lit - - - -" 1 " "" - -- ' - --.!-v- - - - - -y --rr"" : T ; " i I I 1 IQ 15 "No Faror Sways Us; No Pear Shall Awe."t Frost First SUtuau, March 281851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Oumt A. Snucus, Sheldox F. Sxcxett, PaNuifrs Caitus A. Snuccs Sbzxdoh P. Sacxett EditOT-Mamffef Member of the Associated Press r&. TSwaa la -rMn!vl- MfttTed fa tha CM far TObft- tKm ef mil dispatches credited a H ar act etnarwaw eratUlad Feeifi Coast Advertising Representatives: ArOtvr W. Btnfe. int. Portland. SerurUy Kd. FvascfcKo, 6han Bide: Los Anxele. w. Pas. Bid. Eastern Advertising He present tires: rgfl-PM-BtecbgT, Itkl, New Tor, Z71 sTKllsoa AT. J - Chicago.' (0 K. Michigan-Ave. nUrtf at Lkm Potto f fits at Salem. Oregon. Second-Clas Hatter. Pbtihed every morning except Monday. Bueuuee ice 215 S. Commercial Street. SUBSCRIPTION RATE3 In Advance. Within Oregon ; Dally and a I1-S5: MO. 9Z.Z&; i ycax .. nw Mail Subscrtotloa R'e", vEer tt cent per Ma or ..0 for 1 year hi advance. Cop By City Carrier: S cents a month ; $5.50 a : l i ccnUL Ob train, aad Kews Stands S ndul $5.50 a year la advance. Per 5 - V e Suing the Radio Trust THE suit brought by the Grigsby-Gnmow company against the Radio Corporation of America and allied electrical manufacturing concerns, for $30,000,000 is not a -mere ges ture like a libel suit against a newspaper with no expectation of recovery. It is a genuine attempt, we take it, to bring to the light of day some of the facts surrounding the patent rjghts held by the radio trust. The Radio corporation, the General Electric and Westinghouse are cited as having set up a vast illegal pool of radio patents. We hope the suit goes into the way the Radio corporation acquired the patents from the navy department at the close of the war. Some of the most important underlying patents were turned over to this corporation without charge when the war ended. If they were to be transferred out of the own ership of the government, they should by all means have been made available to every American manufacturer. There could be no justification of giving the radio trust a monopoly based-on patents held by the government , and developed by naval radio engineers. Besides having been forced to pay tribute to R.C.A., the other radio makers are" deeply resentful of the trade practice of that corporation when last spring it dumped great quan tities of radio sets on the market, broke the prices and de moralized business for the other companies. That however is a matter in the realm of free competition and any manufact urer might do the same thing. This suit, whfch is backed by the maker- of one of the leading radio receiving seta, will be pressed by Senator James A. Reed of Kansas City. That means that a nation-wide audience will hear the proceedings, for Jim Reed will give the court action life. It was Reed who in 'giving an address as sailing the radio trust a few weeks ago, using a broadcast to reach the people of the country, had his broadcast broken off by some sudden and unexplained "S.O.S." call which und er the rules of the air, calls for the immediate silencing of radio broadcasts. Charges were made that it was done in an effort to suppress the Reed speech, though that seems doubt ful. At any rate, the fat is in the fire, and Reed will see that the grease is fried out of it in court. Orderly Marketing Reaches Turkeys IT is surprising how fast a phrase spreads. Here is "orderly marketing" which has become a slogan for marketing of farm products. It means to erase the peaks and valleys of selling. It is sort nf straight line-production, like automo biles. The endless conveyor belt moves along carrying wheat and corn and cotton and meat and cranberries to market in an even, orderly manner. And now this slogan is carrying over into the turkey business.. Turkeys have been a Thanksgiving product, with a lesser call at Christmas time. They were grown for a date and sold for consumption on a date. Thanksgiving was the original of the special days which later spread from this Turkey Day to Apple Week, Rice Day and Codfish Week. Orderly turkey marketing is in the air now, however. The set-up was made at a recent conference in Salt Lake city, attended by government agents and representatives of turkey co-operatives. A central sales agency is to be set up for 10 western states. The news reports do not say whether in support of orderly marketing of turkeys the government I a e ft ewn l t 1 1 1 , win Duy an tne unsold stock aiier lnanKsgmng aay ana noia It off the market or not. To have straightJme consumption of turkeys there should be an advertising campaign, and promotion" work through the spring and summer. Neat booklets telling 43 ways to serve turkey should be printed and newspapers sup plied with reams of publicity material about the merit of turkey meat. While the turkey trade is being made orderly, what would happen to beef and mutton and salmon? i But under the sway of the slogan of orderly marketing, so long as the government money holds out, we will have our turkeys and relish them on the Fourth of July as on Thanks giving day. Every day will be Thanksgiving Day, by and by. Today's Newspaper MEN idling at typewriters have long been, telling what would happen to the newspaper of tomorrow. The feat 6 f transmitting an edition of the San Francisco Call-Bulletin to Schnectady by radio and reprinting it there for distribu tion is pointed to as a prophecy of national editions of great papers which would, be published simultaneously over the United States. Others point to radio and television and ex press wonder over how they may affect the transmission of news. - , v There is no discounting the fact that mechanical changes iiay have profound effects on newspapers the same as cotton mills, dynamos and street flusters. But'there is always going to be a field for local newspapers. The country weekly is more prosperous today than ever in spite of the inroads of the daily papers with full news and circulation coverage. Mechanical improvement! may result in economies which will benefit the small city dailies as well as the large city dailies. Meantime the newspaper of -today in cities great and mall is a remarkable product Papers have lost something In individuality that is true; bmVthey have more than made op in the breadth and variety and fairer treatment of the material they offer. A writer in a current magazine in dis cussing Tomorrow's Newspaper," after pointing out the standardization of papers through use of identic sews ser vices, syndicate material and style of make-un. savs: ,.; "Nevertheless, the newspaper el today, standardise or not. Is a good newspaper. Factor for factor in its content, newspaper quality was never so high a it is today. The ratherinr at news Kan Wn brought to a magical perfection of scene and detail. Aataaritv- tn ent&tfon and Interpretation is at the highest point that has eve been reached. The syndicate, the news serrice, as they function now adays, can tarnish for a hnndred newspapers material that in excel lence ant importance would be beyond the reach of any one news paper, except, perhaps, a few of the greatest ot them all. In erery ease wi me worn, newspaper or toaay the best bargain any taan eaa buy. Regarded as a manufactured product alone, it sells for less than half the cost of taming it out. The value of the lnf ormatlea It garners from a thousand semreea and lays at your doorstep er on your a ear. u uueny oeyona calculation. . .-.- HEALTH Today's Talk By B. S. Copeknd, It p, n s w Ancient peonies had moat of the same disease we meet today. "Arthritis- is of ancient origin, and t appears to bare been, the enrse el ancient days. 'ifle .jsgyp tiAns ot three thousand ex more years ago were afflicted with it. We hare had re ports from Ger man scientists who examined 30,009 Egyp tian mummies It was found that Egyptian slaves, who worked and sweated under the hot suns of the Nile, bad almost perfect teeth. But persons of royal birth, those who ate soft food and ban queted sumptuously - daily, had badly decayed teeth. - Harked changes were found in the bones and joints of the mummies. There are many types of arth ritis. The word "aritis" means "inflamatJon of the joints.' In one type the tissues of the Joint are involred. The ligaments and lining membrane become Inflam ed, in another type there are fev er, an accumulation ot fluids in the Joints and changes in the bones and cartilages. - One kind of arthritis, which la particularly painful and serious enough, is ''arthritis deformans." I It is well-named, because the joints become Quite deformed. In acute attacks there is high fever and a rapid pulse. The Joints art tender, swollen and feel, hot to the touch. Erery motion seems to create pain. Infection of some, sort is us ually at the bottom ot this trouble. Infected tonsils, or teeth and diseased gums, constipation and digestiTe disturbances set up poisons in the system which Na ture has to fight in the battle for supremacy. Constipation leads to degenera tion of the whole alimentary can al and the poisoning of the sys tem through putrefying and pois onous "matter. Arthritis may re sult. It has been said "Nature is the curer of disease." Here Is a case in point. In arthritis, rheumatism and gout a ferer and swelling ot the joints mean something. They do not represent a disease but the reaction of the organism against ft. Nowadays everybody realises we must aid Nature in her cure all we can. To do this effectively may demand the unusual. For In stance, in arthritis, Instead of plunging the aching joints in Jce water, bandage it and Increase the heat and swelling of the part. In this way Nature, in her system of riding the body of the invading bacteria, forms around the germs a defense ring to keep them from going further with the blood stream Into the heart and kid neys, those vital Bpots which are to be guarded carefully. In help ing Nature we use the same meth ods she does. Every effort should be made to locate the source of Infection. Nothing should be taken for granted, but your physician should be called in early and with the right treatment much can be done. i. ANOTHER PLAYBOY TAKES WS THRONE J, l The news of . the merger of Pacific coaait firms, engaging In fur niture manufacture brings to light the Information that the Pacific - Coast now ranks as one of the greatest furniture manufactnrlnar sec tions of the United States. A few years ago a furniture dealer made ' a trip to Chicago and Grand Rapids once or twice a year and ordered his furniture there. -It came in cariota and he had to carry bis- stocks. ,t Now ho buys from western factories, going oast only tor certain spe- v..ai nnes. T&e merger may result in even greater expansion of this - important una ef iadnstrr oa this coast. - . , : . ,, The Safety Valve - - Letters from Statesman Readers To the Editor: The writer is anxious to see Thomas B. Kay, now state treas urer, placed upon the republican ticket for goYermor, Ties George W. Joseph, deceased. The asser tion that Mr. Kay is the best equipped man in the state for the position is everywhere accepted. Had he entered the primary elec tion as a candidate there is little doubt that he would hare been easily triumphant at the polls. It nominated by the state commit tee new his election is already as sured. In this section of the state he has notable strength among democrats, who realize that th commonwealth at this juncture needs his experience and his clear conception of the requiremento of tne gubernatorial office. Ho will take pride in directing such an ad ministration of public .affairs as will be- a model for future executives. It. is- a rare thing indeed that any state has the opportunity to secure for four rears the leader ship of a man of the type of Mr. Kay. He possesses courage, inde pendence, vision, and la entitled to the honor. Every member ot the legislature will delight la fol lowing his lead. The citizens of the state -of all Dartiea will feel that their Interests are in safe handt. Under him we shall know what real business administra tion is. Polities win not blur, fav oritism win not blight, ambition wm not color nil occupancy of the executive chair. This letter intended as an appeal to thought ful men and women throughout the state to urge their respective committeemen to vote for Mr. Kay. STEPHEN A. LOWELL. A. Problem Fcr Tou For Today d ( VWS, V&rV: -AuVTrwrti who sp Srf Wm0 AT tte 0&aZ?ZJf7fl4fZf1tt Jf .-Jl 130- Kmc rMUttl Syntax, tel. find MBk nto iwnl Che SEA BIRD DC By BEN AMES WILLIAMS , THE ROMANCE OF AN EVENTFUL WHALING CRUISE A man owing 85-81 ot a 'vessel sold -! of his share for S1.5C2 Vs. At mat rate, what was the val ue or the vessel r . . ; Answer to Xseterdays Problem : 175. .Explanation:. 1 per-cent equals .11. The number Increased by .12 ot Itself eaualal.lz of it. If 1st .i. 1.11 ot a number, that vnmoer is us euvided by lax. i - x " "- ' :: :-' j There have been no bank fail ures or hold-ups tor 59 years in wuoraoo springs, Colo. - CHAPTER XVTH. "Pass over your tubs," Mr. Ham ordered. Dan'l's men obeyed and-- Mr. Ham took the fresh line to Willis. He was no more than just in time. "The black devil's still going," Willis said. "Second tub's all but gone!" "Bound for hell, more'n like," Mr. Ham agreed. "Hold him!" Danl's line was running out try this time, for Willis had worked Quickly, and still the whale went down. Mr. Ham stood by, wait ing. The line ran on steadily; the whale showed no signs of ris ing. The bow of Willis boat was held down within inches of the water by the strain he kept upon the line. Another tub was emp tied: he began to look anxious: and the whale kept going down "There, pass over your line, Mr. Ham said abrutply. "Hell be gone on you, first you know!" Willis looked at the smoking line and reluctantly he surren dered. With no more than sec onds to spare, the end of his line was made fast to the cut end of Mr. Ham's. The whale continued to go down, held now by the mate. He had taken all the line of two boats and wanted more. "He's hungry,- Mr. Ham grin ned, watching the running rope. Gone down tor supper, likely. There! M he went on, moment later, his eyes lighting. "Getting tired or struck bottom, maybe." They could all see that the line bad slackened. The bow of Mr. Ham's boat rode at a normal level, the line hung loose. The mate turned around and bellowed to his men: "Haul In!" They began to take in the line. hand over hand; It fell In a wide coll amidships, overlapping the sides, spreading a coil that grew and grew. They worked like mad. The only way to kill a whale is to pull up on him until your boat rides against his very flank. All the line this creature had stolen must be recovered before he could be slain. They toiled with racing hands. ' Mr. Ham began to look anxious-? ly over the bow. down into the blue water from which the line came up. - "He's near due. Tie ssid. It is one ot the carious and fa tal habits of the sounding whale to rise near the spot where it went down... It is as it the creatures followed a weu-kaowm path into the depths and up again. This Is not always true, (or sometimes a whale. that has sounded wui take it into his mind to ran, will set oft at a double pace; bat in most cases the while comes -up near where he disappeared. The men knew this. DanT To- bey, in' his sinking, boat, worked away from the neighborhood to give the mate room. Set did Wa lls. . And Mr. Ham, leaning one knee on the bowr peering down into the water, his lance ready in his hand, waited for the whale to rise. The lino came In. The nerves of each man tautened. Mr. Ham aid, over his sheulder: "SUva, yoa coil the line. Rest of you, get in your oars. Hold ready!" - He heard the men obey, knew they wero waiting to maneuver at his command. - The whale wan coming up slowly; the lino was still alack but tk creature should have breached long- before. - ' The mate thought he detected a light puU oa the line. It seemed to draw 'backward underneath the boat. . Tun her around.-, he aald softly. . . y ..-The oars; dipped: the boat swung slowly on a pivot. The line now ran' straight down. . ' - Abruptly Mr. , Ham bending abov the water,- thought he saw a black bulk far down and down a bulk that seemed to rise. He watched. It was ahead of the boat; it became more plainly visible. The mate waved his hand, pointing. "There!" he said. "There!" Deep in the water that black bulk swiftly moved; it darted to one side, circling, rising. Mr. Ham saw the flash of white, a huge black head, a swordlike, saw toothed jaw. The big man tow ered; he flung his left hand op and back in a tremendous gesture. 'Starn! Oh, starn all!" he cried. The oars bent like bows under the fierce thrust of the men as they backed water. The boat slid back; but not in time. Willis Cox and the men In his boat saw the long, narrow under jaw of the cachalot a dozen feet long, with the curving teeth of a tiger set along it slide up from the Water, above the bow of the boat. The bow lifted aa the whale's upper Jaw, toothless, rose under it. The creature was on Its back, biting. The boat rolled side wise, the men were tumbling out. But that narrow jaw sheared down resistlessly through the stoat sides ot the boat, crumpling and splintering ribs and. planking through the boat and clamped shut across the thick body of the mate. They saw the mate's body swell as a toy balloon swells un der a child's foot. Then, horribly it relaxed and fell away, and was lost in a smother of bloody foam. Loum. Wulis' boat steerer, swung them alongside the rolling whale. It was Brander who caught a loop of the loose line; and while the creature lay quietly. apparently content with what it had done, they hauled close, and Willis the boy's face was white, but his hand was steady, drove home his lance, and drew it forth, and plunged it in, again and yet again. The whale seemed to have ex hausted its strength. Having killed. It died easily enough. It spout crimsoned, its flukes beat in a last flurry, then the great black bulk, was still. They picked, up the men who had,, been- spiUed from the mate's boat. Net a man was hurt, of them all, pave only Mr. Ham. Him they aeter found no part of him. The sea took him. No doubt, Faith tnooght that night, he would have wished his life to come to some sueh end. ' Mr. Ham was dead and gone. Faith was surprised t find, in the next few days, how much she miss ed him. The mate had been harsh,' brutal to jtha men,ready with his fist: yet somehow she found in her heart a deep affection for the man. Ho was se amiably stupid. so stupidly good of heart. . His philosophy of life had been the philosophy of blows. He-believed that men, like children, were best ruled for their own good by the heavy hand of a master; and ho acted oa that belief,-with the best win In the world. But there had never been any malice in his blows; he frowned and glar ed and struck from principle; he was at heart a simple man and a gentle one. Not the stuff of a lead- tti never the man to take com- manr ot a masterless ship. Never theless, a man of certain rude and simple strength ,f soul. ; , Faith' was sorry he-was gone. She felt they eonld have better spared another man abnost any other, save Noll wins. She did not at ones understand the true nature of the change which Mr. Ham's death must bring; about aboard the Sally, in the balancing of man and man which had aude for a precarious stability there, Mr. Ham had tak en a- passive but nevertheless im portant part. Now he was gone; the balance was disturbed. But neither Faith nor the others per "ceived this; none of them saw that Dan'l Tobey as second mate, ajid Dan'l Tobey as first mate, with only a step between him and the command, were very different matters. Not even Dan'l saw it, in the beginning. They were all too busy, for one thing. There were the whales to be cut in for James Tichel had killed and towed Ills btaoty back to the Sally an hour after Mr. Ham died. TkheUs whale, and the one that had killed Mr. Ham, would give the whole ship work for days feverish work, hard and en grossing. Cap'n Wing, who had leaned upon Mr. Ham in the past, per force took charga of this work, and the strain of it wearied him. He no longer had the abounding vitality which it demanded. What with the death of the mate, and the rush of work, ind his own weariness, he altogether forgot his threat to have the man Brander whipped in the rigging. He for got Brander, tried to drive the men at their tasks, and eventually gave up in a stormy outbreak of impatience, leaving the work In the hands of Dan'l Tobey. Dan'l went about the business of cutting in and boiling the blub ber in a deep abstraction. He was considering the problem raised by the death of Mr. Ham, which none of the others save perhaps Faith had yet perceived. This problem was simple; yet it had possibilities of trouble. As Mr. Ham was gone. Danl automatical ly became first officer. Old James Tichel ranked as second, Willis Oox as third; but the place of fourth mate was left empty. It would have to be filled. The Sally could not go on about her busi ness with one boat's crew forever idle. There would have to be a new officer. Dan'l was troubled by the prob lem, for the reason that Brander was the only man Aboard with an officer's training; that Brander was the obvious choice. Danl did not want Brander fa the cabin; he had seen too much a Faith's eyes that night when she heard Brander sing by the capstan. He. had eyes to see, and he And- seen. There was boiling la Dan'l a storm of hatred for Brander. He was Wled with a rancor unspeak able. (To be continued) Scissored Squibs Gdltorial Bits from the Press of the State We torseo that-the "nlaifnmi" left by the late George Joseph. wiu nave 10 oe strong enougn to carry a crowd. Morninc Aster- Mr. Hoover can caU ceagress In" extra session, bat can he make it behave after hm ta it thvv Albany Democrat-Herald. - v ; Gosh, we wish we were IS years old again, and eonld take off onr shoes and stockings and go bare foot Medford News, e e . Nobodies have another advan tage; They can have baby with out any advance publicity. Med f ord HaO-Trlbsme. ' " - Officials of the Philippine Is lands are trying to introduce a poultry industry to avoid Import ing chickens from China.- - I BITS BREAKFAST or By R. J. HENDRICKS The oldest jchurch building .. On this coast and belonging to people of the Protestant faith, and yet standing and still in use, with its original pulpit and furni ture. Where Is it? It is probably in Marlon county; the Pleasant Grove (or Condit) Presbyterian church, which is to have its an nual home coming tomorrow, and of which more in this column for tomorrow's issue. Getting her information from Mary Condit of Turner, Sarah Hunt Steeves printed in her "Book of Remembrance of Mar ion County, Oregon, Pioneers" the following: "In each succeeding generation God, in His mercy, has raised up men to meet the challenge of their day. literally fulfilling that old promise, 'As thy day is, so shall thy strength be.' The American people have always been a restless sort. They descended from other restless men and women, else our American continent . would not have had its settlements at James town. Plymouth, New Amsterdam, etc. This restless spirit prevailed among the early preachers as well as among the laymen. Let us hope the spirit of adventure, the pio neering inclinations of these early preachers were Incited by mission ary eeal and a desire to be at the frontier to serve as best they could, as well as to satisfy their own desires. "Up until the time when the greatest of American enterprises was launched, that of the winning of the west,' by the pioneers, there was a dearth "of well train ed, well educated ministers. Men of more than ordinary mental en dowment usually, and gifted with the ability to express themselves verbally, would feel they had a 'caU' and would at once proceed in the work of the ministry with their stock-in-trade, consisting principaUy of their Bible, their faith and an abundant amount of seal. The folk ro whom they preached were for the most part uneducated. God-fearing men and women, not the worldly wise, crit ical, duty-shirking folk to which the ministers of today have to give an account. After all, the 'golden rule is a very simple thing. The good btfok savs, 'he who runs may read, 'and the min isters of that day filled the re quirements of their times. As pop ulation increased and learning be came more common, the demand arose for the educated, salaried preacher of today, who gives of his time sto freely and Is serving the day in which he lives. In the future the need will be met in the same way as had been In the past, we feel assured. "To the settlements of the mid dle west, then considered the frontier, from which Oregon drew her greatest immigration, a sal aried preacher was very unusual. The men of that profession usually toiled through the week upon their farms or in the shoos, sup porting their families by their own labors, so as not to be a bur den to their pioneering neighbors. Their 'quarterage was so small and so uncertain that most of the early ministers had to take the example of St. Paul and be makers of tents. "The sons of these pioneer min isters needed land, as well as those of the laymen, upon which tu settle and rear their own fam ilies, and it was many a wise preacher-farmer who loaded his family ot sons and daughters in the covered wagon and started out toward the setting sun with a' threefold mission, to preach the gospel in the new country, to find homes for his' large family and to take unto himself a donation land claim upon which he could make for himself and good wife a home in their old age. "Among those of the Presbyter Ian faith coming to Oregon In the early days was the Rev. Phillip Condit, of Ohio. 8yh anns,a son of Rev. Phillip Condit, had come to Oregon in 1851, driving an ox team across the plains for Hiram Smith. Among this party of 1851 were also Thomas McF. Patton. Joseph Oook and the Bucking- hams. During this journey he bad learned many things about the camping places, how to mum for fuel and knew somethln? about how to treat the Indiana to get best results. "Sylvanus Condit took the western journey in search of health. Fever and ague, so prev alent in Ohio at that time, had afflicted him so seriously that a change ot climate seemed the only cure in sight. An uncle, Alva Con dit, Sr., had already gone out Jo Oregon and had settled on the Clatsop plains. This location is now about midway between War renton and Seaside, in Clatsop ?ounty, on the main highway. This uncle had sent word back that they were free of this scourge in Oregon. "Sylvanus said that the very day their caravan arrived at the village of Portland, or where Portland is today, he had one of the worst chills he had ever ex perienced and was so discouraged over this that had he been pos sessed with sufficient funds tor the return trip, he would have started back1 to Ohio right away, he was so homesick and disap pointed. However, he went down the Columbia river to visit his uncle Alva and in a short time he felt much better and again went to Portland, where be worked as a carpenter for two years, and in 1853 returned to Ohio, a well man. By this time he was so en thusiastic over the beauties of the Willamette valley and its health giving climate, that he really in duced his father and brothers to join the western exodus. His mother's health was very poor and it was in hopes of her complete recovery that the decision was made. "In the spring of 1854 we find Rev. Phillip Condit,-his wife, with, their two eldest sons, already mar ried, four minor children and an adopted daughter, ' Nancy, and three young, unmarried hired men to attend'their stock, headed for the Oregon country. "This small company was com prised of only 14 souls, and must have set out with great faith, in the face Of experiences suffered by others. Sabbath observance was one of the cardinal tenets of the Presbyterian church, and as the three Condit families were all of one 'persuasion,' they made it a rule not to travel on Sunday but would rest by the way and lis ten to the Rev. Phillip expound the scriptures best suited to their needs. "Always before starting out in the early morning, these faithful men and women had family wor ship. The record says that only a very few Sundays did they break this rule and that was to find food and water for themselves and their animals. In their case, 'vir tue seemed to have its reward, for they had no trouble with the Indians whatever. Many came to their camp, but these good folk had laid in a goodly supply - ot trinkets, and a present of a little tobacco or a few beads seemed to satisfy the redskins and they were not molested. The only ill that befell the party was the death of the adopted daughter. Nancy, of camp fever and the loss of some of the stock as they wore out along the way. "Because of his previous exper ience, Sylvanus was chosen cap tain of this little company, and they finally arrived in Marion county and made a settlement near Aumsville, where the father and his two sons took up adjoin ing land. "Just as they crossed over the Cascade mountains, provision ran low, so one of the younger boys was sent on ahead for food supplies. The only think he coulll get was a sack of potatoes and s little salt. For 6ome time the stock of potatoes they had laid in before starting west had been consumed, and they said these po tatoes tasted the best of anything they had eaten for a long time. "So many of their oxen had died along the way that by the time they arrived at Aumsville the only team Sylvanus had was one horse and a cow, but these were industrious, sturdy folk and it was but a short time until a home was built for each family and stock was accumulated. Their farms yielded well and in time these families were considered aomng the most prosperous in Marion county. When houses were built for the three families, and shelter for the stock, and the farms had been put in shape to produce crops, these good folk be gan to consider a house of wor ship, where. those of the Presby terian faith eonld meet together. W w (This story will be concluded tomorrow.) YOUR vacation will Be more carefree artel en joyable if before going you "put your house, in .order by having that long delayed will drawn by "your attorney, . and your family's future pro-' vided for. You may have the services of this strong fiitancial ixisti tution as your executor, for the same fee set by statute for individual executors. We i n v i t.e confidential consultation about the best way to arrange your affairs. - See our Trust Of ficer. 1 Ladd & Bush. Trust Company A. N. BUSH, Presides. . Vnu 8. WALTON. Vice-Proa. . 1 JOS. U. ALBERT, Trast Officer.