring three year, in prtsoa for a crime he did not commit. Peter Borden, his employer, waa chletty responsible for sending him there. bellenng it hi. "duty,- he putl it with Bob, release. Borden? take him to his home and offer. to share hi. fortune beeauae ha is sorry for him. Bob Terry aecepts Bordea'a hospitality bat deter mine, to make him auffer a. he has suffered. Ia Borden, homo. Bob moeta his daughter. Loi. whom ha has always admired from afar. Bob also meet Jtaxajeon Shannon, niece of his prison pal. Todd Shannon. Kathleen 1. John Carzaody'a private secretary. Car mody 1 the state, political boa. and is a criminal lawyer. Car mody also hate. Borden and de termines to get him through Bob Terry. He offer. Terry a position in the law office. Borden, boat- nee, associates are taktsg him to task for permitting Bob Terry to stay- at his home. John Merii weather. Borden, bu.lnes. rival. i. particularly angry about it. John Carmody sends for Bob and urges him to come into his law office. He counts on Bob, help to get even with Peter Borden. Bob and Kathleen go to lunch to gether and in a taxi returning to the office Bob klase. Kathleen. Carmody learn, that Kathleen and He shone with admiration. "And tne haneh la that you want to keep in Intimate touch with Borden'e af faire so aa to help this kid out by scheme ior mm up a when he posted S5,00 bond on .1 ...4l.r aralnut one uuuoi vuu n.L i- i i. i..in. 1S:,,I.. . , .J Kl. DO IB J -u AiA nnf find India Uie iana OI reugiuusuum ana we. - nrtw n,anB tn Boh ., weir , 'tiSmm weak minded people who -onal recogninc otnr. ln Sincerity. and all Uiat, wnjen raauy fkJwai recently arretted when re- henchmen. Whispering there affirm, me peopie ox teased frem McMeu isa ia. WeaTen .AAA LAtAii m a. viTTtaaa in i riHir i ueauuis i fiiaia i u whole. But they are wuu yem .L " court', rnliag oa the legality off Tfp ... . a mwtt t h a iirni.iouH orsica vn . . . m s- fanaticism .and caste " lerldence onwme I 7 ..Cood nouah" The big . . .a a. a. mawma no lmnn. . a-. a. y their tempJeTand gnats tnat go unaer vc , t.iepaone w, . ,owera tlmMlf Into a chatr . IV' vVi otm.te.d Und produced a cigar. "What. DEBATES OPBI Ml DUAL MATCH WITH CORVA1,- LU SET FEBRUARY IS "Nothing. . ...-I.. mnr hail." Olnastead The personal prereronces o. . . wrong?" editors seemed to run cioseiy wbiwu mm - " " , . . .i t. wn bmtIobi Instance, nan tne .taie-wiae . I ZT.Z' -f.ifj-l "Oh rnm now. Chief nrea. Of the editor, expressing ipeeted ny uirnsww I 7 T, I " ,, ' , pc . w-. wMfiL. f.iUii to annear for trlal.l Carmody smiled wryly ..- n,.urHMrr has n. i. th. last one of H eonylcted lg wrong, exactly," he evaded Vr r:ri:' a tbiwi.; : .-itora Uk.n to the-But certain thing, are taking Louden 'has 6 firsts. 16 seconds penitentiary, to e released from ,hape and 17 thirds; Dawes naa i I custody. 15 seconds, and. 12 thirds; Boran I want Noth some informa- has 5 f ita. 1 second and 1 third ;Uj0R sic UIT CALIFORNIA Hurh has 2 firsu, C seconds O I vniwo im Hugh and 3 thirds. their arguments, members or puilip I KUNTZ DIES teams are working dlligenUy fnlLir J. INUfllt Italph of Mild Tornado Sweep Across State; Wind and Rain TeH t ra AWfiTP.T.rcs. Feb. 4. (AP) HERE AT AGE SEVENTY wlndstorms and heavy rain. . in- . . "twister which (Continued from Page One) .inin a. mild iwisici damaged real estate offices, priv- rarages and c&icaen cau, - U. XTnnt. wt. IUMM.M mree . - t-Ii-i. nllfornU today tntendent or scnoois m "i yu passed the Oregon bar Santa Ana in V. rt t u a toS nrdvfnnt T was wlnliea DT m wUTVWfc lie uavi f " 1915 he examinations, I . . . . . fK IMU1IU.UVU.. . 1 . , . I rrZ , inn fnrrP would turn our nation ill- ;eut.y aaopiea m . u - " studled law in Illinois and had of dipping wa-. i ine yivyvaoi . f Aafone er American states, isaoei v.n Dased the minois bar. but had fore 8 a :iu. t- iV.a nlano nf reasonable nrovision tor aeien&ei nnilth rimDoae the sa-l ,..J L ioi rv iiauiv li viii i-v - - i anu - Ju.t be- whose never practiced. In 1923 Kuntz aipiiM3 tically all oi nis me auu ue .7 V . A ,vii,ani demolished: 300 U 4V,f .Atinltm rivah-V in naval armament ;em negative team which will en An inAATIA nd inercwsable' attitude. ; Te physkal e. of Americans is pot in any vivai the question win be upheld yearg f dpnendent UDon the sea and upon tne navy in me way i ,t corvaiife by Annaoei rooze ana i " - a t '1.-1 i - d.u.A Wo-IuMa dam it ttdb saninr mm - it tu i : a o r Krimin i! i nun uci iniiir iwoo va o the physical Hie OI ine pWpiC vt. " . " Th. aonearanc -B 1 " .AlfJ neTi"n ivi r w f nnnIant Ours is the one nation tnai cuum i.vi . ftf th .nminstion tour- , usnn. Mm forlwere 'I iV , j.:.t inonlratinn tnward a reduction ml , - .h. Hl.trlrt. and de- , . nr.Mtr-l kfllad and a thousand or more - the WOria very uuimic uojit - - uauiui.... ineariy o jcmn. -- vnP T,val armament V w" IT. ..: v a"y au ol.lue U1f." I -htffd bout and dam . , , il: Mqsnnahlo airy, o r s 1 the loatte nere. xic - And the fact that we COUIO ao mis wim concerned. Other schools enter- Kn,eht of Pythla.. safety to ourselves makes the iaea oi vast imi cjiau- are Daiia. Fails city, mae- tragic from the stanapoim ox f - routTict wta are to vie for CUBA DEFENDS YANKEE vancemeni oi worm peace. ithe gtate championship It is tracric that ten years after the war to end war, in r tion. "I'm the man who can get it "It s Borden as usual. I un derstand his company has been tnreadine out a little too thin What do you know about it?" "Plenty. They're solvent, of course, but they haven't any cash ind can't get any. They've let the 'ease run out on the old plant and the new one isn't finished ome sort of trouble they've had with the contractor. If they clamp iown on him, he goes bankrupt ind they get lots of satisfaction and no cash. About all they can do is to finance him through on a share-an-share basis, take an original loss, and get going ln the new nlant right away. But that m.. me -siwiiu. antics closely resembled a tornado - .nnninuH .n..n . wMt residence awiu" w as aywwimvu ilu - . . v " sage with the Corvallis afflrma- f th or Salem, a estate office Into so mucn 'moMtakes money and they haven't live here, while the affirmative of posltlon whicD he held for nearly and carried the remain, across l"rUny street. Judge Kuntz had been a mem-. Diving WZlVZ Wrm ber of the Methodist cnurcn prac- tion wi. dam- ivVir Amorim pniraired with unselfish purpose, that we a-a - z o are tending to reproduce in our own life and action the ob- Bits For Breakfast I NICARAGUAN POLICIES (Continued from Page One) garages aged. residence was - . aged ln the 30 blocas area -fected and It only .lightly. The estimate of the total damage waf J5.000. 'Sure?" "Positive. Hartnell at the Fourth National turned them iown and you know damned well they wouldn't have tried Hartnell if they hadn't been to all the other, first." The whisper of Weaver's voice fell soothingly on Carmody's ears "Hartnell turned them down?" "Certainly." "Why?" "No security. They've borrowed -in to the hilt on the security they're bt. The nlant Is mort thinking That it?" Weaver rooe. "I got you. Til x.rt the srum.hoe squad right out (... mora rood dope for yen by tomorrow afuraoon." Ha paaaea with hfa hand on the door. ' Toca Shanaon get. out ia' a few daya.", -Tvo figured that, too." n rwered Camody. drylr- "Ho, ery fond of Bob Terry. rtnmg for him-" - Or with him. eh?" "Yes." whi.nerlnr Willie Weaver hook hla head in amusement th hand von one thing. Chier what you want, you get. 1 "You think? ao?" "I know it!" jakn runadr'i eves turned to ward tbVdoor which led to Kath- . . .... . lean , otiice. nu iwa scruUble and hi. answer seemed to Weaver unduly emotional. "God know. I hope you re right." Todd Shannon came through the eatea. hi. atep aa eular and rhythmic a. Bob's had. been, his mwmm riiatjittlnsr -eaaerly. hi. tre mendous shoulders clearing a path for himself In the press of pas sengers. - Kathleen and Bob Terry were there to meet him. Their greet ing, were simple. Kathleen of rrA hnr lins and he held her (tlaht against him for a moment Then he turned and caught bod s hand in a bone-crushing grasp "Bob!" "Todd!" Th trio naaeed through the waiting room and into a taxi. Kathleen gave her home address and the car shrieked its way through the late afternoon traffic Todd Shannon lay back In the unaccustomed luxury of an uphol stored seat. His gray eyes caught the scene of bustle and activity and freedom, and he sighed deep- 1t. "God!" he said reverently "this is good." Kathleen covered his hand with hers and a contented smile crossed the lips of the giant ex-convlct. He talked not at all, but he under itood much which made him hap , . I. pv. lie was conscious oi iue uuuu ith this vounz man whom he loved and the girl who was daughter to him. There was no mistaking the occasional glances which passed between them. But Todd's chief Interest was ln the boy whom he had last seen through the Iron bars of the state penitentiary that hour when he had presented him with the tiny pagoda carved with an old razor blade from a filched bit of cedar. It was Todd Shannon who saw the change in the lad: the touch of color In the cheeks which had briihtsMs J "rr" turn or ponw- .v::.. the .trailhtonmg ; f f taa shannon was glad. He had fatherod Bob 'J cause he MUmW imubcuhv Bob did net boloaf there, bocauw ho needed ahelter from the others In that coavict environment. Now It appeared to him that Kathleen had performed tno - miraele of miracles, that bo had keened Bob, interest ii Ufa by focussing m. tnt. rests In herself. Tbe worth, at that rnomenx. very good to Todd. $ They earn to At he boarding house where Kathleen lived. Sher had a large room ot her own and had engaged one tor Toaa, in this room a table waa set and Kathleen had arranged with the boarding houM mistress ior me serving of a .impia aeiicaiesseR supp.r. They Ulked little through the meaL There was a much unaaid. and tacuiy wy awaited the peaceful afUr-meal hour when they eouia taia turbed. And then finally the dUh- were cleared aay. and Kath leen presented her uncle with a box of fragrant elgr. and a pair of carpet aUppor.. They .at to- gather. Todd 7 Kathleen and Bob opposite oa the ' .. . (To bo Conunuea.j Thls is Y.W.C.A week a cordial welcome by every one- Because they represent a vita' community need. The Y. W. for session with, military and naval power that made Prussia bo vjtwty hated. - U7ifal trKSpen two and a half billions for more naval WuipmenC and to' pour out a half billion dollars a year on running ships, and $200,000,000 ar year in interest L the girie is as important as the u.-u j : V,,-M ia oil .h.r nonsense. I Y. M. for the boys. It would be on money 10 nunu u s;- r poor community without either. It i wonje thani-riminal. It is an idea born of the diabolical s s WrmarAr anirit In the past year, the Salem Y. I. -"!. . - i. ii 1 jmv w had 37.000 persons using its MIlre.lS0-vestlge or excuse m tu.w -w prlyn;-es: ,o.3i8 lunches were and sanity and fairness and sound reasoning for the pro- eaten by worklng girls ,n the lob. gram. bTI 92 outside organizations held Out with it' Let's get back to the normalcy of cornmon meetings; 1295 women and gins UUt Wltn 11. xx;ts 8" u j provided with employment, Sense anarommon aecciij. 1. 8. These are J net a few against intervention and therefore And the solicitors ought to navel probably the difference would solve itself more into the one of form than subatance. Charles Ribout of Haiti was one 3f the most emphatic, speaking in French he asserted that at the Rio Janeiro jurists convention the! here tonight. nnVFRWQR PASSES AWAYLaeed tor as much as it's worth ' lot course it's a temporary crisis Rhode Island Official Succumb They pull through this and inside n .J5-w .t Own Home Uf two years they'll all be making aMMWM- WONSOCKET. R. I new fortunes from it Trouble is uh 4 Ithev ve expanded a mile too (AP) Governor Aram J. PothleTl quickly." of Rhode Island died at his home "I see. What will they nntaht lie suffered a .par- "I'm blessed If I know. free ot cost. high points of the activities. m The Salem Y free employment office had 106 men. asking for . The Statesman is attacked by a dyspeptic neighbor ir jo6s the past week, and 44 were n0.,min a rlenend uDcn the industry and ability of Con-Lent to work. And S women o r a. . QQM, imnrtve- asked for work, and only two were gressman mwrey 10 gic u x -.. .-.--r- . sent to Jobs. Spring weather ment of the upper Willamette river; and the inference is made tWni. actiTe yesterday. The made that if this thing comes about through his efforts it I week end. Friday evening will h the first.time of "oiir congressional Rip Van Winkle fcl " V 1 1 A 4 2 p&g Q Olaiceiiiau iuio iuui a- waking from his 20 years of slumber to become a channel!, Com!ns up wm gr0w still rrx-trtr.n I faster TTrn 4 Via finf upnmnlishments of Congressman - wt?ll- 1IJ1C UA bAlV r : I . Hawley at Washington was the securing of an aprpoprtationi bQ g, ,n the foUowlng of $300,000 (or about that sum) to purcnase tne loots ai timely paragraph on dahlias Oregon ty. And he has been singuiariy wwm bloom this summer if getting federal aid for Oregon rivers and harbors, which J1 BOw planted in a house are nearly all in his district. "Ask the people of Coos Bay. la aood rich dirt, set the the mouth of the Columbia, and the Willamette and Coium- If the eed i. choice mixed. biairabekiw rortI.The total runs to about twenty y(m w delighted with etrme ...J r .- ttZvXm -nA wrftl arjTjroririations forBw rarietles, or enUrely -new WnUmette by th. fn. the J-S i hopefof getting better work of imprpving the channeL lie of th year' blossom, by bees, has worked incessantly on this. WAS cngressiiian Haw- unnVPR i v infA thA rivers and harbors bill signed in SURVEY GIVES HOOVtK January: 1927, the clause for another examination, with the LARGE LEAD IN STATE p -n. .till water from Salem to Portland. He is ( continued from Pago One) ' - Bill! IB" III IWAUa - - ' u VMM w m . . on the Job now. ,IB hbeen all along. So has Senator A1C ' .T"'' wr i v . ft.ini. iinltiMiKKh !ii anil . - 4 ... . .v"Tit Congiressman xiawiey di nm, vm-w" O.A- . -wWHlT . . I t and editorial sentiment In J-"-IL DUCE REACHING OUT w it" "He's pretty canny. "Right you are. Anyway, that the situation. You know those kmWn., wri .nnnrh to arree with 1 remlerl that ther ain't going to let Mussolini has drawn up a consti- thinf;s mo gmash. They've sunk tutlon tor the formation of iaacl8Mtoo much In It already and their zroups living abroad giving harni u too thoroughly and fast rule, for tneir conautu Kouna. There may be some last- Tn the constitution which was , . , ... issued today the premier say. that! ,Get u .. fasdsU as fasclts must uphoia tnei ,IDone wItn y0u.- The big honor of Italy and Italian nuBtman's eyea narrowed and his nat keen scleaT ot all Internal PliUC8Lrai whlaner became almost ln- of the country in which' they re-Ludjbie, giving his words an un- slde. jnust obey witnoui Q-"L,niT .iniater meaning. "What's TfVENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO ( From columns of the States man, February C. If 03.) Seattle Passengers on the Great Northern east bound train were nearly suffoctea wneu iu train became stuck in the Cascade tunneL No deaths resulted. Fred Lockley. Jr.. has accepted inn as circulation manager for the Pendleton East Oregonlan. uM j. N. Smith and Mrs. F. E. a a. .H aeAMrft Smith were bruieea wueu out of a buggy on uenier mu Commercial. Tb.lr high-tp1rltel horse ran away. McMinnville Kiwanis Club To Establish Ubrary List Mi.. Cornelia Mrvin. .tate li brarian, has Just neen asxea oy the McMinnville Klwani. club td select a list of book, suitable for a biography section which this din ner club has undertaken to estab lish and maintain In the McMinn ville public library. It Is under stood that the club has roted to set aside a fund each year for the purchase of book, for thi. section. A similar work U being under taken by the Rotary club ot Klam ath Falls, which receatly voted an appropriation of $100 a year with which to purchase books Tor boys for the public library of that clfjp according to Misa Marvin. A recent bequest in the interest of better library facilities whJth has just come to Mis. Marvin's at- ' ten tion was one for 1500 left by a patron ot the Tillamook public li brary for the use of that library. dot tta auffered a .car-1 "I'm blessed If I know. Unless nrinfniA nf int-rvABtion had been alvtic stroke last night and failed they lend the money themselves .i,.i an that the I You understand: let the corpora- h. hr Aa for I tion borrow from the individuals himself he would for the principle of non-interven tions. I TTpiin Oovernlne - Mexican Speaks i , . , n, v-,.n nniM T?n. of FaaciaU Everywhere MawUa vKa Tirtt irtnl'an In ' ROME. Italy. Feb the committee to find a formula that might "establish In a positive fashion the great -principles for which we are all fighting." "Let us all conclude a pact of non-aggreesion that may complete those establishing arbitral trade union and American conciliation committees." he said. "Let ua consider as acts ot war every ag gressive military action. "If we do not assure the peace ot the continent by these means. we will have caused two immense harms to the hemisphere wo will hare betrayed the historical des tiny of these nations and we will have definitely killed Pan-Americanism." up order! of the Italian consuls htfeof the fascist regime ln tnei ... ....... t think. Willie countries where they are stationed 1e gQt m hunch that Bob and must be unaer oiiwpuoo Terry to coming to work here. Willie Weaver made a son. hissing sound. "Really? "I. think ao. We can use him, of course. Ho knows a good deal - Demand' M-tfy) lialiaaMiaiMMMBMMa , ' . JlNr V f ' f 7avfo)nro)fr ..m aa members of the fascist nartv in the homeland. The first article of tno consuiu- tion calls for fascista to respect the laws of the countries where labout VTQTiM and crimlnala and VICE PRESIDENT STARTS they are. living. ait faariat abroad win come under the charge of the secretary- Burt Brown Barker Now Officer! of State University a -on xorao sianaiiiT cwnuMwc, icoiumou. uougia,juu.m.u, neishbor, no memrjer oi ine "i,8Bjb:- Maiheaur. Tniamook, aei f andlrf committee oi tne nouse, . " MONTCLAIR. N. J.,' Feb. 4. (AP). Burt Brown Barker of this city has gone to Eugene, Ore.. to aaaume the vice presidency of the. University of Oregon, leaving behind him the announcement that all of his salary would bo devoted to the erection of a statue of his mother, "commemorating : the courage and devotion of the pio neer women of Oregon.1 Barker's family, settled in Ore gon In 1847 and he is a native of that state. He will have charge of business and financial matters of the university. Plane for the monument have he's fond-of them: they've Deen hla only friends for three year. And he', in the clear because he. general of the party in Romo iml committed a crime. But in cases of breach or cucipiineu of all yrden has gone craxy they mar bo expelioa irom tnei hlm He's living with Bor narty. The organization ahroad . . haUnx him." Includes the fascist Boy Scouts aI An4 you're going to let him well aa women's organizations. Yanr chestnuts out ot the fire?! KILLS SIOTHER'S LOVER QUINCY. Cal.. Feb. 4, (AP) John Slaughter, IS year old son of Un. Marie Weaver. Portolal momlnsr house keeper, last night shot and killed William Z. Steven on, hia mother's alleged, para mour. Stevenson was uepuiy net- if f and constable. The boy was ta kn Into custody. 'Uncle 8am has earned the cred It of introducing two , kinds The whole world knows Aspirin as ah elective antidote for pain; But ifs just as important to know that there is only one genuine Bayer Aspirin. The name Bayer is on "every tablet, and on the box. If it says Bayer, ifs rentune: and if ft doesn't, h is not I Headaches are dispelled by Bayer Astirin-So are colds. and the pain that goes with them; even neuralgia tietxritis, and rneumansm prorapuy rcucveo, ucr. quaver ax aiy "inigstore -with proven directions. ; . ' - Physidans presciibetBaty it does NOT affect the birt kaplrfa W taa 9 lUlBlMlB Kractlr." Carmody'. voice was metallic and precise; he did not dissemble before Whispering Willie Weaver. "Borden I a hard man to reaeh. He's too damned honest. This seem, a combination if circumstances which should lead to something. Terry ..hating Rnrden and working for me.' His interest and mine are identicaL 1 hope, to make-him happy by let .ing him slough Borden -and 1 set the satisfaction of seeing Bor den sanlrm and knowing that rn forwarded to a - sculptor in. diplomacy: shirtsleeve and : ..air- did it. FREE VOTING BALLOT This ballot is good for 200 votes for the Candida to In The Oregon SUtesinan Snbscription Caialgn, whose liame is writUn on It. Do not f old. ' Triin. 7 Name Address 4 VOID AFTER MARCH 10TH, 1928 I ANYONE CAN VOTE FOR FRIENDS 4 1 ' L " ' T V. v i a , IH