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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1930)
PAGI3 FCUIl Wo Favor Sways U: No Fear Shall Atoe" ' From. First Statesman. March 28, 1851 I THE STATESMAN PUBUSHINGjcO. Cha&tes A. Sfsagve, Shtldom F. Sackxtt, PnllUhar . Chaeles A. Sfracuc - - -.,' Editor-Manager . Sheldon F. Sackett - - ; - - - Managing Editor ; Member of the Associated Press i " " : The Associated Tress 1a azdnslvtMy entitled to the arm for pabllea Mn of all nws dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited this paper, . . ," . j ; Pacific Coast Advertising Reoresentatlves: ' Arthur W Stypea. Ins;.. Portland. fewrltr ' Ban Fnn-lro Sharon Bids.-; W. pao. Bid. Eastern Advertising Representatives: Ford Pamnm.-gtecher.Ine.. New Tnrk, 171 Madison Are.; Chicago, as N. Michigan Arc , . - . Entered at the Potto ff ice at Salem, Oregon, at Second-Clas Matter. Published every morning except Monday, Bueineea office, SIS S. Commercial Street. 4 SUBSCRIPTION BATES: I i : v Mall Subscription Rates. In Advance. Within Oregon j Dally and Sunday, 1 VI o. to cents; 1 Mo. $l.SI Mo. $2.25: 1 year $ 4.0ft. Else where 80 cents per Mo. or $5.00 for 1 year In advance. By City Carriers 50 cents a month: $5.50 a year In advance. Per Copy S centa. On trains and News Stands f cents. . : " Romance and TACK SHOUP, son o Paul Snoop president of the Southern Pa- citic railroad, is working as a cleric In a grocery store ? The romance, he says, has all gone out of railroading; the pioneer ing has all been done. "Is the romance cone from 'all been done? One wonders." Review. - ' v . . M . ' XNOt oniy 13 me romance gone, uui. most. 01 me pruuus. '-The slump in business has cut the earnings of the railroads until they are experiencing1 the worst year since 1921 "when they were trying to emerge from the blight of government operation in the midst of a business depression. 1 Fewer men are employed by the railroads of the country than in 1911. : . v t i, . Raflroad executives are going around giving speeches and making threats of the fight they are going to make to protect their interests and preserve the roads as the coun try's chief transportation system. But there isn't much fight left In railroad men any more; they are sort of tooth less old gentry whose bite doesn't amount to much. ' The roads have been regulated and regulated until the starch is pretty well gone from their persoimel. The suc cessful railroad nresident tnrlav is one vehn can win the traf fic of the big industries on one hand and pare operating costs to the bone on the other hand. In the days of our youth railroading attracted thousands . of fine young fel lows. It did have romance in it then. Where is the man of -friT-fi tv?9V txrVin AiA nit: in Vila rwwVirwl fitmlro fix Vw an mirl. V hvmmj v v w 1 a uve mm, tef ewr eaws wm sa w aw vmq neer or a conductor on a railroad train? Now, the conduct ors and engineers you meet are all grey-haired men. It has become an bid man's game with the young men squeezed out through bumping. . The railroads will of course recover from the present business slump along with the rest of the country. But they face a difficult struggle to preserve their place in transportation. The government fixes their rates and ever since the 1920 increase the rates have been steadily whit tled down. Law limits hours of labor for employes; polit ical boards fix the rates of pay. Taxing bodies milk the roads for constantly increasing sums for support of gov ernment. Under such atrintrent regulation and under sharrj competition from motor and water transport, the roads have a difficult time to preserve a margin for interest on bonds and dividends on stocks. Some, roads prosper; others lan guish. Railroad management has been able to keep the roads alive under such regulation only through increase in efficiency -and through rnwianical improvements in rolling stock. Bui there are limits to this. Trains a mile long- may be practical, but not five miles long. Since their return from government operation the roads have made good as agents of transportation. But it is not difficult to foresee with the handicaps under which it la , bars that private ownership may ultimately give up in de - spair and seek to turn the roads over to the government. Who Gets Last Laugh? f There Is no public deception' In this thrift campaign and ev- ry printed promise is made good and no one is being deceived. The only protestant is tha Statesman and its grievance lies In the fact that it lost the advertising in- conjunction therewith. If It really holds there has been a violation of the law, it should take ft up with the grand Jury, not only cities where the same campaign Tor the Statesman, wits this is the season of cheer .and good will, wo pass by, to pose as . .the pure in spirit, the unstained, unsullied and untarnished eham- ' best Jokes of the Merry Christmas season. Whatever its deficien cies, it cannot be said that the Statesman staging a spasm of sour grape rirtue Is lacking In delightful humor. . ( ' " - Adding to the merriment of the Christmas season is no small function; and if we have really helped the editor of our evenincr contemnorarv to lautrh out loud we f eel abun dantly repaid for our efforts.' No, it is not a matter of ."sour grapes" over the loss of this business. . The conditions which The Statesman -made when the advertising was first offered to itwas that the publicity should read: "offered to the people of Salem and vicinity by '. ". . (name of savings and loan association) through The Oregon Statesman". We did not want the ad vertising where we were to appear as giving away a bank and 60 cents; and have no regrets at all over the loss of the business. V: x s The Capital Journal may insist that the statement cash present of fifty cents to be given away free by the Capital' Journal"; constitutes no public deception. But when the facts are that as the promoter yesterday, admitted at the Ad club, the bank costs in quantities but $1.20, and when the Capital Journal is putting up not a. dime for the bank or the fifty cents, then The Statesman submits that it is deceptive so far as the public is concerned. . , ' ' Einstein's PROF. Einstein is the world's greatest physicist. His writings are so profound that only a few people in all the world can even understand them. Yet as he arrives for a visit to America this is his message: ' j 4 - . . - "Kill the monster of militarism. Your political and economic -position today la auch that you can entirely destroy militarism whenever you set your hand to It. The German professor writes from a land which has gone through hell because of the terrorism of xnilitarism, a nation which is paying the penalties of devotion to war fare aa an instrument nf natinrml vlisv sstVTrif Tf tl "-. Zrftt A - " ' Bfrvmj f wm WU1M J ffUiVU today writhes in desperation from the burdens imposed by victor nations.- . j So exhausting, so universally debilitating, so futile has modern warfare become that the organized intelligence and -Jieart of the world ought to unite definitely for peace. The trouble is that each disarmament conference -save that in Washington is surcharged with an atmosphere of suspicion, of fear, and of desire for competitive advantage. Instead of working for maximum reductions in armies and navies, the delegates seem to scheme for minimum reductions for them selves and maximum for other nations. r . ... America does well to pay heed to the message brought by Einstein. ,;v. ,.; o:-v:;'.-.-:;.;,:.:i:j'. . a ;:v r,' Tha IHki mlnxtrAt Tbnradav lilrht Armwr mUniiil o.t ! folk responded in a better-than-usual . . . . . W ' . rwi v wowu; pat iuimb was -lodre in hiilUlnr in Ita fund eheer. The cause is worthy;, and uving.up in mis practical -manner which the order la founded. (Ma Railroading V " 1 " railroading? Has the pioneering Frank Jenkins In Roseburg News- A. . ' A. ' 1L 1 '. L here but In Portland and other has been or Is being staged. Its spotted record, which because Message -A. y ' uvus, Micul fashion. Home talent always a . . . iub aaaea incentive OI aiding this fni TThriatmaa 4tisrttia mm -.. the Elks deserve a lot of credit for vo me iaeai mt beneYOlenee on : - ' HEALTH Tcdat Tc3c r By It. 8. Ccpttaad, tL D. One of the most : painful perienees of childhood la the ali ment formerly known as "mem branous croup. We hear that name . lnireouentiy tnese oays ; because now it Is recognised . as a mild form of diphtheria. I The synip- toms of this condition are caused '. by en Inflamation of the. larynx, tha windpipe, . with the formation of a false membrane. It usually at tacks the ehlld between the ages : of two AS and fire years: The attack may start as a cold does. There may be some fever, and general discomfort. It may come very suddenly in other cases. : In .a sudden attack which Is apt to come on at night the chUd is awakened from sleep gasping for breath. The mueuous mem brane lining the , throat is so swollen that scarcely any air. can pass through. There Is a sharp barking cough, with what Is us ually described as a : "metallic sound. The ferer increases and the pulse is rapid. V Keep . Cool . -The child appears to be des perately sick. It is natural that the mother should feel terrified. But heroic maesurest should be taken at once, so she must be as calm as possible. The first thing to do is to send for a doctor. While awaiting his coming there are certain things to be done to giro relief to the little sufferer. Put the child in a hot bath at a temperature of about 100 de rees. Be careful not to have the water too hot, so a to scald the little patient. Try the heat of the water on your elbow to sake sure it is safe for trf child. Keen the Htle patient in the bath for fifteen- to twenty min utes. . At the same time cold compresses should he applied to the head. In an older child a hot foot bath, to which a teaspoonful of mustard has been added may be adequate to draw the blood from the upper part of the body. When this takes place it gives reuef to the sufferer. Syrun of Ipecac, or syrup of squills, is sometimes glren to in duce vomiting to that the mucus accumulation in the throat may be cleared away. But every such remedy, all drugs. Indeedshould be glren only when the , family doctor prescribes. , The child is usually mgntenea at the - extreme . difficulty in breathing. He wants to be taken up and carried. Keep the child well wrapped and guarded against exposure If taken from bed. It may be necessary to apply treatment known as "intuba tion." In this a tube is inserted in the throat, enabling the child to breathe. Fortunately this pro cedure is rare these days. Anti toxin has saved the necessity of operation In thousands of cases. The Important thing to re member Is to apply the Immedi ate treatment I nave outlined. This Is likely to give- relief to the sufferer. Membranous eroup Is always a dangerous thing to handle. The larynx is In the narrowest part of the respiratory passage, so that a slight obstruction may prore serious. - X never think ot this ailment which used to he so common when I was a younar doctor. without a feeling of extreme thankfulness that science has round a means of prevention. with the universal Inoculation against diphtheria, membranous croup win disappear. Answers to Health Queries M. H. O What oans. in the legs? A. Have a careful examina tion to find the cause. ' Yesterdays . Of Old Oregon. Town, Talks from The States man Oar Fathers -Bead December 18, 1903 " Conrad Krebs was a Portland Tisitor. .. - s A. H. Damon, the drayman, has been missing two weeks and no trace of him. has been found. . Rot. I. P. Desmarals, Catholic pastor at The Dalles for the past two years, was In the city Tisit Ing with Rer. A. A. Moore of 8L Joseph's jchurch. Father Demar ais will leave tomorrow on first lap of a 10-months Journey to Europe. i-"..': .; -V:, - After a two-year search, or iginal copies of Salem's ordin ances are found and are now safe in the custody of City Recorder, w. A. Moores. The PeoDle'a - Povar TMrna which Is proposing several con- a. max . a a .at . . . sumuonai amenaments, will hold a mass meetinr In ParUanit tn elect officers and- take final ac tion on the bills. TODAY'S PROBLEM J A schoolroom is;. SO ft. -wide and i 0 ft. long.' If a- person must hare 4S0 cubic feet of air, what must he the height of the room to accommodate 31 pupils, and their teacher. Today's answer to morrow. Yesterday's l answer 135.47. . MOVES HERB FROM EAST AURORA, Dec. II -The S. H. Stoner family are ; rejoicing, be cause ot the arrival of their son. James O. Stoner who with his wife and child, hare come from Lahlta. North Dakota, to settle here peremanently. and he near weir seiatlTes. m 11111 1 i ' . 1 1 1 1 .- RIGHT WHT 'f "FOREST LOVE' : CHAPTKB XXX. Once Roger went out to hunt np - tome . government official something to do with his work and left her alone. . X won't miss you a bit. . Ill do a little illegal washing In the wash basin. Maybe I'll eren darn a stocking i she told him, laugh ing. , But when he was gone and she dragged the suitcases out from under the bed and poked and pushed through their rumpled contents, her high - spirits oosed away. She didn't know where to start, there was so much to do. Louise had always done- their' mending and washing. She felt discouraged and helpless, sur rounded - by crumpled silks and sad looking linens. Even the cor al chiffon dressing gown looked limp, i and the-French flowers on one satin mule were loose. And the room waa terrible. Sticky varnish on the- dresser. None too clean lace curtains at the windows. 1 wish we'd taken a. chance and gone to the good hotel! she moaned, but that waa Impossible, of course, with the Porters' likely to turn up any minute. For that matter, she might run Into Anita Beamer, staying at the. palatial Riverside, where all the dlTercees and ev eryone who was anyone stayed In Reno. Anita Beamer, hare la Reno getting a divorce so that Jack could marry her, Nancy . , . Poor Jack! How disappointed he would be when he knew that she had Jilted him for a ranger a poor ranger who didn't mind aw ful hotels, and dldnt know the difference between sew clothes and old . . . "It's so tunny! she thought, giggling helplessly. She thought she was laughing, but her eyes were wet, so she must be- crying instead. Roger found her, s wilted little heap s beside the scattered clothes on the floor when he " came backr "Don't leave me! Don't leave me again! she walled, and he lifted her in his strong arms and comforted her and 1 laughed at her and they were both happy again. . "The first time yon leare me all day I'll probably go home to mama!' she laughed, looking up at him adoringly with wet, Tel- fety eyes. -. ? "Oh. I guess not!" But It frightened him a little. He loved her more every day, 'but he real ized that he didn't know her' as well as he thought he did. She was so Independent up there In the High Sierras, and now she waa so soft and dinging. : she sure cares a lot i for me! he thought, half humhle, halt ex ulting. "My- Nancy f It was only when she was clinging that Nancy felt that she knew him at all. Sometimes, see ing him at a little distance -or hearing him speak to some man about something sh knew the knew nothing about, he was a stranger. "That's my .husband! I'm married to - him, she mar veled. - . r yj..'. - - In the church where they were married he had looked so strange and unfamiliar, with . his unruly hair slicked down -and his -tunny little toothbrush mustache shar ed too close, that it was all she could do to -make proper re sponses, and not cry out "Oh, waitwait I'm not sure I'm afraid I'm getting the wrong man! Waking sometimes . In tha night with Roger, sleeping quiet ly beside her, she cried In the darkness because' her world had turned upside down and she was all v alone In a strange. ' queer placet. Now. with Roger's arms about her, his cheek against hers, she was happy. In spite of the shabby room, her, disreputable trousseau her unquiet thoughts about ma ma. -r--. "I do lore you, she murmur ed again, contentedly. . "Well, you ought to tell your mother i "Old maid!" she teased. Sud FISHERT.IEN denly she flung her arms tight around his neck, almost choking hint, kissing him 'wildly, again and again. "Roger, I do lore yon I do! I do!" He crushed her to him, bruis ing her soft flesh, smothering her with passionate kisses. His arms were bands of 'steel, the rough khaki ot his coat scratched her face, but she made- no sound. She lay limp in his arms, drunk with happiness. Minutes passed. Or was It hours T Nancy's eyes were closed. Her thick lashes lay dark on her flushed cheek. Roger roused him self, kissed j her closed eyelids. "But Just the same, you ought to write to your mother,, old lady!" j . "All right," ahe said after a long pause. He went back to his papers. From where she sat at the ink stained hotel desk she could see him out. of the corner ot her eye. A big, blond man la the ol lre drab ot a ranger. Reading the newspaper In a cheap hotel In Reno. Absorbed in it already. "That's my husband. Ta mar ried to him," she whispered to herself. A big tear dropped, blot ting the Ink, spoiling her letter. Nancy thought she hated Re no. "Wo- can't leare- too soon to please me!" she told Roger, oyer and over. "I'll he Just as glad to get out of here as you'll be, hon ey," he said, and she . knew he waa hurrying, trying to finish the work that had brought him here. Oa the fourth ' afternoon he went orer to the Riverside hotel to meet two government officials motoring south. It seemed funny to think of Roger at the River side while she waited In their hot little home on the other side of town. "I wish we'd gone there and taken a chance," ahe told herself for the hundredth time. "It would . hare been exciting to be over' there where all the, really smart people stay." ... But that might have meant a meeting with the Porters . or Jack Beam ers wife, and Nancy wasnt real ly ready for that. She wore Roger Decatur's ring on her finger, an unimpressive platinum band . . . Jack Beamer would have; given her a circlet of diamonds or em eralds, not that she cared, she insisted loyally. She'd 1 rather wear Roger's utilitarian wedding ring than a pear-shaped diamond from Jack still plenty ot time to tell about It In spite ot "Mrs. Decatur" on the- hotel register and moments when she could hardly remember that she had ever been single, she still thought H . .. W....,H.1l.Uit. Sometimes she : found , herself planning, - "When I go home. But. ot course she .wasn't going home she was going oa with Roger, forever and ever. -'"And whenever she thought of life without him her knees felt weak and she wanted to cry. She did cry a little this afternoon, thinking of him at the Riverside hobnobbing with notables, beau tiful Jewelled divorcees passing in and out. and she stuck la this dingy, vgiy little room! But she knew It was silly, so she bathed her 'reddened - eyes and put on her heat dress, the beige crepe de chine', and went for a walk. - . : The loungers in the lobby turned and stared after her. "I suppose they think I'm a divor cee,: too!", ahe thought, and the rery idea ot It amused her so that she looked right at a fat man In a loud checked suit -and laughed.' . 2 Where can you walk' In a strange town? Nancy fallowed the main street, ; past rows of pleasant looking houses and over a bridge. She didn't know which way to go then, so she .walked back on the other side ot the street, and reached the hotel half an hour later, hot, tired and cross.. ' It was sueh a relief to . find Roger back and waiting for her that she fairly flung herself into X lTvingston his arms, rubbing her hot, pink cheeks against his cool, brown one, showering him with absurd, mumbling kisses. "Roger, I DO lore you. but I hate this horrid place. Can't we go soon?" (To be continued) The Safety Valve - - Letters from Statesman Readers Salem, Oregon. Dee. s, '30. To the Editor: X read" your editorial on - mar- ried teachers. Poor married wom en. Why can't the man with an income adequate to support him be called upon to give up his Job to aid the unfortunate? Why not call upon the single girl with a father who can support her, to give up her Job td the down and outs? No, the married woman catches-It. . '-:v..l - Ousting the married woman will not solve the trouble. If a eensus could be made there are Just as many single girls work ing who hare fathers with far more money than have many of the husbands of married wom en. Why not call upon these girls to step aside for the sake ot re lieving hard times? X know a girl, who three years ago Inherited $200,000 and the papers lauded her for continuing to work Instead ot letting the money go to her head. She la a teacher in a Washington city. Yet those same papers drag a woman teacher over the coals for work ing when she and her husband have been trying to support four on a working man's salary ot around 92,000 a-year. I know of two teachers In the Portland system,, unmarried and with private Incomes that are larger each year than the salary they receive. It is true that there are many married women working who do not need the work but there are Also many single women working wno also do not need the work. One Washington city has solv ed this in a rather novel way. The woman whether single or married must sign a paper and till In blanks as to theamount of salary or income her father or husband receives (the Income tax helps check up) how many , are in the family to be supported and this is taken . into consideration when hiring women. -.Few women, unless it is necessary, will sign sueh - an application It the clause Is-added that they have to work to help dependents and would not otherwise be asking for work. X hare taught school since be ing married. My children areln high school and I know do not Interfere- with - my work - as a teacher. They help In getting the house and themselves ready for school. In. the evening we all help with the meals. I hate housekeep ing and believe me it doesn't en ter my head while I'm In, the school room.- But X do carry the school home- to be thought over and new plans laid. I belong to no clubs nor organ isations that can obligate me. In any way. X enjoy teaching, X like to have the young people around me. My mother-in-law had a "fit when my husband and -1 were married. She was a 'housekeeper.- :' ' "Poor, ' poor lad, I'm so sorry he Is marrying a- teacher. X never saw a teacher who could keep a decent house." - Of course now-a-days with the electrical devisee we hare It Is an easy matter to fly through the housekeeping and there Is no one home to mess It up all day. No, you cant use that against us. Too, I know of several single teachers who 'batch' and also .go home to cook their own- meals and hare to keep their apart- BITS for BREAKFAST -By K. J. JIENDIUCIIS Th Gilliam sagai - - "W . V '" In the Oregon Historical So ciety Quarterly for March to De eemher. lfl, there geared, from the pen of Fred hocwj, one. of the best written sketches he ever published. The Bits man proposes to steal it bodily, be ginning as follows: . "My maiden name was Martha Elizabeth Gilliam," aaid Mrs. Frank Collins, when I visited her recently at her home In Dallas. "Mf father waa General Corneli us Gilliam, though they generally called him Uncle NeaL' Father was born at Mt. Pisgah, In Flor ida. My mother' maiden name was Mary Crawford. She waa born In Tennessee. X waa bom In Andrew county, HIssourl. the day before -the Fourth ot July la the yearj 1851. Father and mother were married In Missouri. I don't know the day nor the year. "Missouri was the Jumping off place back la those days and they didn't have courts and court records and licenses like they do nowadays. Any circuit rider or Justice ot the peace could marry a couple . and no records were kept except in the memory ot the bride. Father met -mother In Tennessee when she was a girl: fact is she would be considered only a girl when father married her, by people of today, but In those days she was considered a woman grown.' ; ;f "The women worked hard when mother was a girl back in Tennessee and they had a lot of danger and excitement thrown in with their hard work. My mother lived with her aunt. When X was a little thing I used to get moth er to tell me about when she was a girt. When she was betwixt and between a girl and a woman she and her aunt were busy with the housework : one forenoon when some Indians came to the house. My mother's aunt shut and bar red the door. The Indians began hacking at the door with their tomahawks. They cut through one board and had splintered an other when my mother's aunt tired through the broken panel ments clean. So again It is tit for tat. I am not teaching at present but have to help out so am work ing like a square peg In a round hole. I don't like my work and would take a more congenial Job as quick as scat if it were offered to me. I also know of an incident here In Salem that is another angle. The family were in desperate need ot extra money and the woman couldn't get work. So she divorced her husband and got her Job. They are able to support their children and furnish decent clothes and food for them. The single girl goes out Into the business world to make mon ey dad can't give her and when sh la married aha again goes out or ataya out to make money 'hub by can't give her. Woman ta In business to stay and some other solution Is neces sary. Since January of this year to date my husband has brought in about $900; it will probably reach $1000 by the end of the year. We have had two expensive Illnesses in the family In that year, clothes, food, dental bUls for tour and It Just hasn't covered all the expenses. So ean you blame me for wanting to help the man I promised to lore, .honor Romantic figures of America's past are a part of the poetry of life ideals to spur a man toward indef inite possibilities. Courtesy is' the dominating- spirit of this organiza tion. 1 P. J.' TTT7 PERSONALITY Personality lends a, touch of friendli ness and the confi dence that every wish will be faith fully observed. ssawr av Jll v aa of the door and shot one of the Indians through the chest. While mother's aunt was busy loading the gun my mother boosted one of the children through the back window and told him to run to the .woods where the men were getting out timbers for a cabin and give the alarm. After quite a spell ot hacking the Indians finally cut through the door and crowded into the cabin. My mother and her aunt had crawled under the four-poster bed and before - the . Indiana could, pull them out the men came on the run. The Indians heard them coming and ran away, all tut the one -mother's aunt had wounded. Just aa he was going out of the door the men shot him and he laid down and died on the doorstep. - fiuwauii s uiau uusb bjuo- ally has only one Job, like being a lawyer, or a preacher, or a pol itician, or a farmer, but when my father was a young man thf men folks had to do whatever came to hand. When my father was in the 'teens he was a man grown and a good shot and was good at tracking runaway staves. They used to send, him all 'round the country, for a heap of slaves used to take to the swamps. He made good money at the -business. He waa so good at track ing them and bringing them back to tneir owners inai wnen ne ran for sheriff the people said, 'He is so successful catching runaway niggers, he will be good at catch ing criminals,' so he was voted in fas sheriff. "When the Black Hawk war came on father enlisted and serv ed through it, and when the Sem inole war broke out ht Florida where he was born, they made him a captain and he fought through that war. When he had finished fighting he went back to the frontier ot Missouri, for everything west ot Missouri in those days was Indian country. He was a great man to make friends and so they elected him to the legislature in Missouri. He got interested In religion and was ordained a preacher. He was one (Turn to page 6) and cherish,' in any . way that I can? Can you blame mentor re senting the. slams married women get? Please look into the things and face it from everv anala. I knviv that as a mother I hare gained in my attitude toward school work.-7 have a greater love and compassion, greater patience and understanding for the ehlld and its parent than I ever, did before marriage. Some have this when single. In some It awakens when they hold their own in their arms and some never have it whether married or single; mothers or old maids.' M Then there Is another feature not yet touehed. A woman In Seaside explained It to me. "Keep the money at home for local ex pansion and growth." Hire local teachers, single or married. They spend their money here and the salarte go back into the city's circulating fund. Married women will improve their homes and if not property owners will often become property owners and so boost the growth of the.etty. In sist that all teachers Improve themselves by further study and so reap the gain ot the teacher improvement for local schools. Nough said. I Tours truly, ELIZABETH CROPPER. AMERICAN BIOGRAPHIES ta llinlatnre Miles SUndish (1584-1636) Imi mo w imttmAXownHv Of MtU$ ttUtHUCWAl sou m UKASMIO, UHLANS Iff In I&29 Kl Til KCHt) ONYN0 HAJTrXOWU AN VPOH KTMOVfrL THAJft gjjsi UAMA., 'ZtfratMM m$ iTftATUY arc a f HI 04.0MY 4ACVK jtsrsrsta n u-h-y 'Atrim,-T-.j ri fin tit i tL. .Ml riAi"t r m ik. CU'lt H YV't rrx r C S (in i jSsb