PAG D FOUR ase Uiuu z aaa LouiAJi,. Kaiasu Ore oa. Wednesday -.llornln-. Arril 15, 1S31- ..- ..- i- "No Favor Sways' VV; Mo Fear Shall Awe" 7 From First Statesman. March 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING JX). -Charles A. Sprague, Sheldoh F. Sackett, PubKsAera Chajuxs A. Sfsacub - - - - Editor-Manager Sheldon F. Sackett .. - Managing Editor Member of the Associated Frees r Tho Associated Press is exclusively tHM te tb for P"c tton of all uwi dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited la Pacific Coast Advertising Ee'presentatjvesi Arthur W. Stypes. t"-. Portland. Seenrtty gla. i San Francisco. Sluroa Bid. ; Los Ancelea W. Pao BldaV Eastern Advertising Representatives: ;: -v. Ford-P'arsoos-Stecber.Inc.. New York. t?l Madison Ami . Chicago. S60 M. Michigan Are., i lT Entered at tk4 Portoffiee at efce, J5 S. Cttftmarciai Street. i V : ' . SUBSCRIPTION KATE3: ! Man SubscrtpMon Rat. In Advance. Within Ormj J". Sunday. lHa.il coeta: a Mo. fl.li Mo. $5.15 ; 1 ar I4.S0. Daa wbere it cants per Ma or 15.60 lor J year In ad'aece. By City Carrier: . cote a month: $1.1 a yaar In advance, Par Copy 2 cents, On trains and News Stand tfenta. ; , , Exit, the A T.wiKSO the Thirteenth A of Spain become Alfonso bon he was, of that brancn or tne jsourDoa www wjuch ruled Spain since 1700. A Hapsburgr too, through his moth er, who was Marie Cristina of Austria. For over a quarter of A century Alfonso has sat on the throne, but the past de MrlA ft haa been si totterfns? seat. Now with his consort, Queen Victoria, British born, he makes his exit The cur tain rings down on the last of the Bourbons; another mon archy has, crumbled to dust. troubles were mir1 was a meddler who sought public acclaim but made himself something of the down. He loved the trappings 01 royalty, ana typical xsour bon that he was, made the army the bulwark of his regal Authority. His struttings, his interference in political and military affairs, very often with disastrous consequences, his flightiness counteracted his obvious attempts to court public favor and with a show of bravery to ride out the storms that in late years beset his reign. ! The real downfall of the Alfonso rule ! may be dated back to the defeats of the army in the Rif campaigns in Morocco. Without consulting the minister of war or ad vising the commander general of Morocco King Alfonso sent Gen, Silvester and a body of troops to open up the road to the Rif, long guarded by the wily Abd-el-Krim. The gen eral and ten thousand o'f his soldiers were killed in the en suing battle and Alfonso went off to play at Deauville. That was in 1921 and the rising tide of revolt was met in 1923 by the military dictatorship of Primo de Rivera, who for four years held Spain under a dictatorship and propped the throne for the Spanish monarch. Primo grew tired and relinquished office. Alfonso's later cabinets were ropes of sand. Financial needs of the treasury pressed. Al fonso could get no one to form a cabinet, t maily on bun day the elections went republican, and Alfonso's reign was ended. His abdication followed though he resisted the act until the very end. - Spain is still Spain. It has been peculiarly the victim of its king?. Charles V and Phillip H reigned over many lands in Europe and the Americas, but the Spain of later times has been but the shrunken remnant of former great ness. With the burden of monarchy thrown off perhaps Spain may regain some portion of her former glory. -A burned out land, brown with the suns of centuries, her peo ple are by no means a burned out people. They have spirit and pride and under able leadership should go forward to fresh accomplishments. t The Cof fey-H ONE of the Drs. Mayo has visited the Coffey-Humber clinic where their discovery has been in use for the treatment of cancer and is quoted in the press as given praise to the doctors for their work.'. These commendatory words of the Coffey-Humber treatment are the only favorable comment coming from the medical .profession regarding this purported cure. The Journal of the American medical association said "it is in no sense of the word a cure and even its efficiency in treat ment : is exceedingly doubtful." A writer recently in The Nation" summed up says that the profession after reserv ing its opinion pending study has finally rejected the Coffey-Humber treatment; and says: 'Today they have reach . ed the virtually unanimous agreement that the Coffey Humber discovery is neither novel nor infective." When the formula was first presented for patent, an examiner in the patent office wrote a long brief in reject ing point by point the claims made for the discovery and refusing the patent. Later Secretary Wilbur i wrote a letter urging special and early reconsideration of the application and a new examiner within 24 hours recommending issuing the patent which was done forthwith. The action of Secre tary Wilbur has drawn sharp rebuke from within the med ical profession. Dr. John M. Rehfisch. radielogist and as sistant professor of clinal medicaine in t Wilbur's own school, Stanford, has been caustic in his criticism. Dr. El lice McDonald, director of cancer research at the university of Pennsylvania, writes: -: i c , 'This patent claims that the Coffer-number extract is an adrenal-cortex extract, stabilixtar growth, and that it controls or destroys cancer. These claims may b easily ; proTed untrue " ... time unfortunately is telling us that Jt Is not 'capable of controlling andor destroying carcinoma, sarcoma, and other malignancies How such a patent was erer allowed by the United States Patent Office is a, matter of astonishment It is a ery dangerous precedent, if such casual, peuedo-scientifie. Patent Office? l BO"caUed ner; r allowed by the ... "How-any medical man could advise the Coffey-Humber v treatment after reading this patent staggers my imagination." Drs. Coffey and Humber have -been held in high re pute In the profession; and it is indeed regrettable if in their zeal they have given out false hopes or misstatements "girding their ' discovery. The tragedy comes to those stricken with the disease, who grasp at every straw, and to whom word of a cure comes as a dawn of fresh ho Usually with "cures" which are fraudulent! or m?ffect1vt ;iS?JS- 2s .of, "neya more often loss of valuable time which might have been used following -other methods sJlt 8Ur2rery r radium' with r benefkSlre! There is probably no disease which is receiving as much attention .fromtfiose engaged in reserch at present as cancer. It may be that eventually some real cure wUl be worked out but until it has teen tested and PrveTthl medical profession and the public which have beenfSed la many times, do well to be extremely chary o? the cUiiS made by. discoverers or their iwrtisans. "SZT assssssas' , ' beat n:roSm 2" with the board of control. Its members arerteet frTt?. are men of experience and man J SdtnijanU S are not yes-men eren to the goreraor. and their som - A. r Itr i. the earn-role, of the TnIl Stmt. Miatrt sr. la turmoil, ortfflrry- dituftr.rt i7 7, . mor.1.1. tlnc Unpaired. Tor 7Zk" 5 tl?2rSJ"iSSfii Salewi, Oregon, eut Second-Clate Bourbons j of the royal line of the kings the Last of that Jine. Bour trtly national and partly po- lacked competence, one who Scarlet Fever By VERNON A. DOUGLAS, M.D. Barton County Health Dept. : Parents as a rule become rery much alarmed in the presence of an epidemic of scarlet zerer, and rti where thess are single cases in a selghbor hood there is, apt to be much eon- eern si to whether-' this disease will spread. Tears ago scarlet- ftrer was one of the moat serious diseases of childhood, tak tng many Irres annually as Dr. v. A. Oeacias well as leering other children with - damaged, hearts, kidneys or ears. Of re cent years, howerer. for some un explained reason scarlet rarer has taken on a mild form. There hare been Tory few eases In Marion county which have been serious. It is unfortunate, howerer, that there was one death in 1930 In a school child resulting from scar let f erer. This was was rery se rere and the child was sick but a few -days. ; - -i . ,; In spite of-fhe mild character of the disease of late years, we must not become careless in try lng to prerent it. Uncontrolled; the disease may derelep in the more severe form and even In the milder cases complication of ears, heart or kidneys may re sult during the. period of con- alescence. It la well to know something of the earlier symptoms of scar let, f erer. Most of the contagious diseases of chUdhood are most easily communicable before the disease is eren recognixed by the parents and many times the mild case goes entirely unnoticed. scarlet zerer perms suaaeniy as a rule with slight sore throat, a rise in temperature and almost always Tomitlng. On the second day a fine red rash ap pears on the upper part of the chest and this rapidly spreads to other parts of the body, depend ing upon the severity. The glands of the neck may become' swollen since the invading organism are located in the throat. In an average case by the end of the first week the temperature has nearly subsided and by the end of ten days "peeling" has commenced. The skin may come off in large chunks, especially from the hands or it may be so tine that it resembles talcum powder so that it is hardly rec ognizable by the parent. Peeling may continue fire or six weeks. There is no relationship between the scales and the contagiousness of scarlet fever. All of the infec tion which may be passed . on from another person comes from the nose and throat and some times from runny ears which may follow. If the nose and throat discharges "are properly taken care of, there is very little danger of another person in the house hold contracting, the disease. scarlet fever contacts can sometimes be protected against the disease by the ase of scarlet fever antitoxin which is similari to diphtheria antitoxin. This is, howerer, apt to gire a rather se- rere skin reaction - resembling hives and the Immunity which it confers persists for only two or three weeks. The antitoxin can also be used for treatment in severe cases of scarlet ferer. In addition to the antitoxin, there are on the market several preparations of serum, which In the presence of serious epidem ics may be given to children and which undoubtedly gives some immunity for a short period. This particular, serum, howerer, is not as effective as toxin antitoxin used in the prevention of -diphtheria and whether : or not it should be used ought to rest en tirely with the family physician. At the present time the most effective methods of preventing scarlet fever are the .early iso lation of the patient, the close watch by parents, teachers and nurses for new cases, and the close supervision of milk and food supplies through which scar let, fever is sometimes spread, fortunately scarlet fever is not as contagious a disease as meas lea and so the disease 'does not spread rapidly if carefully watch ed at the beginning; ,- Yesterdays . . . Of Old Oregon Town Talks from Th tales man fear Fathers Read ,Ajril 15. 1900 The county elerk has turned of ficial election boxes over to Sher iff Culver, in preparation for the primaries April 20. Owing to the weather, the Sa lem military band concert sched uled for Marlon square this after neon will not be given., v The Y.' P . S. C. E. of the Chris tian church win m -r- sale at Perr's drug store, with i.uuaercniera. punch I and other things to be sold. Charles P. O'Brien has receiv ed a carload of choice spring oats from Unn conntv tn tx.f.ik.i. among the farmers of the county. Outdoor Picnic -Season is Here . "iff 'v..-..-' V . :.'" f . . , ;i ,( ' . . " : Salem saw its first oat-df-door picnickers -of the season Sunday in Wlllson park. Severat .fami nes went there "shortly after noon and had a foni itinn. t. t UrtJl1 on a Blossom Day wr x-iuvius put in els fPfnce : shortly, after 1 e deck bat one group of picnick ers were not to be dismayed and calmly- fin tailed their meal "before AlkiA4m A AB S m uwir eariy-season adventure. i ln Stw ttm . ' ( ,L - i , g ii i ii J "A Knight CHAPTER XXV "Miss Joan, whar is you? Hannah's voice held a sharp note of hysteria. "Dey'a men comin' in de back doah!" Joan knew a moment of wild panic. Where was Dare? Surely he would not hare called her and then hurried away! She heard the scuffling of feet in the rear of the house. She grasped the moist hand of the aged negro and began to tow her hurriedly toward the front door. A harsh voice from the darkness ahead struck her like a slap in the face. "C'mon, yon guys. If they're in here' we 11 smoke 'em out." No Retreat 6he stopped abruptly, her heart pounding in her ears. - She was cutt off, front and rear.. There was a patio, she remembered. which opened off the dining room, but -she dared not search for It, There had been footsteps in that direction. The entire house rever berated, with noise. Shouts from the kitchen -rolled through the empty rooms like the strident murmur of an angry mob. She must find a hiding place. Instant ly. Dark and without, any of the familiar furniture, this house was now alien, .unfriendly. She must remember what it had looked like when Anne and Ted had lived here. She had been in Anne's room many, many times. A wide, cool chamber, hlgh-eeUinged af ter the Spanish fashion. Now she remembered. Of course, the great stairway was just behind her, to the right. She hurried through the darkness, impatient of .Hannah's reluctant weight dragging at her. "Please hurry. Hannah!" she whispered. i Hannah started , convulsively. her hand twitched In Joan's. "Doan have to tell me dar. Miss Joan," she panted. "Dey's a monstrous somepin snappin' at man feet dis minnit!" .The forged iron banisters were familiar to Joan's hand. There had been an ancient tapestry of dull red and sold at the top of the stairs. Only the darkness and the - noise r from below were strange. But Anne, so smiling and hospitable, would not be waiting In her beloved, room. Anne and Ted, Joan remembered, were run ning a little bakery in Miami now, glad to- earn sufficient money to clothe, feed .and shelter them selves. A shout raverbrated through the hall. If one of' those men should, use a flashlight, it would be all over. Why ; did Hannah pull so? There they were around the corner now, hidden forthe moment in the upper hall which led from Anne's room to one of the many guest chambers in the rear. Joan tripped on a pile of rubbish and , would have pitched headlong to the floor had Han nah's weight not jerked her up right. It was lighter here.; Joan glanced ap at the celling. There' was a. Jagged -hole in the roof where the tiles and sheathing had fallen away. The moonlight 3y mm Thm dr burst pe mid lha WW W- wi; SPRING SHOWERS Comes Flying" t stared coldly between the beams. wxiica renunaea Joan or tne oars of a Jail , window. How Anne would have hated that linl in the roof and that rubbish on the noon Anne had loved the house so: . "Miss Joan, I'se done beat. gasped Hannah. "I'se Dlanh winded. I Is. an' you better 1es Co 'way and lea' me here to cotch man Drear. . "Just a few more steps, Han- nan, dear," begged Joan, desper ately. "Mr. Dave must be around here somewhere. If he isn't, we'll find a place to hide. Please, Han nah, come on." Ret age Needed They stumbled across the threshold of Anne's room, now a starK, grim ceil lighted by the four long windows which had overlooked a garden gay with brlght-hued tropic flowers. Once the room had been fragrant with perfumes and cosmetics; now there was only the decaying smell or oamp plaster and rotting. vege tation. The walls, themselves seemed to have undergone a change. Once they had smiled be neath their colorful hangings: now they stared reproachfully at tne intruders, as U wishful only for peace and quiet in which to crumble into dust. - Joan shivered, although the air was stifling. She had not realized the room would be like this. She had. turned to it as refuge, but it was as unfriendly as the men from whom she was trying to - escape. Where was Dave? She heard the stamping of neavy boots on the floor below. The stairway creaked as someone mounted the loosened treads. The frightened girl glanced' wildly around the room. The only re maining hiding place was Anne's closet, yawning pitch-black in the oark corner. Joan's flesh crawled at the thought of entering it There might be snakes and scor plona there. But she remembered the way Mueller's eyes gloated at her. Hannah whimpered like a baby as Joan dragged her toward the open door. - . Trapped Tne absolute blackness was worse than Joan had expected. When the door had been closed the sides .of the narrow apace seemed to close in on them like a collapsible box. Hannah's fleshy shoulder pressed against the girl's body. The negress was trembling as it witn a chill. "Miss Joan," she chattered, I smell snakes here. Let's us go 'way." . v-,.: , "$b! whispered Joan, fight ing. for : self -control. "There's MmflAnl ABrttf?a I'd as soon be daid as here." moaned - Hannah, rocking her huge body back and forth. . Joan - fumbled around and placed - her- slender hand across Hannah's mouth. The Blithering footsteps on the other side of the cypress door had died away. The silence was as terrifying as tne sounds had been moment before. Joan fought -down an in r '. a- um in blidin Imre OmUiSkt Elustace Adams sane desire to batter at the door with her fists and to scream and scream until her lungs burst. Hannah began to sob. In her de sire to . soothe the other, Joan conquered herself. She placed her arm around Hannah's shaking shoulders and whispered mean ingless words and phrases, as one comforts a child who has sud denly wakened from a nightmare. ' And then the door burst open. The blinding glare of a flash light blazed Into the cell-like closet. Hannan. her eyes rolling wildly, her face gray and wattl ed, buried her head in her arms and sank to her. knees. Joan in voluntarily pushed at the light with her outstretched hands. Her tousled golden hair glinted und er the incandascent rays like a diamond-flecked halo. Her cheeks were drained of their color. Her deep blue eyes were wide with horror. (To be continued) KEILEMS TO SHOW Kill FILM Dr. Kellems, who is leading the campaign , of Marlon County Christian churches at the First Christian church here is not only Internatl onally known as a preacher but he has more than local reputation as a hunter of big game. He has had two big hunts in Africa, one in Rhodesia and one in Northern ' Zululand. Wednesday night he will show a film of one of these hunts and will lecture on the big game of Africa.' Dr. Kellems is an enthusiastic believer in measures which are now stirring the. South African people on the conservation of their game. - Such large audiences are now attending these services that spe cial seating is being arranged tor Wednesday night. - Already there have been more than a hundred additions to the churches cooperating in the' cam paign. Tonight a delegation of more than a hundred will attend from Sllverton. FEOD OH SPB CAUSE OF SLB SAND POINT. Ida.. Aorll H fAP) A coroner's 1htt deeltfiMl Monday that Charles Silta. ranch er, snot ana killed Walter Lund, 24. last Friday In a fend - over water rights to a spring near Cab inet, Idaho. , . : Matt Hakala. a witness at the inn nest aald Rllta IS rm aIA his foster father, Andrew Silta. and Abrom Koski, were cleaning out thft mrkr vhm Lnnd an. peered, rifle in hand. He ordered the workers off the property, and when asked for his authority for the order. Hakala said. Lund pointed to his rifle. Lund watched the thro until they finished, and then ordered them to "line up." A ahot drop ped him, Hakala aald. uiuer witnesses sum Juua& ana the SUtaa lone had auarrld over rights to the spring. Delaware Still Dry, Indicated DOVKR. DeL. April 14. IAP1 The state senate Monday defeat ed two "wet" Ulls. one to repeal the Klair state prohibition -enforcement law and the other ere- viding for a statewide referen ts -on repeal et the Volstead BITS for BREAKFAST -By R. J. HENDRICKS Lost in Yamhill woods: ' In his "Ten Tears In Oregon.1 Dr. Elijah White told of being lost in the woods tn what is now Yam hill county, and almost starred to death. It was "the first autumn jt his residence at the mission," which makes it the fall ct 1837, when, "baring a patient afflicted with a threatened tumor, it became nec essary that he should consult with his fellow physician.' Dr. W. F. Tolmle. at Fort Vancouver. The man being out of danger. Dr. White started home, to the old mission 10 miles below .what be came Salem. . ! Dr. White had been gone long er than he expected, therefore wanted to get home to his anx ious family as quickly as possible. His party was on the way by boat, on the Willamette, a considerable distance below old Champoeg His -crew accosted two Indiana on horseback, who said there was a nearer way by land, on the west side-and that they might reacn the mission by horseback that evening. They loaned him a horse. '. . They lost the trail. Dr. White became separated from nis guiaes wandering all day in the hills, ac costed an aged Indian woman. who could not understand him ahd whom he could not under stand. The shadows of night came on, and - the bewildered doctor spent the night in great discom fort, and danger from wolves, part of the time in the limbs of a tree with his head on bis saddle. S The next day he wandered west ward up a high mountain ( prob ably Chehalem' mountain), and deciding by the position of the sun that he was going in "the rong direction, turned about and in six - hours of hard going found himself on the bank- of the Willamette, a short distance from where he had left the boat the morning before. Let him tell the rest of it: . i After relating that his pony was utterly unable to bear him further, and himself in little bet ter condition, and completely be wildered, he wrote: ."His cogita tions were most painful, but he bad indulged tbem but a brief space when far down the river he heard the faint stroke of a pad dle. It was repeated, and now the only anxiety was whether it was going from or coming towards, him. A few moments, and a eanoe rounded a point and came direct ly towards him. and, to his Joy, be discovered Its occupant to be one of his neighbors, Mrs. Bllake, a youth named Lueia, and an In dian crew. "a As they approached to within a very short distance, Mrs. B., till then scarcely recognizing the stranger, elevated both - hands, itnd, in broken English for she was a . half-breed exclaimed, "Can maslca chareo? 'Is it you, iny friend? where did you come from 7 is it you. toctor? V "He. replied to the good wom an that if she would give him a bite of something to eat she ?hould know the whole story. She raised both hands as before, and with a look of consternation In formed him that they had been absent ' from home a week, and expecting to reach home that evening, had eaten their last rem nant of toed about half a mile below. Observing the petitioner's look of blank disappointment, which was verr nitlahla. aha re marked that her nephew had shot a aucn just beiore, and Inquired if he could eat it without any kind of seasoning. . . "The doctor was a little-surprised, not to sav eharrlnad. at such a question at a moment when he could eagerly devour anything that was eatable, and reolled instanter. "Whr ers and all!' She laughed merrily ai me oaauy or tne expression. aua saia in ner own language, 'Oh. that is too bad. but T we can fix you something.' Ae- coraingiy, tne iowi was stripped, quartered ana prepared for the kettle: and. althnnrh h riM burned briskly, it was then. If ever, mac tne nungry man real-; iea cne trutn ox tne trite saying, i A watched pot never boils.' v "When it was done,' he seised tax. A 53 to $20 per yr. rt. 1 1 r r r . , I -m r-ii ' NATIONAL BANK in upon it, and never was duck dis patched in less time by one per son; and it was a most delicious morsel, for It seemed but a mor sel. While thus engaged his kind friend prepared for him a bed In the canoe, and she afterwards used to laugh as she told that his head had hardly touched the blanket pillow' ere he was snoring lustily. The arrived ther resi dence about midnight, and had hardly' stepped inside' the door when she called a slave boy and commanded him to catch up a race horse immediately. ' ' "Meanwhile she set before her visitor milk, pork, potatoes and bread, and he had just finished a hasty repast when the horse gal loped into the yard. Mrs, Bllake then led him to - the door , and, with a tearful eye and 'quivering Up. said. 'Mrs. White la not far from frightened to death about you. I hare ordered a good horse for yoa; do not spare him; re turn to your family as fast as he can carry you. With a grate ful heart he mounted: the gallant steed bounded oft In the calm light of a full moon, and about S -o'clock he arrived at the mission, and enjoyed the happiness of em- ' bracing his family, who had be come very much alarmed at his prolonged absence." ! The woman who Dr. White called "Mrs. Bllake" was. Mrs. Pi erre BeUlque. The Belllque place was on the east side of the Wil lamette river about a mile and a half abov old Champoeg. The Plvrre Belllque donation claim -was No. f 7 and 71, notification No. 7 6T, and conUined Slf.vt acres. The patent waa Issued to the heirs of Pierre Belllque, the claimant having' died. a Pierre -Belllque attended the Champoeg - meeting of May 2, 1842, and voted for the establish ment of the 1 provisional govern-.,. ment, though his name does not appear on the monument there. m He had been present at the meeting at the old mission, Feb. 18, 1841, where the FIRST pro visional government was formed. and Dr. L L. Babcock was chosen supreme judge, and had there been elected one of the three con stables, F. X. Ladtroot and Wm. McCarty being the other two. n Belllque. was a French Cana dian employee of the Hudson's Bay company, coming, before 183Z. Robert Newell., a close neighbor, and an independent set tler, testified that Pierre Belll que voted with the majority at Champoeg fori the establishment of the provisional government. Mistake Tunnel Of Railway For Road; Smash up Whitehall! n. y.. Auni 14. (AP) Three Dartmouth col lege students who mistook the entrance to a railroad tunnel here for a highway underpass wedged their automobile so tightly be tween the walls that it took a locomotive to pull It out. The students were not serious ly hurt but the car was wrecked. No More Gas In. Stomach and Bowels . If yvn wish to 1m pnaaaaUy r. 74 at ta stomach and bowI, ikm Baabnaaa'a Ca Tablets, whica pwparoa especially for stomack cat ad all the bad offsets resulting front . T-t Pr. enawin faoMac fc it of tao atomaca will Uaappaa.ri that axloaa. Barrows falina; witn haart oaN itatia wUl vanish, and rtm wul again ablo to take a dsp brosta witaowt Jseomfort. Taa drowsy. sUapy feellBf aitaa 3afwUI bo rsptaoad by daalro oc ntartatnmeat. Bloating wUl cease. ""la arms aad fiacera will no ar feel eold aad "go to aleep" be. iao BaahnaBa's Cas Tablets prevent 'rasa iaterfertB.e'wtta the circa U Cat the gaoelea, tn the yellow po. y at any good drag store, Price SI. Always on hand at Daniel J. Fry's. Adv. 1lvaio. "J safety box .4 ... -,- in our vaiilts -"! 1 1-. . . . SOMETBiES even !a police force can't act quickly enough to catch a crook. - Put your valuables In our vaults 4- where strong; steel doors and every modern protection will keep them safe for you. . FIRST Salem Art - . - .