The New 03EG0N STATESMAN, Salem. Oregon, Wednesday Morning, May j, 1929 PAG2 TI2I "WHAT HAS HAPPENED SO FAR - Daphn Haines, seventeen and love ly, la literally driven from bona by her nagging stepmother, whose soU Interest ia in her own daughter. Crys tal. The second Mrs. Haines la deter- , mined that Crystal shall marry Ralph I THcKevitt, a handsome young- man of -wealth. Ralph, one day admires Dapb t M, whom he sees at a distance, and Mrs. - Haines decides to permanently eliminate the younger girl, whose ri valry she secretly fears. She "pro vokes a sordid Quarrel In the house hold, and Daphne, realizing the help lessness of her position, leaves home to make her way la Ban Francisco. The quest for employment Is difficult. She Is almost starving when she en counters Ralph MeKevltt, her stepsis ter's "prise" , young man, in a cheap restaurant. He buys her a hearty meal -and takes her home in his car. . As weeks pass a. nlc friendship develops Between tnem. icaipn secures a gooa position for the girl, arid when he kisses her In the moonlight she feels she Is In an earthly paradise. The mot ley assortment of roomers at Daphne's house speculate "wisely" about her each time young HcKevitt calls In his flashy -car, hut she finds two good friends In hard-boiled Flora Mccardie and a love-starved- little dressmaker MIm Vint. Kirk in tttm V Haines home Crystal announces that he too la leaving for the city where she Intends studying music. Daphne's , father, brooding over the fate of his own slrl. seems crushed and broken, but be IS In mortal fear of his nag ging wife. A stormy scene follows. Crystal's i mother Implores her not to leave, but she Is determined to go. All the way on the bus to San Fran cisco her thoughts are strangely of Daphne. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORT CHAPTER XV1IL 9 V-'T'LL rite you a ring before I Monday." Ralph had Mid. bnt Sunday dragged to a funereal close without a word from him, and though Daphne was f ready and waiting Monday evening, he did not come. Tuesday ' passed, and Wednes day. "The days are setting '"shorter," Miss Viola complained, grudgingly lighting the gas In the .hall -right after supper. But days had Ssever seemed so , long to Daphne. Flora McCardle dashed giggling " down the stairs every night with a different "gentleman friend and old Mrs. Kinkle peeked through ber crack In the kitchen door and grumbled. "Out again! Ach, I don't know, a ber when I was young we didn't run wild!" Once she pinched Daphne's cheek with her dark, workworn hand. "Dot's a good girl, not always mlt boys . . . like my Viola, good, too. ..." Like Viola .... ' "Oh!" D&phne rushed to her room, to throw herself wildly on the faded red couch and bury her bead under the musty sofa cush ions and cry in peace. . To think that anyone, even Old Mrs. Hin kle, could believe that she wanted to stay home night -after night in this ghastly place . . . to think that nobody wanted her and she'd go on waiting and waiting forever ... .like Miss Viola. But the tears of yesterday al ways gave place to the hopes of today. "He'll surely phone to night . . he's a busy man, I can't expect him to cal me every night." And every night, long before T o'elock, sbe put on her best blue dress and her chiffon stockings "Just In case". She waited fever ishly In her room, moving rest lessly from the squeaky rocker to the dresser to add a last minute dab of powder, and back to the rocker, and oyer to the window . . . nervous . . . listening! Listening for the telephone . . . waiting for him to come. Brrr ... Before the first vibration had ceased she would be at the tele phone in the hall, pulling the re DEVOTED THIS DAYTG CHILDREN'S WELFARE Dr. Copeland Applauds Congressional Designation oZ May First as a Day for the Advancement of the Physical Weil-Being of the Nation's Children By ROYAL S. COPELAND, M. D. United States Senator from New York Former Commissioner of Health, He York CUf. ONCE In a while Congress turns aside from its ordinary yerfornv ances and devotes a few minutes to the discussion ef matters having to de with the health of the people. When in one ef these happy moods It passed the following resolution: fefe.COPCLAK children have applied their every effort to make Child Health Day this year the best celebration of the tort we have ever had. - President Hoover has always been interested in the children. Ho is really the founder of the practice ef devoting a day each year 10 ue weuare ox ue roungstars.-y ix i rememner correctly, ne is tne author ef what we call "The Chad's Bin ef Rights." Just as Mr. Jeffer son Is the author of the Political BUI of Rights, the present President proposed a national standard for the protection of child life. We shall be happy when there shaj be no child tn America; - . That has not been born nnder proper conditions. . - That does not live in hyglenle aor , roundinga, , That ever suffers from under nourishment. . That does not have prompt and ' student medical attention and 1 Inspection. , That does not receive' primary fts ' etructlon in : the elements eC hygiene and good health.' I That has not the complete Mrta right of a soomI mind la oovnd . .body. - --"s " - - - That has net the encouragement i t t express in fullest measure the V 2,ilLithla which Is the final Y , stiAewiuent eg . every htirwaw 1 have never failed to he thankfsl I was bora la the country. Pr we Cad open , spaces and room tor fh many activities as dear s the chad's heart.. In the city there taareal prouent when K oemes to Teetvausa and play... Apartment ceiver off the hook. ' .-' "Hello!" Her yoke shaking a little, her face all glowing and starry with hope. -?. : - But It was always for some body else. And every time she saw Flora wrapped In the rich summer er mine coat she thought. "If I had a coat like that he'd take me out. I I donY blame him. He was ashamed of me " The more she thought of it, the surer she was that the old blue coat was to' blame. She would hold it up and look at Its shiny, shapeless sides. Would any self respecting man want to go ont with a coat like that?" And that hateful last night ... her cheeks burned again at the thought . . . going without a coat in the wind and the fog ... He must have seen the gooseflesh on her arms . . must have felt her shivering. She gulped angrily. "He must hare thought I was c-craiy!" i She thought of the credit shops. But suppose something happened. Suppose she got sick, or lost her job before her purchases were paid for? And the ten dollars not yet paid back to Ralph . . She would figure surreptitiously In the office when she should have been typing . . . Three yards of I material at $2.50, and $4.00 a day tor miss vioia to mage it. it would take her two days at least, maybe two and a half. And lin ing and buttons besides ... oh dear ... Perhaps a sale coat would be better after all. If you paid $10 down and $1.00 a week for ten Wk8 e The work would pile up while she would figure and plan and dream. "Well. I gotta get rid of Miss Haines, that's all," Miss AbramS, the girl in charge of the office, said, "she gets worse all the time. Too bad, too. because she's a good typist." - , see Daphne found the notice on her desk the next morning. It was brief and business like. Her ser vices Would not be required after the first of September. Kind, courteous and final. No explanation as to why they no longer required her services. . ..No second chance. "Now I have something to wor ry about!" she thougfit miserably, tossing on the lumpy couch that night, but not even losing the Job seemed ag important as losing Ralph. Even getting out of the house at night didn't help. No sooner would she get three blocks away than she would have a terrible feeling that he was calling, and run all the way home, only to find out that no one had called at all. Sometimes Miss Viola Insisted on accompanying her on the short walks that she wanted so much to be solitary. Poor Miss Viola, hur rying along on her fat feet, hold ing tight to Daphne's arm, puffing a tittle as she talked. But Sunday was the worst. Everybody, even the Hinckles, went out. Mrs. Spellman and Mrs. Halliday, the married ladles who wore kimonas until fire o'elock on other days, emerged from their flannelette cocoons like middle- aged butterflies. Dressy and per spiring, ready for an afternoon at the movies with their freshly shaved and brushed husbands. Flora, giggling hilariously, climbed into an open touring ear Into which two girls, three men and a police dog were already "Resolved by the Senate and House ef Rep resentatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the President of the United States is hereby authorized and requested to issue annually a proclamation setting apart May 1 of each year as Child Health Day and inviting all agencies and organizations interested in child welfare to unite upon that day ia the observance of such exercises as will awaken the people of the nation to the fundamental neces sity of a year-round program for the protection and development of the health of the nation's children. I By authority of this Act of Congress, the President proclaimed Child Health Day this year. May . Day, which has always been given to the children, win this year and each year following, be observed as National Play Day. Recreation and nlavrronnd associations and all lovers of houses and great hotels take all the space that might be given ever to ball fields and- playgrounds. But there are children problems every where and they must be solved. la every sense the child Is the cor nerstone of the nation. Unl we 5 can guarantee to our children that the BUI of Rights shall be something more than a proclamation, we have not gone far in solving the problem of the future. To my mind, good health Is funda mental to spirituality, to education, to prosperity; to good ettlsenshlp, and to the welfare of the nation. Whatever we can do en Child Health Day to awaken an Interest a the physical welfare-of the chOdrea,wm mesa that we nave done our part to lay broad and deep the foundations Answers) f HeaJth qqeriea JB. A. WV- rBxm eaa I gala VslghtT plenty traits sad vegetahles. - Praettoe brsnthlss aa4 drink wsssfc Get plasty oCr rnte ee trrsr efl as a soMl hejlIdssV LIVINGSTON packed, and dropped, with a shout of laughter, onto her boy friend's lap. . After Flora was gone the house was deadly quiet. Boards began to squeak, doors to rattle. "I can't stand It!" Daphne thought, "I can't! I can't!" She put on her hat, and the despised blue coat, and walked, all the long blocks to Golden Gate Park. It was a glorious day. She sat forlornly on a. bench and watched other girls and their sweethearts walk by. . "If Ralph asked mo where I wanted to come, rd choose to come here, she thought wistfully, watching another young couple in an open car. Then her heart thumped, seemed to turn a somerset in her side. A ear like Ralph's . . . . yellow with nickel, trimming . . . She stood np, waving craslly . . . "Ralph! Yoo-hoo! Ralph!" D'GOE SEEKS TO A motion to dismiss the Indict ment filed by the state of Oregon against Pete DeGuire was argued Monday in circuit court. Judge Percy R. Kelly taking the matter under advisement after attorneys for both sides had presented their claims. DeGuire) was Indicted on the charge of contributing to the de linquency of a minor. His attor neys contended that evidence in. trod need to secure the indictment came from testimony DeGuire gave in another case and that, the use of this was unconstitutional inas much as the defendant's own tes timony was being used to find him guilty. DISMISS CHARGES POLLY AND HER PALS HEH.'HEH! Y'SA Ur4K 60T B4JMT Or4 HIS WHISKERS? HAW.'HAWI I tQADCFlHAVl TILLIE, THE TOILER SHE HAKJ'T VJORD A&OOT COMtr "THAT ia I GAVE Kievrr ViHippJLB KJdOVAl rota heb- SO 1 CAM ash some TsTLToC Tmtmrm SyWtelt. Inc. Cnal Briuh 1 hi ft I LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY V v (me-nouuttuJ If isW.lls f ftfi baboom. I'll rWvotomecri!l HELLO THIEF YtnZrr AMMtE,WHAT5 TAHLtQ-riE-HE-jj ' II PtUOCH HrSNOSE.M MAO. Mft. ABUER, A m- I vrJUL THT KWTER ICWXEPMEA' SZS rPlPKfT CALL ME V v THltF TOOTS AND CASPER r JHT&M VOUSCH. a unrrLE. SHXTA ONE. Of mncLK rarV sm &. -Voo LOVCS. TO CVJCDi&S j I CrUESS 3HE HA3 AARTVED aT -COLOMEL. H0U9S. ui now; sastM EB B F F1IIS BED Members of the office force of the Oregon-Washington Water Co. honored J. W Helwlck, retiring manager. Monday night when they gave a party in his honor at the Marion hoteL Amer C. Stolp. assistant to the manager, acted as toastmaster, in troduced a number of the em ployes and Mr. Helwick, everyone responding with informal talks. Mr. Helwlck praised the staff for its loyal service and said he trusted the company would con tinue to receive the loyal service of its staff. ' : , ' t Present at the meeting were Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Frame. Amer C. Stolp, Marie Breitensteln, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lamb, Jennie Best, Elizabeth. Klem pel, Helen Richard son, Roslna Kerber. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Slefarth. U. S. Gesner, Will Bennett, Mr. and Mrs. 8. C. Kight- linger. Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Grid- ley, Miss Yerine Anderson, Oscar C. Blomberg, R. H. Corey. T E The Consolidated Truck Lines, Inc., with headquarters in Port land and capital stock of $100. 000,.. has been Incorporated by Ice land James, Eric Rendahl and Roy Swint. Other articles filed in'the state corporation department today fol low: Bollons A Pinkney, Inc., Port land, $1000; William Bollons, W. M. Pinkney and C. S. Lindsay. George W Bradley St Son, Inc., Pendleton, $2500; George W. Bradley, Albert S. Bradley and G. P. Hickey. Medical Sentinel company, Portland, $5000; Wayne W. Coe, Georgy C. Coe and Earl A. Coe. I IF yTAKfc Mr fl KEpP CLEAR OF HIM. HES lE'S, MADDER MA TAKE A H0RNJET X Z T UELX-O. MSH HI B TlP VOO CAkl'T "TO MV let me r Tr ,M MOO HES HAHbSl V GXTYbND ME! WHEN tuar&riD rr"TvyrT Mrf WE3S3 SCOLD fOO Me 2 r7 JtY S VP 1 H V mm mm m- m m ssnnaunB T-v- M-..S . Tat an GOOD-NIGHT --4 STORIES By IX ,TrH The Shadow-Children and Mr. Clock Save Rolfs Dinner DO you suppose little Rolf ever imagined that it was his shadow who helped him? Of coarse not! Rolf never even no ticed his shadow. The trouble with Rolf was that he couldn't manage to com early to dinner. Despite the fact that his mother begged him and his father urged him, he came in late. It waa the same thing night after night Now, among those who weTe particularly annoyed with the lit tle boy's tardiness was Flor, his shadow. The sad fact was-that the later Rolf arrived, the less there was to eat for poor Master Flor., " The reason for this was Millwork Service corporation. Portand, $1000; H. A. Johnstone, Maude Shaw 5 and Gertrude Un keles. State Investment, corporation, Portland. $50,000; George R. Emery, J. A. Goodman and L. B. Sandblast. Waldport-Corvallis Truck Line, Inc., Corrallis. $10,000; Andrew Kent, W. H. Kline and M. Ferr. Wolff ; Electric Works, Inc. Portland, $25,000; Boyd L. Wolff,' Eva Wolff and C. G. Schneider. Oregon Music Teachers Associa tion, Inc., Portland, (no capital stock); Mary Cahill Moore, Frank G. Erchenlaub and Nor daunt Goodnaugh. . Central Lumber company, Al bany; capital increased from $10, 000 to $25,000. Gresham Berry Growers asso ciation, Gresham; capital stock in creased from $25,000 to $100,000. PARK OPENING SET KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., April SO. (AP) Crater - Lake ;Park will. open July 1,. .Colonel C G. Thompson, retiring superinten dent of the park, announced to day. He said depth of snow was 15 per cent less this year than last. . " RUT YOii CAbJTT) I I'LL SLA HERE PERU ROOM TILL. CjlLET fCLKS KJ0W toJR WHlSKERSv iVi THE SPlTW' SROvs IrJifiAlfJ. ITMIMAfiE OF- WEEKS.' LASHUR URL DCOtulCI """SHE -DOMTI owe vcu CSMiT NOVUSo DO NT TRy t-irrr wte?v MELLO.CAPCni- HOP M TVn5r- PECjYs I OUWT C(JT IN ANt I CDULCNT ANDO0HB. OVEQ. lVATTTOTAIX ANT3ETS. US, 4, rM 90 PBCg6V IT BTeEM VOICE. mi 1 ik f 1 that the other little shadow-children, Mij. Hanid, Tarn and Knart especially Knarf always ar rived for dinner promptly. "Dear me," Flor would say, when he finally reached the table, "I wish I cpuld get here early for once." "Why don't you come with out your master?" asked Tarn. Well, it happened one night that the tardy boy came In late, as usual. "Rolf, said his father, sternly, "if you arent here at six o'clock sharp tomorrow, you go to bed without your dinner." Flor was positively terrified. He al ready saw himself suffering with out dinner, all on account of his master. The next afternoon Rolf was out playing. Unlike other boys, he wasn't content to play in front & H TD Show Yon What to Do!" of the house, but had to take Ijim-J sen a mue or so away. i "Don't go!" cried bis shadow ia alarm, for he saw that it was al ready, getting on to half-past fire. The boy stopped short. It seemed to him that something told him to return home. Then he re membered what his father had said, and turned back at once. Alas, hardly had he taken three steps when he sat down to take a rest, for he . bated to hurry, even for dinner. In vain did Flor plead1 with him to move. It grew later and later. Meanwhile. Mij, Hanid, Tarn and Knarf especially Knarf noted with surprise the absence of tXJNT UtoRRy LXJvtoAV c v ik ! " -- lJ . I 1 TTUL BT5 UWTS OLD T1MBS TO seK. Ybv AAasm,ca5per: rve OPTTCN TtOU6iT OP THTc-KUCCTHIW Tbu irsrTO 3AY l.inusi hriii s - .,ws oil EVPTrWK OF MEi Vv v 1 Home-Making H - By ELEANOR ROSS The Decline of the Left-Overs YOU may recall Oscar Wilde's famous definition of a gentle . man as one who never Insults another Intentionally. So one might describe the competent housekeeper who never has left overs unintentionally. Fashions In housekeeping change, like everything else. There was a time when good cooks prided themselves on the elegant dishes they could turn out of odds and ends in the Icebox. Indeed, a hefty section of most prudent cook books was devoted to direc tions ror using left-overs, and whole books were written on the subject. If truth be told, many of these concoctions were gross ex travagance. In order to use up a few bits of meat or vegetables, the ostensibly thrifty cook added a number of rather high-priced In gredients. One of the prize cases that sticks in memory. Is culled from a foreign cook' book and Flor and his shadow. They glanced up at the clock. So did little Rolf's father. They all saw that it was already two minutes past six. Just then Hanid, who was standing by the window, spied the boy and his shadow hur rying home at Jast. "What a pity," she said to the other shadows, "that poor Flor should have to lose his dinner on account of two minutes." "Can't we do something about it?" exclaimed Mij and Yam. They were all really sorry for their comrade Flor, you see. They ran up to the clock and tried to push back the hands. Un fortunately shadows have no strength to speak of. They can't push back anything. ;J.It looked pretty black for Flor when Knarf, who had merely been looking "on said: "I'll show' you what to do. Then he stepped up to the dock. "How long-will it take you to reach six o'clock again?" "Eleven hours and fifty-eight VUrlffL -to Srt A (1 MY N ? fW'.. ' 'rXiya'Q3 n-e ui-icu, okow I I 1 v nrwyi . i via -r fAMD THEWRE STILL OUT OM BAIL! BUT Tlx GET WtM III GET TriEM! IiE pTiLL Qui SOME STOLE TLL PLANT IHEM IN TH&R b HOUSE -I W0MT REST UMTIL 0OTT& ARE ( PRI50M BARS!! sV X. TUB IBEA fiPNThi noma EAd td the tou cjot me. 3o WWWT TALKTOKEQ 1 .r cTMiiuiBtiKK. vImi. If n -. V AH-fi- tO 0rCOUQ&E TO- a . . elps you know how marvelously ett nomical th4 European cooks ar WelL this particular recipe whicl had tor its object the rescue of about half a pound of cold meatl included the addition or ffksi mushrooms and cream. Probabljt, It wasn't bad when finished. Buff why liot serve a diah of nice, fresh) mushrooms, and not corrupt it by the addition of left-over flavors? j Economy is sometimes an ex4 travagance. it's cneaper to throi out half a cupful of some t kit left over than struggle with it and try vainly to disguise its etal ness by adding costly fresh ma terials. But better still is thj custom of most modern housed keepers to buy small quantitied frequently. A little at a time, as ways fresh, and-so well plajiceol that there's nothing left. WfeBf she. has cooked food left in the ic4 box it's because she has planned it so. and is intentionally cooking more than one meal at a time. minutes, replied the clock. "If I tell you how to reach It in two minutes, .will you do H?' "Of course." replied the clock, "I always want to save time." "Very well, then." said Knarf, slyly, "Just turn backwards in stead of forwards." Three minutes later in walked the tardy boy and his shadow. "You're five minutes late, said his father. "There'll be r,ft dinner for you tonight." Rolf believed'his father and was about to walk off when shouted: "Look at the clock!" - The; boy didn't hear anything exactly, but it seemed that some thing told him to look at the clock. "Why," he exclaimed, "it's minute to six. I'm early." His father glanced at the clock, too. Jmagine his astonishment t see that Rolf was suite right. "It is one fnnte to six." b cried, "and getting earlier eveiy; jnlnute!" j Rolf got hi dinner anyway and Flor did. too. By CLIFF STERRETT By RUSS WESTOVER waa Si(y)ASZV vaitTH MR. , AMt HERE THATT 5oy OF THOSE JEAJEL5 1 BEHIND By JIMMY MURPHY iCl im N0W.r4OVri! rgccnb). CALM DOWN1. wattled Better rrr REAIY!VOuQ HER WAV HtK. Nt TOO DOftfT NWAMTMC31TO TOU WTTM A HIN HO., DoTtjur 5-1. .IOrsAAVal . . : ByVERD TO, VII I 4 .