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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1930)
1 t PAGE FOUR Tut OREGON STATESMAN. Salem, Oregon, Saturday Morning. June 21, 1930 j, "A'o Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Awe." From First Statesma. March 28. 1851 rTHE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Charles A. Spracve, Sheldon F. Sackett, Publtshert Charles A. Spracie ... Editor-Manager Sheldon F. Sackett - - - Managing-Editor The Ayocfated Pres Is exclusively entitled to the nte for publi cation cf alt new 8 dispatches credited t It r not otherwise credited In this paper. Pacific Coast Advertising Representatives: Arthur W. Styles. Inc., Portland, Security Bids. San Frai ciecc, Sharon Bldg. : Los Angeles, W. Pa& BU. Eastern Advertising. Representatives: rord-rarsons-Stecher, Inc.. New York. 271 Msdlsoa Av. ; Chicago. 360 N. Michigan Ave. Entered at the Postoffice at Salem. Oregon, as Second-Class Hatter. Published every morning except ifnday. Business office 215 S. Commercial Street. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Mill Fihscn'it!on Rate. In" Advance. Within Oregon; Dally and Sunday. 1 Mo. ents; S Mo. $1.25; 6 Mo. $J.E5; 1 year $4.00. Else where 0 cents per ilo or Si 00 tor 1 year In advance. By City C.uiier: 50 cents a month: $.50 a year In advance. Her Copy Z Cents. Un trains, and News Stands i renia. . HEALTH Today's Talk 1 By R. S. Copeland, M. D. What to Wear . years gone by, though not so dreadfully long ago but 1 what matrons who still are eligible to the young ladies guilds in the churches can remember, styles were propa gated by publication. They originated in Paris as indeed they still do, although Hollywood makes bold at times to challenge . Deauville. But they came to Marshalltown and Waco and Evansville bv way of the illustrated monthly magazine. Har per's Bazaar was the Vanity Fair and Vogue of yester-year; with McCalls and Butterick's and the Delineator percolating fashions to the masses. When the April issue arrived about the first of March milady would study it for a week, then go a-shbpping to learn when the new fabrics and patterns might be in the dry goods stores. On lucky chance they may have arrived : more commonly they were "on the road" to be in when the slow-moving freight deposited its miscel lany of boxes at the depot. Styles are no longer dependent on maga'zines nor mer chandise on local freight trains. Now the lady reads in her magazine this afternoon about the frock which she saw in the apparel store this mormng. Swifter buying methods and express shipments have made the stores the diffusers of In formation about the styles, anticipating the gay illustrations of the magazines save for those with a penchant for dipping far into the future. How do the stores know what to buy? They do know, for charts and graphs and percentages and ratios have reach ed the merchandise marts. No more does the sto ekeeper de pend on what Marshall Fields man may tell him on his semi annual visits; nor does Ely, Walker s salesman, give him the true picture f what to buy. Special services in New York speed the information daily by telegraph to the larger stores, or by weekly bulletins to the smaller stores. And the infor mation they get is the result of laborious checking and tabu lating. One representative of a fashion service may be clock ing (counting with a stop watch) the snug-fitting blouse which she sees the women on Park avenue wearing. Another may "be studying the windows at Macy's or. at Hudson's in Detroit, to see the trends of the newer things. Another may b3 visiting the exclusive tea rooms or the theatres, where ladies of- social rank set the stamp of approval upon the node. The whole information is assembled and studied and tabulated and judgment drawn from it. It is a sort of Bab son's service for the store-keeper. Like Babson's it may go awry ; but by and large the merchant must depend upon some such service to plan his buying and his selling. As two writ ers who contribute an article on "Charting the Fashions" in the .current Atlantic Monthly say: "There's nothing new under the sun and never was, but the de signer lives and flourishes by knowing when the old is old enough to be new again, and what manner of ingratiating detail it may at tempt by way of disguise. And the fashion analyst, watching these attempts and their, failure or success. Is the merchant's barometer, loretelling with a gratifying percentage of accuracy the sunshiny styles which will become fashion and the stormy ones to be avoided this side of signing orders on the dotted line." We should be thankful for changing fashions. They help to keep os young. Lacking them how barren life would be and how dull and drab the social scene. Greeks Bearing Gifts IN their zeal for preservation of roadside beauty the wom en's clubs of the state and country need to be on their guard lest they fall victims to the stealthy plans of compet itors of billboard advertising. For instance, we note the Sat urday Evening Post in an editorial egging the women on in their new crusade. On the surface the position of the Post may seem quite plausible, a sincere desire to preserve the beauties of the rural scene. At the same time the women i ought to remember that the Post comes into the sharpest j kind of competition with the billboards for advertising. It is i keener than newspaper competition because the newspapers liave a somewhat different emphasis. When a big company makes an appropriation for advertising it usually splits it among newspapers, magazines, outdoor and radio. If through propaganda against the outdoor panels and through legisla tion against erection of billboards the appropriation for out door advertising is wiped out or reduced, then it is easy to see that the magazines in particular would hope to have their allotments greatly increased. The Curtis Publishing company with its formidable list of publications may not be wholly disinterested and entirely ingenuous in agitating against the disfigurement of the land scape by billboards. Newspapers too need to be chary in en gaging in wholesale condemnations lest they be accused of nixing business malice with public service. And our . good friends the ladies most be wary that they be not caught in the trap and made tools of jealous competitors of outdoor ad vertising. Even with legislation that is designed to be restrictive there must be education to beautify the countryside lest our roads be made into ribbons with slum borders. Flowers In the dooryard, painton the barns, fences in repair are quite as impressive in their way as a sylvan scene or a marine sunset. Vertigo is a sensation of gid diness in the head. There is a swimming: sensation, the sur round la a; ob jects seeming 'to whirl in space. There is staggering and uncertainty of the body bal ance. If yon once experience it, you do not forget the feel ing of vertigo. . Someone has compared the sensation with that experien-1 ced in an earth quake. Well, I no vwelano never naa tae experience of feeling an 'earthquake beneath me. I cannot add my testimony to tnis, but I think it must be true verugo is a prominent symp tom, often connected with dis eases of the small brain, or "cer ebellum." This is the part of the brain controlling the movements by which we maintain the erect position. There is a disease called "Men iere's disease," an affection of the internal ear, which is unpleasant and very serious. This ailment Is accompanied by vertigo. Vertigo may occur when cer tain muscles which move the eyes are paralyzed momentarily. The eyes are disturbed in their re lationship to each other. Their team work is disturbed. The ef fect is particularly noticed In the movement associated with rela tion of the head. There are certain physical con- ditions that will produce vertigo. The most common cause, perhaps. 13 some form of Indigestion or in testinal disturbance. Constipa tion is present la almost' every case. It is a pity that the d tees tire and eliminative organs are so ne glected. I doubt if any other part or me nooy is so disregarded as tne digestive tract. ine average person make av plaything of the stomach. With out the slightest hesitation there go into this patient organ the most doubtful dishes. It Is gives contaminated milk, shellfish from unknown sources, huge quantities or pastry before going to bed at night, bootleg liquor, and other evil things. And yet we wonder what cause dour gastric disturb ance. v hen you have an attack of vertigo it is time to find out what is wrong. If it i3 due to dlges tive trouble, that is readily reme died. If it is due to heart or blood vessel trouble. It will be more difficult to overcome but your doctor will help you. Sometimes persons will take a too powerful drug through Ignor ance of its nse. Vertigo and faint- ness may follow the taking of strong medicine. Never take drugs unless they have been pre scribed by a doctor. Simple giddiness may be re lieved by emptying the bowels. An enema is the simplest way to accomplish this purpose. If you have an attack of ver tigo, lie down and keep quiet. When the face is flushed, support the head and shoulders with sev eral pillows; but If the face is pale, use no pillows, and allow the head to be a trifle lower than the general level of the body. By eating the proper foods and by sensible living you should try to get the digestive and other or gans into a normal condition. You will then be unlikely to have; further attacks. I O- ANOTHER HEAT VICTIM o i What Are Libraries For? THE librarian at Grants Pass thinks the library is made for the housing and the reading of books. She has a high sense of the duties of her office and the function of the li brary in the community. It must' not, so she has decreed, be made a trysting place. Library dates are to be taboo hence forth in Grants Pass. .Are the cavemen going to stand for this? Vicarious lovemaking is all right in the Grants Pass reading room. One may read the novels and the dramas, read - of great loves and famous lovers, though the "hews report says that the librarian "has combed the shelves for books of strong sex appeal and has placed such books on the adult shelf." Otherwise one may read, we presume, Robert W. Chambers and Harold Bell Wright and his heart-beat will rise and fall with the fortunes of the hero and heroine. But t Esther in the flesh may not meet the much-alive Ronald in 4U i. VI i i . a i i . That is to violate the rules. It looks like a dull summer in Grants Pass. The candidates for the rorernorshfn nomination hav thu mn. eolation: their campaign won't cost them as much as the primary B,?i th,ULk.oftnt "wate" ' nearly a hundred thousand dot-- rs. with all bets "off after the money had changed hands. The Safety Valve - - Letters from Statesman Readers BITS for BREAKFAST -By R. J. HENDRICKS m SEA BIRD D By BEN AMES WILLIAMS HI THE ROMANCE OP AN EVENTFUL WHALING CRUISE To the Editor: After reading the platforms of several of the candidates for gov ernor -of Oregon, I became Im pressed with the contrast of prin ciples and purposes as set forth by the aspirants. Just to carry on, or speed up, or step on the gas, as a slogan to catch rotes, is of no Import at the present time when the state It in dire need of beneficial re form, both moral and political. Wast Oregta needs most Is in dustries which will give hones! employment t the home bonders. wnica implies home ownership, rather than the present system of the exploitation of the many for the purpose of the aggrandize ment of the- few. There is an unending Insatia ble clamor for preference and ad vantage rather than a desire tor equality. Never before have I had. the prospective pportaalty to coop erate la the defense and support of democratic principles as were set forth by Senator George W. Joseph, republican candidate for governor of the state of Oregon. As I- see it there could be no higher honor perpetuated to the name of Senator Joseph than to inaugurate and carry out the prin ciples and purposes of his political lite. To that end it Is. vitally Im portant that Mr. Joseph's cam paign platform be espoused by. his appointed successor. Sincerely, D. H. CLARK. Salem, Oregon. A Problem For You For Today How many gallons of water trill fill a cylindrical vessel 3 feet 4 Inches in , diameter and St feet deep? (231 cubic Inches equals one gallon.) . Answer to Yesterday's Problem 31. Explanation Multiply 33 by 43; divide .55 latp 244; into this quotient divide the first re sult, - - -. . .. .. CHAPTERrXII jae water was sootninir as heaven itself after the salt: but she was not satisfied with mere ly wading. She stood tor a lit tie listening, gathering courage. striving to pierce the shadows of the bush about her with her eyes These first months- of her mar rlage had driven a measure of her youth out of Faith. They had been sober days and days more sober stiU were yet to come, but for this hour a gay Irresponsibility flood ed her. She waded ashore, singing under her breath; she began swiftly to loosen her skirt at the aist. When the man came trotting down the trail at last, shouting ahead to her as ha came. Faith was sitting demurely upon the sand, clothed and in her right mind. She was trying to appear unconscious of the fact that around the back of her neck and her pink little ears wet tendrills of hair were curling. When he came in sight she rose gravely to meet him and he looked at her with quick, keen eyes, and laugh ed. She turned red as flame. "I don't blame you." he said. 'It's a beautiful pool." She wanted to be angry with him, but she conjd not. His laughter was -Infectious; she smiled at him. , - "I couldnH resist it. she said. t She was studying the man. He wore now, the accustomed gar ments of a seaman, the clothes which the men abpard the Sally wore; they were harsh and awk ward garments, but. they could not hide the graceful strength of the man. He was not so big as Noll, she thought; cot even quite so big as Dan'l Tobey. Yet there was such symmetry in -his limbs and the breadth of his shoulders that he seemed a well-bulked man.-Hts cheeks were lean and brown, and his lips met with ei pleasant firm ness. A man, naturally gay, she thOQgbt; yet with strength in him. They started down the path to ward the sea together. He carried eleth wrapped bundle swinging In his hand. "Who are you?" Faith asked, looking at htm sidewise. "Bow de yoa come to be here? My name's Brander." he said. ! waa third mate a the Thomas Morgan.-" - She tried to remember a whaler by that name. "New Bedford?" she asked. "No Nantucketfer." Faith looked at him curtously. "Butwhat happened? Was she lost?" T . Brander's face was sober; he hesitated. "No, not lost." he said. He did not seem minded to go on, and Faith asked again: "What happened?" He laughed uneasily. "I left them," he said and again seemed to wish td let the matter rest, but Faith would not. "Is there any reason why you should not tell me all about it?" she asked. "No. "Then tell me, please." He threw up his free hand In a gesture of surrender. "All right." he said. They were following the narrow path down the stream's side toward the sea. Faith was ahead, Brander at her heels. After a mo ment, he went on; . "A man named Marks was the skipper ef the Thomas Morgan. I shipped aboard per as a seaman. I'd had one cruise before, but not with him. I shipped with him ndl round out, within two days, that I'd made a. mistake. Not that they- were- hard on me. I knew myrjeb, after a fashion, and they let me alone. But the man had a tough time of it. It was a tough and his mate mate's name was Trant, and I'd not like to meet that man on a dark night. There was murder in him the sheer love of it. He was the sort of man that will catch a shark just for the fun of spiking the creature's jaws and turning him loose again. I was in Taku once. Saw a little China boy catch a dragon-fly, tie a twig to its tail and let it go. the twig overbalanced the dragon-fly, and it went straight up into the air, as fast as it could. May be going yet. That was the sort of trick Trant would have liked. Not that he ever actually killed a man on this cruise. Better if he had, for the men; but he didn't He was a big fellow and heavy-fisted. but he wasn't satisfied with the list. The boot tor him!" They were climbing a little knoll in the path. He tell silent while they climbed, and Faith thought of Nou Wing and Mauger. "Well," said Brander, "you know how things drag along. We dragged along. Then one day, we touched. We'd gone around Into the Japan Sea. Marks and Trant walked up to the second mate and took him between them into a boat and went ashore. They came back without him. He was a man as big as Trant but he had crossed Trant more than once. Trant had a face that was cut to ribbons when he came back aboard: but the other man did not come back at all. I never knew what the par ticular quarrel was. They shoved the third mate up o second, and put me in as third. 'All right,' I said to myself; 'but don't go to sleep, Brander.' And I didn't." He waved bis hand, a if to dis miss what followed with a word. Nevertheless, he went on: There was a man in my boat whom everyone called Leadfoot, because, he was a slow-moving man. I told him to keen out of Trent's way. and I told Trant Jok ingly one day to leave my men alone. He was huffed at that; growled at me." Brander chuckl ed. "So I swelled up my chest like a fighting cock and-told him to keep hands off. Oh, I threw a great bluff, I can ten you. But Treat was not a coward. He wait ed his time, and I knew he was waiting. And while he wafted he talked U the captain, and I could see them both whispering tcgethr. They whispered about me. They did not like to have me about; and once Marks threatened to put me oacK m the io'e's'le. but he changed bis mind. . se matter went tm we eame past an - island to the north of here forty or fifty miles. We made that island at desk and worked nearer it after darkness had fall en. It- came on cloudy and dark. i met Trant on deck and said to him, "Do we go ashore here?" He grinned at me with his teeth, ana Dade me wait tul morning and see. That was enough for me. I knew what was coming. I thought i wouia nurry it a little, but luck hurried it for me in a way that worked out very well. The lead-footed man was at th wheel. When the anchor went down he started forward, and brushed against Tratft. Trant may have meant it to be so. Anyway, Trant knocked Leadfoot flying, and went after him with the boot. Jumping, as lumbermen do. There happened to be a belaying nln handy, so I took it and cracked L- irani ana ne dropped in mid-leap. Then Marks Jumped me. I man? aged to wriggle out from, trader him. and he fell and banged his head and lay still, but Trant waa up by then and at me. "The lead-footed man was yeU ing la my ear. I told htm to go overboard and swim for it. and he did. Just then Trant got in the way oi tne belaying pin 'again. shrp, thnmgh and through. Mark, and thjs time he didn't seem to want to get tip. There was some confusion, you understand. I did not stay to straighten things out. I went over after Leadfoot. He could swim like a porpoise. He was ahead of me, hut half-way in he met a shark and came clamor ing back to me to be saved. I got out of his way, for fear he would drag us both under, and then I kicked the shark. It went about its business and we swam on. They were too busy sluicing the old man and Trant to come after us in a boat. They could have knocked us in the head with an oar, but they didn't. "However, Leadfoot took the shark so seriously -that he swam too fast or something of the sort. Anyway, he keeled when we touehed sand, and I felt him and found that he was dead with heart failure or the like. I didn't stop to work oveV him. I could hear Trant bellowing. He had come to life and a boat was racing after me. So I went into the bush and stayed there till the Thomas Morgan took herself off. After that, not liking the island, which was low and marshy, I borrowed a native canoe and came over here and I ve been here since." They were within sound of the rollers on the beach when he fin ished. Faith was filling out the gaps In his narrative from her own understanding of the life aboard a whaler. She could guess what Brander must have endured? she thought he had" done well to come through it and still smile. She thought he was a man. They could see the surf throueh the thinning bush when he said: "You haven't told me how vou happened to be aboard the Sally Sims." Faith herself had almost for gotten. She remembered now, and something like a chill of sorrow swept her. "I am Noll Wing's wife," she said. They eame out abruptly Into the whiter glare f the beach. Mr. Ham's boat was drawn up, n quarter-mile away. Brander looked toward it looked at Faith. "Ah," he said quietly, and add ed in a different tone: "then yoa dhr is your husband's boat, walt lns NoU Wins; is an able skin per!" Faith-naid nethtax They went on, aide, by aide, towarflTr Ham. (To be continued) Largely bunk: 'm We are hearing from Switzer land, France, Texas and other for eign Darts protests against the new tariff law. The Swiss watch makers and other manufacturers seem to think legislation in this country ought to be for their spe cial benefit, and French concerns feel the same way about it. The Texas yawp is on all fours with the other democratic outcries, by members of congress of that party color who plug for the protection of their various local industries, then vote against the whole bill, for political effect. The greatest saving section of the new tariff law is the one that preserves the resiliency provisions that were first inserted in the one whose place it takes on the federal statutes. The more it comes to be used, the better for our country. The whole tariff squabble in" this country is largely bunk; a mess that has trailed Its slimy length since slavery days, when cotton was king and the old south was against the rest of the country on account of its one crop, grown with black labor. It never had any right ful place in the politics of a united country. It is an economical ques tion! never was properly a politi cal question. m S m The United States is the only country that makes a political is sue of the tariff. In England, when any Industry needs protection, the committee la council orders it, and that is the end of it. When the leaders in the British Isles, con cluding, after the World War, that their Insular country should be come more nearly self sufficient in sugar, decided to encourage sugar beet growing, and the making of sugar from the product, bounties were offered both growers and manufacturers, and the orders in council lifted sugar duties over night, so that the combined boun ties and tariff amounted to more than the wholesale prices of sugar in New York- S S And there was not a word of protest uttered by anybody in Great Britain over the Increased dsties, and there was practically no opposition to the granting of the bounties. The result was the building of many factories In England, Scotland and Wales, and the planting of great areas to su gar beets. And this in sections not nearly as well adapted to large per acre tonnage sugar beet sugar growing with a high sucrose (sug ar) content as are many scores of thousands of acres in the Will amette valley, with the aid of cheaply supplied irrigation. . What right have the cherry growers of France, Italy and Spain to protest against a tariff that will protect the cherry growers of Ore gon, Washington and California, to the inconvenience only of a mar- achino trust in New York, and that will tend to shifting of that kind of manufacturing to the Pacific coast? Surely, the Pacific coast states are in the united States. S The time it has taken to pass a tariff bill reflects a disgrace upon the common sense and supposed directness of the American people In no other part of our govern mental system has there grown up a more gigantic mountain of fool ishness than in the matter of mak ing tariff laws. It is a hot air peak of idiocy and futility. S V If President Hoover can get the resiliency clauses to working with out masses of red tape get them to functioning so as to show up in a manner even faintly compar able to the methods of that bring about the British orders in coun cil, he will have accomplished a great work, leading away from the maze of an ancient evil that has muddied the waters of American polities, generations too long. There is no animal in all crea tion that has not made up a part of the dietary of human beings; not many that do not now so con tribute. Most people take oysters raw, and some even clams and other shell fish, and the big bug they eall the shrimp, and th legs of frogs, and snails, etc., and yet hare qualms of their gorges when they think of the Indians eating grasshoppers and horse and skunk and snake, etc.,, etc. S The Lewis aud Clark party ate horse, relished mule, grew fat on buffalo, beaver and nearly all the rest of the animal creation along their route. They were reduced to dogs, weBt of the Rockies; Indian dogs that were likely not appetiz ing In appearance while they were alive. s s But one of the writers of their journals says that they got used to dog meat and came to prefer It to poor buffalo, elk dpor tr n rt rl thrived better on it than on the others, named and unnamed Any war, without what would ' have made up an immense pack of yelping, howling, snarling Indian dogs, several hundrds of them, that historic party could not have lived to reach their station and the site of their salt cairn near the mouth ef the Columbia river; and the world would not have heard of Sacajawea and American his tory would have been written in quite different tems, perhaps. Yours for more pure bred An gora and milk goats in Oregon, and a larger consumption of che Ton in Its various forus, from ten der chops to all day suckers of the jerked delicacy. , S By the way, Jeseph Gervals, at whose house the welf meeting was held, leading to the formation of the Oregon provisional govern ment, was fond of the meat of cats as testified to by Col. William Thompson, madcap hero of the Modoc war. Editorial Comment From Other Papers It seems some Douglas county people have been preparing goat meat for the market and selling it under the name of jerked veni son, to which there is official ob jection. There should be. The aver age jerked goat is no doubt bet ter than average jerked deer meat. It is a matter merely of custom, prejudice and taste. S Deer meat hi called veniaon. sheep meat mutton, and, by the up to oaie, goat meat is called chevon. It should be sold as ehe- voa, fresh, jerked or otherwiaa dried or prepared. U There is no animal cleaner in its habits that the goat. The nan ate will pass up many, things that even the- cleanest sheen wflt r. Hah. Think of the things the hen or the nor will eat. and then be ashamed t yourself, it you have relished pork or Cowl and tamed np yotrr noae eheven. READY TO FIGHT LAWBREAKERS x V '? " 1- r ! , ; 1 ' . 7, :S; i I' 1 - t - ' OXE WHO IS QUALIFIED The Bulletin has heretofore made mention of the qualifica tions which It blieves the state central committee sh'ould Insist upon in selecting a republican candidate for governor to succeed the late George W. Joseph. It has mentioned also oue man who has been prominent In the puhlic eye. who does not possess these quali fications. It Is now proper to sug gest the name of a man who doos possess them. The name fs that of Ralph s. Hamilton of Bend, attorney, speaker of the house of represen tatives, president of the state chamber of cemmerce, and acting governor of the state of Oregon. It will be recognized by those who have followed closely tho news of the last few days that Mr. Hamilton has made no an nouncement of any aspirations in thi3 direction. That Is a point in his favor. His attitude in this re gard is in striking and pleasing contrast to that of another Ore gon governor whose imseenilv haste has preriouslv been referred to. This should not be taken as meaning that Mr. Hamilton mav wot have considered himself in the light of a possible nominee. In his position, with full know ledge of the many favorable com ments which have been made re garding him in his brief incum bency as governor. It would be un natural indeed it the idea had not occurred to him. Probably it has. but g"ood taste has dictated si lence. When the proper time arrives, it may be hoped that Mr. Hamil ton will indicate his willinpness to accept the nomination should it be rendered him. And, It may he added, the cen tral committee would make no mistake should it name him as t!m republican party's choice. Bond Bulletin. Yesterdays Of Old Oregon Tswn Talks from The SUtcs man Onr Father Read Jpne 21, 1005 Dwight B. ;Huss of Detroit. Mich., 01d Beout" leader in the mad dash across the continent in the OUUmobtle race from New York td Portland, whirled into Salem last tdght. He made the start from the big metropolis in the east On 'May 8. in the first raee of fts kind In. the history of auiomoouiag in this country. I county scat of Shawnee g.Topeka. Wonld-UbS Ef, be swift indeed John DeLaitre and associates of Minnesota are determined to fi? -t to protect their Interests and w ill not submit quietly to the cancel lation of alleged bogus school land certificates purchased by tiiem from land operators. They claim about 23,985 acres of the school land now under dispute. W. H. Greener, the justice "f the peace in the Stavton d!?'rict. was a Salem visitor. A. M. Patrick, the Yew Park merchant who was kicked by a horse a few weeks ago and i.nd his leg broken, is sUll conf: -l to hjls bed. MARINES ASSIGNED WASHINGTON. (AP) M(ire than 100 Marines will be in Nic aragua, tn November to assist Cap tain A. W. Johnson, envoy extra rdinary;andftninhrter lenipoun tlaxy. in supervising the elections. AURORA. Jons 20 J. J. Wal ler of this place, has been appoint ed city marshal ef Mollala, former marshal Wade having resigned Waller . family will reside here temporarily.