Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 2, 1931)
v.cn Four: Ths PRECOX STATESMAN; Salera, " Oreroa; Sunday Mornlnr, Aomst 2,-1931 4. 4 1 : i I. , ,- VtJ,,- a gnjBjBajanejM'saaaT'" 1 "No Favor Sicay Us; No Fear ShaU Awe" . From First Statesman March 13, 1351. I THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING XXX - Chakixs A. Snucvi, Srzldok- F. Sacxxtt, PwWisAcre Chasixs A. SrsAGCX - Ssxaxac F. Sacxett . - Member of the Afatl frr ,J Tha Aaaoctatad Praas U axchtafaaly satMed to tha uaa for pnMlca tkm of all naw dispatcbe credited to tt or not tJwrwta eradltad la Bill pnpr. . , L Padfic Cwist Aterti3inff!Epre$nUtiTei ' Arthur W. Strrxa. Inc.. Portland, Security BMft if ' San Fraaclaco; Sharon "BldC-l Loa Aaseiea, VT. Po..B14. - ' . Easter Advertising Representatives: j 1 Ford-Parona-Stcher. Inc.. New York, Z71 Uadlsoa Ava.f . Cklnco. lt N Mlfbloa An. i Entered at the Potto ff ice at Salem. Oregon, at Second-Clatt It a tter. Published every morning except Monday, Butinttt .office tlS S. Commercial Street - " - SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Mall Sub9crlrton Ratea,: tn Advance ;WitMn Oigont DrUly and Sunday. 1 Mo. fi cents: 3 Mc S1.25 ; . , Mo. IJ.25 ; I year 11,00. Elwswbera SO cents per Mo, or $$.00 lor 1 rear m advance. By City Carrier: 4$ cent a month ; S.IM a year la adrance. Par Copy S centa. On tralna and Neva Stands S cant. . , . .... ' . " -.. . . . "! 1 i- t . ' Fiddlers T E FRESHING as an iced -1 v Richard Wetjen'tv "Fiddler's Green, his latest piece of fiction, which. is published. by rho are jing to the beach or . mountains for j their vaca 'tions," and those who are staying at home will find this story 'cooling" in hot weather. It takes one down to the depths at ocean, in pale jrreen light.-Ty the silver bubbles sat, ami by that stopped tq watchrthem with gdsrgle'eyes and foolish, gap ing mouths.". ; ;V - ". i ' " j v' There is more to the' book than, interesting narrative and graphic description. It captures and puts in fictional form the great legends of the sa. legends that passed with the. terms survive, like "Davy Jones able bodied seamen of today, castle days .when sailors worked out their own legends pf what happened to ships and men that sank in the sea. Wetjen not only served as .a seafaring f ami v. In fact he phere of the sea. His grandfather and uncles were, men of the sea andy their visits to his . memories with the old tales of itial "Explanation which is by ten portions of the book: --- "And so, in fragments, I and the Great Ship; of Mother Carey and Midmght Leads man ; of the bad luck which comes from killing a new-born whale, and of St Elmo's fire which plans greenly of nights 'about the mastheads and yards and foretells disaster. And much more, very much more .and listening to it ail, with popping eyes and bated breath. : Until I was sent to bed. - : Tommy Lawn, whose trip affords the adventures the author recounts, was second mate ,on a ship, the Bramcar which was struck by a- broken ice berg, it sank; and down went Tommy until Ben the Bosun took him in tow, and so he went off to see Fiddler's Green, Davy Jones ! Locker, Casey Jcnes and his Glory Hole under neath the North Pole. And .what unique characters did he see, the very ones which Swivel tongue Saunders had told him about: the Old Man of the Sea himself JimmTS with his flapping sides word and mug of rog the Man Who Flogged the Dolphin, together with Steward, Passenger and the host of lesser characters who .people the waters f the. sailors eternity. . Wetjen, who is one of Oregon's younger writers,' came to Oressn after the war and after many strange experien ces on land and sea. He is well kaown in Salem where he for merly resided. Now, he makes work is fast gaining recognition, and his stories find ready acceptance in leading magazines. Fiddlers Green is written In flowing Itylev yet with no sign of "forced writing" or ex aggeration. , i i - ; - It's a good bookkf or summer reading, so very, very dif ferent from the customary, summerf Iction" of lawn swing , or beacn umbrella variety. 1 Spreading vnrjTITH his customary gangrene toward Congressman M i Hawley -the-'editor of the Capitol Journal drains his bile in accusing the congressman of double crossing his home city in the matter of the visit of Gen. Hines to Oregon to view possible locations foruhe veterans home. He says: . "from Portland tn board memberi notified the local ! chamber of commerce that thgy would arrire In, Salem Friday ' ' morning- and Inspect roferred attea.' Instead they eim In lata t the eyenlng before and left at o'clock next morning, haying een no one bat Congressman Hawley who. had promised to no tify the chamber officials of their arrival buLdld not. Instead ,v he saw to It 'that the -general and admiral got ont of . the city without haying seen what Salem had to offer, Mr. Hawley'a in-" tereat lies in Roseburg. not Salem.? ; i All of which is utterly false. The hospital; board mem bers did not notify the local chamber officials from Portland or any where else. The secretarjcrtried to get in touch with them all day bat failed. In the afternoon Major Robertson advised that the party would probably arrive late Thursday evening and leave early Friday ley did not promise to notify chamber officials when the party would arrive, and was not asked, to notify them, and was not "contacted by them. .' . .V ... i . f t The editor of this paper that the party , was expected Thursday night, and the man aging editor found Gen. I Hines and Admiral RIggs and in terviewed them in the evening. ' I . . . Congressman Hawley did not see to it that the? general and admiral got away without seeing Salem.1 Instead these men drove over Salem and saw what they desired to see. They left at six in the morning on their own initiative, with out waiting for the chamber officials who planned to confer with them. - . t I . , There is disappointment all along the line at the hurried nature of the inspection, which appears to have been quite fy- B?t to. use it as a weapon to slug the congressman with is both untrue and unfair. j . , . .A fAw weeka Z C-J was panning Hawley for not getting tie hospital for Roseburg, now it is panning him for fy tting it there. He can hardly be accused of dis " v5? j70.? hoTne city-hen Salem's chamber of commerce had definitely kgone on record as supporting Roseburg, and jectef conSideration onIy in the event that that city was re- Thomas M. Howell U the name of tha man who. nut n a corner on the board of trade in July. The ahortTnald tln?H ill nose when the price Jumped 1 cent,7 la V A tom?Hr 111 wheat bears will be stripped of their shortlesToo. - ! 7 tb JtlSt life BBBrmv m.. - ." . ' time Jast t Uk an airplane at PocUaTd. What-aI"SM "Yd .... p'J"'"" "'"IjiiUin Hoiier'i (Mt il of dir. Ton Ui. blr 13 UlTif A man from Texas earns-te Orsraa and bo-ut avr aaa Jet therear. WS wtSaalc - -. ; Jt J EditoiMsnttftr r Managing Editor Green drink 6a' a hot day is Albert Little; Brown and Co. Folk lonr trailing weeds wherein shoals 'of green and srold fish legends that now are forgotten sailing ships. . Some of the Locker". But few even of the know the lore of the old fore a sailor himself, but comes of was born into the old atmos home impressed his .childhood the sea. As he puts in the in the way one .of the best writ first heard of Fiddler's Green 'Sitting, on. the edge of a chair to the bowels of the ocean ' his home fa Portland. His I- the Poison, f :; , j morning. 'Congressman Haw learned through the chamber . 4 1' -k' tir first eall By C. C. DAUKR, W DV". I Marlon Cow 2vC of Ilcavlth Tha moat eommoa error found 3n children's diets is the inelu Bio of too much carbohydrate This mean that ' they . are getttac los much e r e aU sacar, bread. potato, 9 e-J diasa, etc.. : Of aeeessity,' the other elements la , the ' iods- a r e reduced, p a t : ticularly the mineral alts and Tlta- j m In a. 'These, with the pro teins when re- d n e e d in I xc o. a. isoar amount, V effect the health of the. child. Children with an overabundance of star chy foods -may appear fat and healthy, but their resistance to diseases 1s usually low. .- "Bread is far from being, the "staff of IKe". Wall bread la cheap and an easily available food but H lacks minerals and vitamins. It should be used only to furnish energy . - ' Bweete Danrrroua One of the great errors of diet Is to allow candles and other sweets. This is often donetbrough lack of knowledge or indifference on the past of nareata. The stoat serious effect Is that the appetite for sweets, 'causes the . ehlIL to lose his desire for foods which are essential for ' health.' Ice cream is also classed as one of the sweets. Occasionally another e r ro t creeps Into the older child's diet, that of drinking too much milk. If too much milk la con sumed there is no room In the child's stomach, for ; other foods, Since muk is 10 cercent water. extremely large amounts of tt are necessary to rurnisn eneush food. If children,' say 18 : to 24 months of age, aad older, would drink one pint daily ad a .half or whole pint, . used la cooked foods it . would be much better. Cooking reduces the .water eon tent bur the aolldm are. retained. TiedUkg Im Error Another rrave error with eome chUdrea la the practice of plec-1 lng or eating between meals. The Question of mid-mornina' school lunches for underweight children may fall Into this class of errors. A good rule to follow Is: if the mJd-mornlnr lunch spoils the child's appetite, for th noonday meai. it snouid, by all means, be stopped. This also applies to aft ernoon lunches. Normal children as a rule need nothinr .: between , . . , it I. nnt m dlffl..iU tKI-- 1 " ml lautiii irviu iauocr . v - What bealta BrolTeau tin Mat Tt a dot, artiela rauct any anaitioa la yaar Bind, writ that Qaertioa aat aad aaad it aitkar to Taa EtaUtaiaa or tha Mariaa caaty departaiaat of health. Tha aav- wttl mvptmr la thl eolnraa. Kama thamld h airaad. bat will at ha maad la iaa Nev Views Yesterday Statesman reporters aaked this question; "Is your sym-' pa thy with- the producers or the distributors In the milk wart" K. V. Geer. la ml tor "There Is too much difference between the price that I am paying for milk and the price that the farmer Is receiving. I should like to see the situation so adjusted that the farmer would get his saare." Charles E. Lebold, aato eales- i "I'm always in .avmnathr with the producer because he's nearly starred to death tryinc to I m a Ve. SI H viva aw a-aawmw sat uiiugj. ' I Im FaJrweaihetv motor sales: It daesn't-Iook fair to the- farm ers. If they're only getting two or tare eerats tor their mlUc.',' ..r . 11LT: . aiamcieuiiy lniormea in the matter to be able to say where,tny sympathies are. I feel that the situation is such a serious one that , only a complete knowl edge of the facts . would entitle one 10 give an opinion Daily Thought "No great Ihlna- is created sud denly, any more than a bunch of grapes or a fig. If you tsll me that yon desire a fir. I answer yon that -there must be-time. -Let It first blossom, then bear fruit, then ripen. VEplctetus. . , : . JAMES HAYES OlESIiTSM STATTON. August . 1 James Hayes died at the-home of. Miss Ella Williams en! Thursday, Hit death was due to hemorrhage' ot the stomach. " He was a half- brother of Miss Williams and tame here about a year and a half ago from' Beaverton to. make his home with her.- . ' - At - that time he was la. a bad condition due to having4 had his feet frosen. He nnderweat an operation on them at the Stayton hospital and in spite ot the fact that only stubs remained and he was 70 years eld, he was able to walk la a few months, He was never married. - He is survived by Milton, By ron, Amos and Miss Ella wil- iams of Stayton and Miss Lou Williams of Portland. The funer al was held at the residence at S p..m. Saturday. : . - . - . GTJK3T3 AT TTJBHXR TURNER ' Aug: 1. Week-ead guests-at the- C H. Rihe best were Mrat Georre Millar srnd children, Say aad Doris, Mr. aad I rs. a. B. Mathews and danrh- I Irene aad Kiaa. all fro Tygb Valley. Mrs. Maths w. aad Mrs. Riches are adersrarirey Om .T 111 che r twn Jl"" the ri- I cfalty a. Turner. 11 -T'y V I' ?s-vy tiKtfunr - - .vTr.THtV aoaj-Mmiari . ' , - 1 ; ' . osaabt oTe twe " I i ."7- motv cuenatftu. - r -ti:.,.',. - IV f - . . i r ' ar v- ... a . V V VWwi- tl J i . Vntsw " raa"r- Tuesday: "Learn to fir on f or BITS By R. J. HENDRICKS- Out of bondage: -; . w This is . from Elbert . Hubbard's scrap Book: ; . Looking more and more like an orchid, Tetta stood- the realone, the blood mounting to her cheeks, and waited for the storm, to pass. "I'm not solnc- to talk about this strike" she said when she could I make- herself heard. MIta over want, to tell you "about the' next I one and the next. I wish very I much I could , make you under stand about the strikes that axe coming. "Perhaps there's some of you never thonght much about strikes tm now. - Well. There's ' been strikes all the time. I don't be lieve there's ever been a year WUCU tUOlV WMUk when there wasn't dosens here la I v. v t- i . v . ixcw vaou wo waaii, mj shirt-finishers was out.. They lost ueir sirixo. - iuey wb auoir Just the way be did, but nobody helped them. And they're worse now than ever. There ain't no oiiierence Dei ween one since ana another. Perhaps they are strlk lnr for more pay or recognition er closed shops. Bnt the next striken be Just like- ours. . ItH' be people striking so they, wont be so much slaves like they was before. " fThe chairman said perhaps I'd tell yon about my experience. There ala't nothing- to tell except everybody has been awtal kind to me. It'a fine to have people ao kind to me. But I'd rather If they'd try to understand what this strike business means to all of ua workers this strike we've won and the ones that are coming. "I eome out of the workhouse today, and they tell me a lady wants to give me money to study. she wants to have me go to college like I was a rich girt It's very hind. I want to stndv-: I ain't -la a - m bees. to school none since' I waa f If teas. T nitHT can't aven talk English very good. I'd like to go to college. And I ued to see pic tures In the papers of -beautiful rich women, and . of course. It would be fine to hare clothes like that.. But being In a strike, see- nr n h neoDla suffer, seelne iU the cruelty it makes things look different. "The chairman told, you some thing-out of the Christian Bible. Well, we Jews have got a story too perhaps It isn't In your Bible -about Moses and his people In Ezynl. He'd been brought up by a rich Egyptian lady a. princess Just like he was her son. . But as long as ho tried to.be an Egyp tian. be wasn't no good,': And God spoke to ' him one- day. out of a bush on fire. I don't remember Juitihe words of the1 story, 'but God said: 'Moses, you're a Jew. Ton ain't got no business. with the Egyptians. Take' off those fine clothes and go back to' your own peoplw and 'help thens eecape-from bondage.' - Well, of course, I ain't like '.Moses, and God , has never talked to me. But it seems to me sort as if during this strike I'd seen a blaslag'eush, - Anyhow I've seen my people. In bondage. And I dont want-to go to college and be a lady. I guess the kind prin cess -couldn't understand1 why Moses wanted to be a poor Jew law stead of a rich Egyptian. But It yon lean understand. If yon can understand why I'm going- to' stay with my own people, you'U under stand all I've been trying- to say. "We're a people in bondage. There's lots of people who's kind to ua. I guess the princess wasn't the only Egyptian lady that was kind to tbe Jews. But kindness ain't what people want, who are In bondage. Kindness won't ne ver make us tree. And Ood don't send any more prophets nowa days? .We've got to escape all -by ourselves. 'And when you read in the papers that there's a ttrike- lt don't matter whether It's street ear conductors or lace-makers, whether it's Eyetaliana or polaeka or Jewt or, Americans.;,, whet bar It's here or in Chicago It's my people the people "i lm . bondage who- are starting- Ou tfor; the promised. land:" ; ; .:: - . Ha'.4 4..'" ene stopped a moment and a traagB" leok came over her face A - look.of ..omaaalcatlon with seme distant spirit. . whea she spoke again, her words were unin- UiHgible to meat. of the. audience. -Soma of the Jewish vest-makers understood, And the Re. DmaPaast cemetery aeatb ot Weed- EPSON SO DUMO f the. Ground in two Hours l ham Dennlnr. who waa a famous scholar, . understood. But even those who did not were held spell. bound by the swinging sonorous cadence, -She stopped abruptly. "It's Hebrew," she explained. ."It's what my father, taught mo wnen x was a little girl. ifs about-the promised land I can't say it in good English I V t.... Jm '.S.j ,V -I -Vcn.v.f: "r ..m LV. ?-irS --.Tr.nv. aw ttr efsky baa been repeating God's words fo Moses, the lawgiver, as recorded In. the third chapter of Exodus. I think It's the seventh verse: 'And the Lord said, I have surely seen the affliction ef my htv.heTrdtheSt.rl Urinf f,. .!!lit...:,T,-b7 their taskmasters; for ,,M0W tneir sorrows; 'And I am come down to de liver them Out of the hand of the Egyptians and to bring them ud out or tnat land unto a good land and a large . unto a land flowing with milk and honey.' a Tea. That's it." Tetta aald. "Well, that's . what atrtkea- mean. We're fighting. flghUng. for the old promises.'! From "Comrad TetU," by Albert. Edwards. W-.x. . ! . , - . Tetta thought life was war. and Vr-rir:;..?' "-.f1: follows: "We have talked much ot.the brotherhood to come; bat nrotnemood -baa always been the tact of our, life, long before it be came modern' and insipid sent! ment. Only we have been broth era In slavery and" torment, broth ZlV??I I it. perdition. brothers in disease and war and ES-Jfi-??1. K" ' ., " uMvifvam iu all; we have always been unescap- oy juiuitcu in a common aes-J tiny. The world cowtantly tendsl io ia inn pius uownmosi man in it; ana that downmost man la the world's real ruler, hugginc It close- to his bosom, dragging It down to his death. You do not think so, but It Is true, and It ought to be true.. For If there were some way by which some of us could getfree. apart, from oth ers, if there' were some ' way by w"hich some of us could have heav en while others had hell. If there weresome wayjjy . which ; par.of the world .could escape some form of blight and peril and mlserr of disinherited labor, ' then indeed would our world ba lost and damned; bnt since men bare net-1 er-been able to separate themselves I from one another's woes and I wrongs. since history i fairly l stricken with -the lesson that -we 1 can not escape - brotherhood - of some kind, since the whole of life I is teaching . us .that wear hourly I chooslng-betwean .brotherhood la suffering .and.-, brotherhood la good, lt.rejnalas for us to choose the brothetboodt a. cooperative world with. all it fruits thereof the frulta of love and liberty . . . m J L .4. . ' . - t; Charles '- BteJnmets . aald: "Co operation Is aoL a sentiment It is an enonomie necessity" Marcus Aurellus said: "We are made for cooperation. Uke feet. like hands, Uke eyelids, Uke the rows of the -upper and lower teeth. To act against one other then Is contrary to nature, and It Jg acting against one another to be vexed aad turn away.r , . 4 Said William C. Fitch: "Coop eration and not competition 1 the life of 'trade ? - - . DEATH CLAIMS as. J.;iiwi WOODBURN, AusC 1 After having suffered' seteral months with CI health. Mrs. Adda L Har rington of Woodhura. died at the Salem, general hospital about 8 o'clock Tuesday xdght, Although Mrs. Harringtoa bad been' .very 111, for some time, her; death was a severe shock ;td many of her Wood burn friends.' .' Funeral services will - be . held n - .the . woodimrn -Methodist church Friday afternoon . at : s o'clock. .Rev. Elmer W. Blew of the Wood burn. PresbytsrUa church wd: officiate at tha serv icaa. Jlartsl will be- ar Cia r.Ha BREAKFAST 'The My The nude,' deckel body of Cer - alilne roster u couna bunea a::- 4-vr.::r;mJ . I . H. tli4t.. with a plae-eeented fluid, and h-nearby are two bottles similar to that found la the- office of dt. Humphrey II asken.' Oeraldlne'a employer. Two women were seen j leaving" the doctor! office carry ing similar bottles.- Colt picks up a blond-hair at-the scene of the ; crime, lira. Morgan, a neighbor. MmMnrki tha Anrtnr'm. atafa.1 lhat physical violence la BO lOnsrOr meat that he vat with her dauglL- tar Ka da nf (ka HinnAinnea He claims a etrange woman was wattln ouUlde his office when he returned. Other suspects arel" w" , Af waves vioienf naraidina'a hrnthr. Tirae who l creatures Intimidated by nothln la to inherit her.esUte, and Harry Armstrong, the victim's former fUnce. Armstronr sUtes he phon- ed Geraldine from Hartford, the ni.vr twirnra. ah innnMr tn suggest they elope, but she refus- d. rvlt inama th nrusi roitcr !s an adopted chlld,whose father was hung- for murder. It is be- Ueved however, that Mr. Foster is itik km. rtiT- Mrm ti.k. horn, owner of tba Peddlera Road house. itenUfiea Dr. MaskellV as her tenint, "Mr. Bigsbee." Mas- kell tells of recelvine of - phone call from Cera Wine on January 5th, ten days after her disappear- ance, eayin ahe was la troubl and reeuestlng hlmto meet her. She failed to keep the appoint- 'meat,- The doctor denies taking her to Peddlers Road. "Aa'autoo- sy shows the girl had been dead ten days '.and her body preserved in . tannic acid to make it appear rane. was dead: only 48 houri Pougherty accuses Maskall- ; v CHAPTER XXin -Balancing bis weight tspm jone foot tovinother. smiling, with his head turned to one side. and hie! ! bands in his pockets. he , era ted wlth atrange and vital gusto: - ."I am familiar with the con.- tesslons exorted by the French methods the Parisian" third de - gree.: In faet, I have seen lnno- cent men, at the Parte Surete. col - lapse into confession in the' room that Is called the Chamber of gpontaneons -Avowals. .The epon - tanelty of the arbwaU U acceler - I ated by beating the. soles of . the feet oT the -unfortunate suspects I with . long .tares. JThla Is called I tha haattnada.-Vrw" wall Tha. New York equivalent is probably a flat on the Jaw. .Nevertheless, yon will set nothing from me. I hare an alibi. I did not kill Ger- aldlne Foster." - . IILI . ... . .... troth- M,nd- ked Thatcher Colt. . . I "And If I do that I wUl have nothing to. fear?" mockingly. 'Except Just what you said a sock in tbe Jaw," aald Hogan. who had endured this exchange of com pliments As long as he could. He selxed the doctor by the i arm. . But the latter continued to address Thatcher Colt. Victim of Circumstance I - was caned . away from a - minor operation to come down here,", he complained. "I. have partaken of nothing but the salt i uiivu matt m tvvk" I t.n n.t ft, t,, wMJ.tM. .tnM ed roe ot a sturgeon and a cock- weon. Might I have a sand wlchr before Hogan aad his friends begin to entertain met" No," growled' Hogan. "Step lively. . There' a gain waiting for yon In- a room downstairs; and It'a been a long time slhce they had any exerclae." gl? backTt" tU ot At the threshold, the' doctor ua. ' "It's'terrible, what can happen man through force ot circum I stances." h remarked. "Howev i er," I don't mind, ZlZ-L. Mr. Commis- nr. wii on fceforg ob aaT Thatcher ' Coif, hla faea inacruta- " , Then Hogan poggled the arm of hla-prisoner and led him hurriedly down an inner corridor. , 4A hundred to one that fellow' breaia ' before ? morning," said : Dougherty.". . ?ut Thatcher Colt only smiled, octor Maskell was subjected I to the ordeal of a third degree that Is still considered a classic In Headquarters. -- , - A Battle of Wits He was not under arrest, al barn. 1 Mrs. Harrington was a . native OregonianI She waa born in Al- bany. Or eron April SI. 18CS. or 4, years .ago. Mrs.. Harrington leaves, only her Husband, John. H - sne was an active member ot; many fraternal organisations and took great Interest, in, the work. She - belonged., to the Rebekahs, Relief Corps, and United Arti- an.. .Mrs. Harrington waa also a member of the Woodburn Metn- odist churchy J. W.CLffl( LAID TO REST . .WOODBURN. Aug. 1 Funeral service for James Wesley Clark. who died at ols home about two. VWfc'V Ami... W.VAtWH, Sunday night, July 2 1.. will be held at. Hall's mortuary Thurs day afternoon at S o'clock. ' Clark, who waa born 48 years ago In Ooldendal:, Washington, died of dropsy. He was a painter by trade, and ha lived in the Willamette Talley tor" over 2t years. He leaves a 1 wife; three children, and .three brothers) " . . Rev. Elmer Woodruff Blew ef the , Woodhu'ra r Presbyterian church will officiate.' Interment will be at the Belle Passl cemetery.- - '-.-.-, . - - BASTS OIL GXZTS THEM i . . STATTON. Aug. 1 An ' easy and' successful way of capturlcy earwigs has been reported by Jos. Eestak. He-take. a-on pound coffee eaa aad Ulla-it about 'one third full f Unseed oil, placer lc where -the bogs congregate aad says that in one night ,he had bugs more than aa inch 'deep tn tire bottom of the can Siace lia- aeed oil Lf net poUenoas' It esq anywhere with aaiaty. - stery of Geraldirie' BBBorny i thougk there was mere than smt a i fMut e-rUaiwa t htn, t w - - onojau in 1 "u www as a ma- uasion was necessary; be wllllag ly consented to the almost Inhu man treatment to which he w now exposed. Of course, a man of Mas kail's ataadlag was in no dan ger or beauas from -the police. Nor by tffls do- X mean to sretent Pftlced. , 11 u tfll vnctlctd, al I nei AS mucn as DeiOre. BBt treatment la reserved tor 1 ww win repsona to notning 1 except yiolent physical pals. More- " . lV9UiLa "n man- -- no monger so uec- C"U11- prwoner rougmy I veated la the third decree" can Uw7er th Bext day. exhl- oil him bruises. Hare them choto- tTPhed, an the pictorea.of the Lw w"u MOWn l in" r . cwcea reri I uoi. n cater vatue lias la Mt MU cuuiession iaat ca oe sud- tBVted. tb coonrming; details fahoeatly checked up ?upon. 1 . jn,,ot lM of to? .Maaef police have more i-uw-asetaoas; nerore tbe nlgbt I " YVZ. " " . " w "re taV5 Pnrsical violence was wHw iwe. . . P" Hogan. led the- sucoect down- tlni to a brightly lighted office. 1 where a battalion; of Questioners jawaitea mm... The attack' upon him 'began .at once, launched, by three of the most experienced men the department. - But the dark hours paaeed and a calm man. with ready answers, still faced the ousiaugm ot nara and snarling investigators. - At 2 a.m., when Thatcher Colt, Dougherty, and Joined them, they had got no- I where. . They, eouid not seem to I break this man's iron nerve, Has- Ikeil had answered all their quee- uons over and over again and I not once- had Uey-tripped 'him. 1 Often he smiled at them. in his ir I ritaOngly superior manner. C True. he waa possessed ef a higher de- 1 cree of mentality .than most of his 1 anestloners, but they - bad the I atrength of numbers, of reserve force, brutally marshalled against blm. First, one detecUve would anesUon him fop flftAn mln.tk. I then leave and another would be- i sm. wue the rst checked up on any doubtful Information the doc- tor bad given him. Daring the Inigkt at least a doxen detectives I W . hullled and harassed the man with trick Questions. At S o'clock. when they gave Maskell a glass ot milk and a sandwich, his story was stm unbroken. It was one of the most desperate attempts to break down a denial In my experi ence In the department "Outside the door of the examination room two newspaper men had dragged a table from, the Criminal Identifi cation bateau and sat there, play lag "Seven-up": and. making side bets' on the result. ' When we led Doctor Maskell out of the office AN ORIENTAL 8 KETCH - 'Shsid a aw aaaa Uaa, Wa aara rm Wn U.''"o'Maa XJaV-tS. - Here- f la an oriental : picture which, well deserves sketching: -A well Just outside the old town of Nab or; tea camals caparisoned aa from some distant, country; an aged servant, dignified, well r " ..r B. waver poll, - JLBfX DIM " 'er' Hir w iWI POB, - who pause- dat o aer- T"1 greeting ana generously l raised pitchers of water for him apa ms cameis. i This scan waa rich. In signifi cance, for the servant waa the'ma trlmenlal - agent for : Abraham seeking a wife for his son; and th young miss .waa Bebekah," daugh ter 0f Bethuel.' . Willing was she to carry"her pitchers of water from the' well- to the camel's trough, and with the' true' hospi tality of the orient asured the in quiring servant that her home had straw for beast and. food tor. man. and room for. him to lodge. True, Rebekah was sure of her guest. She was taking in no com mon hitch-hiker of the desert. The servant's camel and goods show ed' hi master .was a man of sub stance. - And had- ha not Just giv LAY SURE' IT .WAS M THE OXHErV PELLEIl'S FAU UT OUT. TH AT WOULDN'T HAVE HELPED MUCH IF WE H A ONT t30TH (3 EEN INSUrED BV. Ko:ERii.sMrni INSURAKC5 AGENCY If onlr Mtmral t blasn"tbe tm Mazn'tbje dent. Bat jrew're ewty ytmretr to niame ir jom smcm we . pretectlom- ef avScquat Imswraace. There's sta swbetltute for ' COStTLETS eoTerasef . . , - - Over ?:!er' Store Comer n. Sato . aa4 took him to the washroom, one ef the reporters remarked thai the doctor appeared to be standing the ordeal much better thaa his tormentors. We toek him back, and then the commis sioner again took charge. First Thatcher Colt reasoned with aim. Over and over again he took him through, his . story, but Maskeit stuck to .hl ainglj yens without the slightest signifi cant change, recounting the hours at which- hw delivered the pres ents, hi, return to hi office, the interview with the mysterious woman, his diaser later la a res taurant of the Fifth Avenue ho tel. At (o'clock in the morning. Doctor Maskell was stiU far rrota being a broken man. His en ergy was equal to Thateher Coifs restless "ritallty. Finally Dough arty stepped to the fora. vhiin. ed into the ear of Thatcher Colt, and the commissioner .nodded in skeptical acquiescence., - - Now Doctor," proposed Dough erty, "I want you to come with me.". ' Thus it was that in th rf.r hours of that morning, Dougherty followed by Colt and myself mo tored' Humphrey Maskell to the morgue at - Beilerue hosnital. 2th. street and East Hirer. Ha walked Into the' buHdlng like a man led into There- he was confronted - with the body. At this dreadful sight. Doctor Maskell could not remain unmoved. He betrayed siens of nervousness and repulsion. But who could say they were Indica tion of fear or-euilt? Finally tha. police brought him back to the examination room, with no admission- drawn from Hps. They were weary, all of r them, with the night's Inquisl-5 tlon. but secretly they marvelled at the strength, the energy, the undaunted vitality of their pris- oner. Undaunted Vitality Meanwhile. detectlrea checking up on all the stories that he told. It was, at this time that Thatcher Colt had a long ard whispered conference with Merle Dougherty, and a messen ger was-dispatched to the build- s wmcn toe aoctor maintain- , ed his 'off ices. But. Thatcher Colt was not ready to give up. He knew that , whea all seemed; ' lost, victory might be within a hand's reach. -Agair0arr sfUl again, he made Doctor Maskell re-tell his storr! He was resorting ' to the oldest and one of the most effective da- vices known to the operating po-Mce- of the - world the trapping effect of repetition. Make the bjis pect tell the same story often en- ongh, in harrying repetition, un til be Is sick of the-very lies that he la telling, and eventually, oft en, I think by the sheer rebellion of the- outraged subconscious, he lets fall some siraif leant litti detail which.- - seized upon and followed up. may break his story altogether.. That was what That cher CoU was hoping to do with Maskell. He tried to reach him from a different angle. I t o be continued tomorrow) SERMON en her a golden earring, and gold en bracelets? No wonder she in vited aim to her father's house hold where the camel were tend ed aad the old man's feet were washed, "and the men' feet that were with him." It was an Important day for Re bekah as she came later to real ize; for she passed the test of the old servant and became his choice for Isaac's wife. The story has made girls self-conscious ever since, thinking that this may be the day, or this the man! Life after all is but a pattern of pictures.- It la a series of sketches, a continuous dialogue between the characters. We do not sense its dramatic quality, yet life is Intensely " dramatic all the wlille. And art hangs on scenes such as this: a girl pouring water for thirsty camels, a fisherman mending hla gear, a merchant haggling with a customer,. " When we realize the drama even of life's routine, its color. Its vividness. Its variety. , then we get' new interest in life. Its dullness, its routine drop away. Instead of rising from bed with senses dull ed and hopes mute, we might bounce- out with eagerness, like -Plppa to enjoy her one boUday, keen to taatavlife to the fall. : . c&e etliew f eliow". for the acci- TeL 9181 llerrin D. Ohlin j V VP'