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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 11, 1931)
I i. it ! I. I PACE FOUR - i j 1 The OREGON STATES31AN, Salem, Oreuron. Fridar Morninjr, September 11. 1931 1 i 1 V 1 U(Jll Lil'UIJJ uiu2 , "Vo favor Sway I; M Fear fiTAatt Awe" From First Statesman, March 28. i851 j THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. : Charles A. Steacce. Sheldon F. Sackett, Publisher , Charles A. Sprague - i - - ; Editor-Manager Sheldon F. Sackett -,.'--. Managing Editor Member of the Associated Press J ".- The Associated Press la exclusively entitled to the um tor ppbtlea ttoa of all news dispatches credited t U or not otherwise credited fa j Pacific Coast Advertising Representatives: ' Arthur W. Stypea. I no, Portland. Security Bid. San Francisco, Sharon Blda. : Loa Angeles, W. Pae. Bid Eastern Advertising Representatives: Focd-Par-oaa-Steeher. IiicNew Tork, III Madison At.; Chicago, 3e N -itaniaan Ave. Entered -at tA Pogtoffice at Salem. Oregon, ae Second-Claoe tiatter. Published every morning except Monday. Buneu office, tlS S. Coynmerctal Street. ; ' SUBSCRIPTION BATES: am o..i , i - -. AAmm ma Wtthla OlMBII f DftflT Sunday. 1 Ma SO cents: s Mo. $-.25; f Ko. Tt.TH I rear 4.. Elsewhere 5 cents per Mo., or 1V0 tor 1 year la advance ( n nitv rrH imii a. mantht SS.SS t Tetr In advance. Per Copy 1 cent a. On trains and Newa Stands 5 cents. Decay i HERE'S HOW By EDSON t i By ESTILL L." BRCN-C M. D. Marion Ceunty Depart uamt of Health . Decay la the teeth Is usually detected by a sharp pain when eating something sweet, allowing the tooth ! to come I n con tact with cold air. Ache in a I tooth is nearly always preced ed by decay. Unless d ee a y I ha s - adranced to ' the stage where t h a nerve Is involv ed it may read- i I y be tilled with the prop er materials to restore norma function. If tha Xr. CIBr-Jt iOOttt is not given immediate car the decay will eventually la voire-the nerve which usually results in the loss et the tooth impairing function and esthetics. - I h r Frequently, decayed teeth will become abscessed. This Is usually preceded by severe palni, soreness of the surrounding tissues, swell ing and general discomfort. An abscess usually manifests Itself by a feeling of fullness around the tooth involved or a small it i i r 1 -'. t - i '.- I 1 l - - - - ' Heart May Bo Affected Abscesses are usually classed as chronic '.and "acute A chron- Protecting Security Owners . a rrrwiir. r.f stuff KnafnpsA exectitivea. met in Portland last XlL week to organize a division for the protection of the in- iiiiufii Vi.1Aora ftf oMtin'ti TVlP mpptinf WS3 Sll Ollt- .growth of the stir raised in Oregon' last cation which gave ffiSlr refSt as a "gum invested capital a chiQ it hasn't recovered from. Wall street boii" . felt it and sent inquiries out here to find out if Oregon really meant what it voted, and waa hostile to capital investment V aoof PrtKoi-f V. ' Rmith spnt ont innuiries and from his renlies made un a rather rosy summary which he no La-lB"y..tL'?!!Lt"!" doubt furnished his eastern Questioners. Is ow this i group is hed bv discomfort or nam. a organized to see that holders of bonds and stocks in rail- I acute abscess is accompanied by roads, uti ities, industries are not made tne suDject 01 organ-1 s, reum-s. 01. tqrsum us " t j j. ' . , . I I sues, pain and a general discom . ized or disoriranized banditry. ; i.i.j ? . : Oregon has not gone yet over to confiscation of property, I aaiiy breaks open and the aid of but we see little to encourage any eastern investor to put ms the jaw near the tooth involved. money into any railroad or utility enterprise in this state at The pus drains out into: the mouth .the present time Apparently it is not wanted. The of ata the bloo1 tream- . J V, V, .-il i jkn,a ,i,A ;nc.fmanfJ ;n Abscesses may cause serious vau street i! iicu, uu..i- V lu , Mrt lesions, headaches. sucn enierprises nere see a cenaui auuuuu ui mwr vaiucs, notably in railroad stocks and bonds, is We miiriit ask this-group about the situation in land, in view of the temper of the people there. Is Portl f MT. CTNA lafWGOArts T L JtY i- SUHMUSU3UAH MA. f I T''"Vy f ? TiVU MAKt ICI CUAM I V , f JlW 'It V DOCTO. A5J r r-A " " i " ftj ffff yxrfie '' Awiy. '7?f x 5OAfB ,,u! J - 'I i ? Miutsumy-THE serum ;2ila Tomorrow Skating on Hypo Ice ! BITS for BREAKFAST . n v vvnavmrivivyn ' - -r By R. J. HENDRICKS "TKa -UJui t i,UL By SIDNEY wma & AXtiuicoi; WARWICK Ti rht BEAD THIS FIRST - Katharine Faring is the right fol owner of the Czsrlna rubles, hidden when her grandfather, Prineo MnrinoT,' was slain 1 by a revolutionary mob; ; Her i- frlehdj Frank Severn, goes to ' Russia, finds them and entrusts them! to Panl Foderoff. who reaches Enc land; only to be slain at a country piaco called Monksllver.' j,., Severn returns and hides him self at .his own country homeL Beggar's Court, and calls Upon his friend Jim "Wynter tor help. How ever, ho Is kidnaped before YTpi ior ca renca aim. , - . j fCAtharme, anco i succedsrai violinist, has given tfp her csreer because of an injury to her wrist; Sho is poor. Jim Wynter rescues her from tho" uaweleome atten tions- of Lester Malia, who has money, bat' no morals. Wynter tells her of Severn's kidnaping and she suggests that tho unfortunate man may bo held ' prisoner j at Monks ilrer.whsro sho believes tho rubles aroniddea. Wynter resolves to go there immediately. En route. wynter Is startled to see Severn passing in another car driven by Creyko, his servant. NOW GO ON: an3 Kincaid's reminisceHtes: I V (Continuing from yesterday:) Returning to Oregon I arrived eye and 1 at tho family home, in the hills ear trouble and general run down I about three miles southeast of condition.: I Eugene, about the last week in It is false economy to sennit a l December, in the year 186T, hav I tooth to ache before visitlnc tho I tag been away a little more than dentist. It Is much easier to fill a I 31 months, tramping and ' work ing wherever I eonld find em ployment, in southern Oreeon and insist on five or seven cent fares regardless of the effect on I cod and frequently tho cost is I California, usually on ranches at the company? Will Portland grant a new franchise to the I much less. Have your teeth exam-iout S2S a month During my IVr JXrrlK "l " i lihd regularly. Your ! teeth are! absence my father ; had purchased LeieUUOIie Wiuyauj tnuwui xcuuuauk suvmuu c I six a.re pnone raxes 4 r- - ; iweu. We are not here defending these utilities. But in view of ih. .fmomVoer tomnar.Af iho olorfAri which tnVpja. nnpcinl I . health problems eare yout If irima. :to let the street nUy d ZcVSrt;.Ti of a "fair return ', on the value of its property? Or will it Less discomfort will be eiperien- 9 A. . MA,V iAaiAfi AMrLAnn At 4VlA AfAilf Tt mwJo 0J- al At tha shaea avU eait.a a Uu.At.M L. delieht in swattins: utilities, there is nothing to encourage fer biba. wrHe iet qaMtio out and the holder of their securities. This fact is reflected in the f ESo. e.t; dtp.rt...iae7hnith.v rl t r tlyatr. Knnle: onrl Tvrfomrt sfivHra Tf i dAiiht-1 PPear la thu eohnae. KaaM WTICt Wl uvuug auu ,v v. wvvw.w. - - I than J h. .lvlMi Wnt m mmA tm ful if the security-owners can do mucn. oecause li one con-1 ". i f esses he holds any securities he becomes identified as a. cap- I . . italist and hence is "suspect". Tne qualification lor lniiu-ii Y QPf QV A LOl 1 f davs ; .fie ... Of Old Salem Towm Talks f row The States nana of Karl for Days September 11, 1006 A bloody tragedy, the outcome six acres of land in the southern part ! of Eugene, at the south-end of Olive street, now in almost the center of town, and had the deed made to me. . i In October. 18 ft, I started east,! intending to visit a world's fair to be held in Paris, France. the next year. I went with my friend Congressman J. H. D. Hen derson, to Washington. D. C. to spend the winter there and wit ness tho proceedings - of" congress and the scenes at the national capital, and then intended to go. on to France the next summer.! I went to Portland and from Port land to San Francises by steamer. At San Francisco he engaged the same stateroom for both of at on ence at the present time is poverty and a loud voice. I : Oregon Gari 7 Care for Her Own THE state grange executive committee thinks a . special session of the legislature is needed to provide agencies for relief, and recommends a luxury tax or a one-cent ta on (rtoAli'na fn rvrnvirlo TMHr? 'fftr TYinlovinO! ldl TOPn. TheTfe is j U4. 4.. na..fi'Anoi;r nt eK lnriolo-ri'nn I of a dmnkAn hnvi m th nartttho new steamer Montana, which J ,onr .m,W wrfifth f rPPZPs -thp tnx- of a crew of tough hoppicker. at AJ sent round CaDe uuu'bi. v. x...- , " t - I St Panl. T-ftHiiltd In rianth fA thai I "n. levying powers oi ine atai. . . , ,.. x '.'..Itowa marshal. J. A. Krechter; i The Statesman nas tne conviction inai xnis siaxe can ana mortal wounds to a ; stranger will takp pare of its own without calling on the legislature -whose identity could i not be or the;ational congress. Theprings of human 7 Hotff inudilibert are not dried up nere; ana wie resouxves iue iwi tcauj j Lambert. Several others wero so been tapped. Oregon Will not let her people suffer. j J rerely beaten in the encounter ; Already the state highway department is planning work I which happened in the saloon of for the winter months on a wider scale than previously. Fort- pj - . - . . T I . " 9 1 J I - land and Aluitnoman coumy nave arrangea wivugii uumj sav vnA-nr.isr.n Rt it ci7o mrr-v rmpmnlnvpd throuirh for manv months Vet. I Sa-I The Call tomorrow will sav: "ThAiabout eight miles north i . Zj. m...4-r'' UnmoTiA Aniff rr4. tr ooA fliof "fss TYi . I Southern Pacific pnmTianT fiasi daV (after great efforts the tire was ... 3 j. -i :fr :to I cided to build a coast line ; to ! pnt out. one engine was aia- llies ana even, iransienis ate piuvmcv ic i.01uCo Portland at once. It wUl run di- Wed, and the steamer ran to of life. rect from Corvallls to Coos Bay New York with one engine. We 1 If the Gifford committee will launch a nation-wide re- and from Coos Bay to Eureka... ere 21 days making the trip, ' lief fund to be raised through voluntary contributions much " Is generally believed in rail- about 7000 ndles. from San Fran- llfter the manner of the !d Cross drives of war-times we nK ? 1 t?TM'ri5! believe that this state would easily raise enough money to tile m0Tement on the part of the a ttk " 3aat before landing handle its own needs. ! buUders of the Western Pacific at tne wnarij- Cf AAntoA it Vuaon trtiOQCii tailaA than f Vio locrrsTflf iirp I who are lookinr with eazer eves! ' TA j it.- .ui. .-4. u unon thejntregon country." I "We remaltred a day or two in would neea to meei aaa utue wuai oteps iv vuuw unuex j me , ; . . New York at the old Aster Constitution tO meet the needs Of the people. If the leglsla-l one of the oromlneht exhibit- House. I nut in the time sight tnre did meet it would face a barrage of crazy legislative I ors of horses at the? fair this J seeing, i climbed to the top of proposals-like Bennett's state currency or cheap money wek., A;c: R5bT Pendleton, Trinity "J;vVSVv -tm . Iul.i. i j T4.,ti.j. -v. L..?J Krho has 12 head on display. Battery to Central Park, and saw making matters worse instead, of better. ! I September 11, 1921 . "At Aspinwall, or Colon, we were put on 'board an old steam er called the Ocean Queen. When in sight of Cuba the boat caugM fire and the I officers expected It would be destroyed. They got the life boats ready, and we all expected to be burned or drown ed, unless we could escape in the life boats to Cuba, which was But SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. It Roseoe "Fatty Arbnckle, motion picture actor, was booked at the v The New Game Program fTlHERE is greater public confidence in the state game j city prison en a murder charge A commission than has. been felt lor many years, jne lilyr membership of the commission embraces men of a high Rappe,-fiim actress, following a stamn of good citizenship. The whole organization which party in Arbuckie'a suite at a used to be a seething caldron of politics wiih more than a110,el ftef Iast Monday . j . i t 1 1 " susmcion 01 exrrava trance or even crrair is oermeaiea now i . - i-i.ij-. -j: 1 oii, T-tt.,tA tn " . urn eiuMiiiua di eiecLnc hft i ma h7iuiiiiBuui.u uav. w. , . -...i A . . -tirifh mnV -f.'n-. Ann.w n- nf T-Aor.Ar.ciKiliT'w rv f ho miftHr Is. . .v- j ...- .. -j - v,a ireai, tufa ou s iiMmwai up ine ...w . "uv.ii iiit-i vuuuuvu ui tpv4juiuvj w wv 1 lce w iau 1109 urmius aisirjcii y-Lcui uuilo , ouu uiu; I o T s-rrenrti rirpr to Vt-r more of New York City in one day than many people born and raised there had seen In a life time. On the cars,- going from Jersey City to Washington, Mr. Henderson introduced me to Sen ator Charles I Sumner of Massa chusetts, the famous champion of freedom. i ' serving nearly 12 years a clerk in the U. 3. senate, going home to Oregon or visiting other places when congress was not in session, crossing . the continent en the Union and Central Pacific rail roads eight times, both ways, aft er they wero completed in 1869. C P. Huntington, rice president of the Central Pacific, was the manager inj the east, and was around congress a great deal. His tall form was" quite familiar to me, and also his handwriting, for he. occasionally' wrote me' passes and signed them, and they were " good as I gold with any con ductor or officer of the road: He was a"" big man, mentally and fi nancially, as well as physically, and his word ' or written order was law all I along the line. 3 V - i. :-v 1 "ln1867 I attended a Fourth of July celebration on the battle field of Manassas. Junction or Bull Run. Senator John A. Lo gan of Illinois delivered the ora tion.? X picked up a shell on the battlefield that had been explod ed. I sent jit to Oregon by way of Panama J before the railroad across the continent was complet ed, and have since placed it in the j Oregon Historical society's collection, at -Portland. During that year I was sent to western New York to meet .a committee of congress j that had gone there to investigate. I did not find the committee, but made the trip, go ing and returning by way of New York City, i I "In 18f7 I went to Boston and visited the museum. Harvard col lege. Bunker Hill monument, and other places of interest. I ar ranged with I the librarian of Har vard college; to have the volumes of the Oregon; State Journal bound by the library and kept In the library. I As long as the paper was continued ' after that date, for more than ' 40 years, I had every copy Of the paper sent to that library. I made the same arrangement with Mr. Spofford, librarian of congress, at Wash ington, one of the largest librar ies in the world, and always fur nished the paper, and missing papers when called for, and sup pose complete sets may be, found in these libraries. To meet these and other demands I had 12 papers each jweek, after the first twO or three years, put in .boxes in Eugene, and hare had three sets bound, and 4 nine sets not bound. I also sent the paper al ways free to libraries in Portland, San Francisco, New York" and other cities,) but in most cases they were not bound, but kept On a. stick file awhile and then de- Chapter XV 1 Not far down -the road Jlm Wynter came upon the house, jln the dim obscured light the name Monksilver met his eyes in faded gilt lettering from a pair of tall oak gates. Behind them an un cared-for. weed-rTown drira ran throagh a neglected wilderness ! of garden to the house. - The house itself lay set: tar back from the road, so shut in by trees that little more than stray peeps of it were obtainable through the yellowing Autumn- leaves. Eagerly Wynter twisted I the great iron handle before he real ized that the gates were fast. They were chained up and psd locked, as though the house was shut up and not even inhabited now by a caretaker. This unexpected rebuff brought a sudden anxious frown i to his face. Had he been mistaken after all in believing that it could only be Monksilver that Creyke was driving r U i r-r H Jim Wynter stood staring with pnzsled eyes at the chained-iip gates. Surely if a car had driven to this bouse within the last, ten minutes a car that presumably would be leaving again, he would hardly have found the gates lock ed like this . 'Hi peered down the dim, sha dowy drive towards the house be hind the screen of trees, its win dows, so far as he could see, all in darkness. Had he been tantalized by that fleeting glimpse of the missing man only to lose the trail again? v. , Then a quick eager exclamation broke from Wynter. 1 . i Ught I j : A light had suddenly gleamed out through the trees from ; one of the windows of the dark' house. The gates might be locked; but Monksilver at least was not de serted:! i .. j -ij j- .' "Good enough," Jim j Wynter. said to himself.: ; i j And without i further ceremony he climbed over that padlocked gate. .- s - I . : The light had vanished now from that upper window as he made his way down the long drive, avoiding the gravel lor the rank grass that grew at the side. He did not want the sound of his footsteps through the quiet night to give warning of his approach. He did not know yet who was re sponsible for that, light. Possibly of course. It was only a caretak er. Still, on the other hand, it might not be a caretaker, but an enemy; and in this house of dark memories and secrets it might be well to walk wearily. ; r The long, 4 winding avenue I o- 1 VU' ! h. i, . ' f m M. Cm Am w rw M e3k i'Jj in ' 1.- . ..... 1 .a - i 'AS L Creyke wan dalJwitfa?a knife wound above bis heart to show ow he brought nlm out into tan open.' graveled, space -in If ton of the great house, v The hlgnt wasfal most moonless, but In starlight ' Monksilver vaguely defined, the; trbnt iaf iih- hroken darkness again. a gleam of light show i throagh the fanlight abovci thelhall dekir Wynter; stopped Ha had not seen It at den in the deep obsc)irity-jht there before him was tie car that had passed him oh th road! Its lights had been extinguished, fid it had sweep the Stood Not ei suddenly dead first., hid den run off th graveUfd into i the Shadow of te trees that- oTerhuhg he open r naee- hnt a.a wtnf Arl . trwklr quick step nearer he fecognlled It almost beyond question as same car, , Not a fruitless journey after 11114; "' ' ' The driver was sUnl sitting! the car; in the dlfanesi Wynter'i eyes could just make out -the vague figure: of the chauffeur, who ' did . not even turn) his head as it stilt unaware of the silen approach of - the newcomer, j 1 j , Nor. did he turn asf Wynter strode quickly up fo the car emp- tiea ; now or its passenger, as glance ; told him. Frank Severn after being drlven :here; y rapit hare been taken into: the houseU- and' Creyke wa going jo expliin way ynier promises : mmsei grimly.! i ; . jji:f.;; f - Well. Creyke; my nan. said suddenly., his voice, though noi raiseq sounaea cunousiy loua in the hushed stillness of thi night, "so It seems you "could hfvii told us; after all, about Mr. Sev ern's disappea ranee. i.i Silence: He was surprised that the ml: had seemingly not heard his ap proach, still more surprised that Creyke did not turn now within start at the : sudden challenge. But the man in the driver's seat neither moved or spoke, his halt averted face a vague white bljar in the shadow. Impatiently Wmter thrust in! a hand through the window of the car to grip Creyke's arm. ' With the mere (.touch of his band the man inside fell forward queerly, etiffly, like some marionette. And Wynter caught his breath, a lit tie cold sweat breaking oat at his COUNT BALKS f AT AIR DUEL I stroyed to make room for newer The first day in Washington I , df tes" , v. visited the dome of the capltol, , ; ..,' -,,- r , 1 1UUI AlUOlVil .1 T7AAb IV A-'AVIA" Instead of regarding the game fund as something to spend Just east of Salem knewi Four public bnfldjtngs. J"J. rkiir. png the ' Thou as freely as possible with as generous personal expense Jac- cer- la nt.efT,t--fL'Ad tKrJ mi t&Te. K th From xiagars counts as oossible- there is a different Sttitude. The chakge S-11 Jlt" .SLf1; TiFalls I went by rail to theud- . . . ..... ,Zr i .7, ... . . .... - , UUIUM UWk UIOUIU mvuiu lUIV vuu6iva . 13 welcome, and the public Will respond more Willingly to the be willing to take electrfc aervice derson and I ) went to Richmond appeals made by the game commission and their staff . from the PorUand Ranway, Light and .Petsburg, Vato Ib wires. and Power company, it arrange? I famous battlefield ofTetersburg ments can be made to extend the where the last great Daiue was fought between the Union ana Confederate irmies before Lee surrendered to Grant. ? "a S - "As my position in Washing ton was a pleasant one, and : I was promoted j from time to time. The above is preliminary to comment noon the wild life program which the game commission has; recently annoiun ced. A comprehensive plan has been worked out! "to raise Streams; lakes, fiplds and fnrpt tf Via iMool f .Ti'- inA I Judge John McCourt of Port hnr,; -, 'tM T.-ilrsC - .-l.! land,,who recently -was appointed " V " "r"9"' ourves on sireanos by Governor Olcott to' be a mem ana jaKes lor fish-planting and on fields and woods for game j ber of the supreme court to suc management have been, laimehpd. A nnvhnr Un rJuK-lceed Justice Charles ; Johns. lished outlining the whole program with the catchv sWan hM Pnrchased ; therThoinaa C I remained there about 14 years, "Tn TMnl-p Hrln v-JU: iv-. "n r ne "-nj SiOfan Campbell property et North Four- during the sessions of congress, ftftA 'Ie.figures quoted show an annual income value of $20,. Z ' Y" 7 c tui,e 0i Oregon s iisn and game resources spreads there will ..be increasinc- rPfliiTfin ff,- through the Visits here Of tourist from , Yesterday Statesman f reporters ed." All that i rpnnircl r,rt, ;Z , ' , asked: "Do you reel there is any nnorfpr llli P? among the chance for Moyle and - Allen, vate7dp and pri- tranPacmc nie"rsT- rflmn.Zf"? suppressed lor a time the iuu a XIne piece of work for the'sta teenth and Court streets, New Views the rery best flyers, and apparent ly from what one gathers these two men-attempted a hard feat before they were properly prepar- son river and took passage on f the steamboat Dean Richmond, at Athens. . Some ' distance below Athens we met .. the steamboat Vanderbilt, of an opposition line, coming up the river. It was 11 o'clock at night, and many.of the passengers, including myself( cad gone to bed In staterooms, rhe Vanderbilt ran ! Into the Dean Richmond, intentionally as they believed, and in a short time our boat was. resting on the bottom, with the upper deck barely above water, which I must hare been 25 to 30 feet deep, because both boats were very large and high . regular floating palaces. When I heard the shock ' and commo tion. 1 tried to open the door, but l a . e a . i , . - . Geer Sisters Visit With Relatives in Portland for Week mmmm' :-.-;' :. " ! ALDO HILLS. Sept. 10 Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Geer and daugh ters Vesper and Reba, motored 1 to Portland Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs, Geer returned that evening but the girls remained for a long fT with their aunt. Miss Myrtle Moore. They will return i?i! to heein nitt tchool at Miverton; -,.... . C. K. Logan, reporter: "I sup pose the crabs hare them by now." . - 1 K. Christ ense, soap xnannfac- tarcr 641 Market street: "I be lieve they will come in by foot. I Era Roberts, county assessor's office: ."I suppose they are in the ocean and gone. ' ; ir7i Zr 4ar TisItor t the Frank I don't fear tor them," i?,om,! er Mr. and MrsJ Vk- t a..artT and daughter,! Phil Hangen. student: "Sure, a I John W. Ritchie, Oregon Klec- i ' m . " "-Portland Mrs. I whole ocean ful of chance for I trie agent : "Hard to tell. ttVMo"JeLan.d on' Lloydlindlthem not to come back." . t oisyion. : 1 ' 5 3i!-K T,nler 1 children I ' Mrs. Masoa Bishop, home mak iv". j w,orm are-home from er: "I feel rather anxious about 7fV . !' to Condon. ! them. The ocean is awfully ,7rw'w floma rolks from I wide!'1 Max Scribctr anif irt-. n,-. I - i -- ice wnoi -c -uucau, Alaska, tell Of the I Ma-tha Rnnumf mi . a jnJTBlBt of the country j "They haven't turned up so 1 sup- ZZi X , Ir,ena- The boys loose they are lost." wvu wi wiiau are amnmiid h.x uciae( ie stay there another W. O. Kraecer, real estate agent: "I think they will show up." : - . : ! Daily Thought year. Habit is aicaMe we weaTe a thread of it i every day. and at Mrs. It. C. Hunter, home mak I last we can not break it." Hor- er: "The chances are against even 1 sce-Mansr- i the sinking cramped the deck. were drowned I never knew. The baggage deck and was weeks before I did not get of the boat ? had door. I got: out through a window.- The passen gers were crowded on the upper Whether any passengers on the lower decks but supposed some were, the boat went down so fast. wa on the lover under water several the boat was raised. my trunk in Wash ington for about , a month, ; and then everything was faded. -The were .-taken off on small boats that ' were near, and were taken tf : New York on an other steamboat." : v f (Continued bn Tuesday next.) Lefty House, Veteran soathnaw who hurled ftt the Western asso ciation for years, has been nncon- . . mitionalry released by JopllsL I; Ei J;v XMS--- ' ';'r! v -: -,: . : -. , r-T"- "- ; . ' l - ' '. - - . . ".'-"'"'is ' ' - ' . '- :,- . -y-f-'x ' . ' . . a' - J vAS-:-;::.::x"-:::''.5:- : . - -V5 - ) .a:a-sv,-:v'-. .-:): v-""-"-'-' "' . ,-. .... -- ir:- s- . y - ; -.. - i eVIayW ye t-gkt tlaels were past-Uce tlke street car yaw jaat saisaL Well far that BMtler. the parUealar proposed eaceatr ea the , iwia ot De-ur teat we re taxuog aeeat is all i?r. Am the reason e aaedsra that t Wt the whsU affair aa swsaistakaUe tevch ef ceaedy. It all started when Cewaf Aj.tem Cser.in, aa Aeatrlma saaa, U said to have stared at the strildaf palchritatW ef Hilda Zimer- er-aa heaary. aad f laecee ef Captaia Charles L. Liaceta, Eagluih aad fersaer Reval Air Fare eff tear. m - Cmr1.A itJ . ". LUcols. ahjecUas to th Oval's alleged rmdmm took ktot to task to the extoat ef kaockiag kia dewa. j CsenOst cawatarad with a chsUe.f Cf-1 pUk the weapeaa. Bm whea the fersaer flier the air with I aaachia goav the Ceaat hastily diplea-atisaliy I erget all aheat kis ehallag. selected a eW la i' retreated sjad fi ll . ' ' . temples. His fingers j as they, reached out. to the figure in the I car had touched somethtek wet. f i"Creyke!"i! ; Tf - ' xiurrieui, wna iiqiaea un easy thrill. Jim Wynter -fumbled for matches, struck a Uht; The tiny tongue 6f flame Ofred up. touching the white face he hud dled, forward-tallen tiguii; touch ed; too, a little dark poo pt blood at; the man's feet. -1 ?'My God ! broke f r t Wyn tef at th0 sudden horr ) of the thing, -j; f:' u M : , - : For Creyke was deattl with a knife wound above his eart to show how he had died. 4 ' f The match: died i out I between Jiai: Wynter 'si fingers Bst for a long moment he stood rofQiionless, white and shaken, ; uiMer the shock of this grim, utif xpected thing that had leapt o 4 1 to his consciousness 'from the pbadow.; IMurder! The blood rthat had made a widening stain I ion tbe man's 'clothing just . above the heart was proof enough of that. A second deed of violence at Monk silver. . : ;1 , ' , ( - SMnrder! By whom? Soraeone in that: house where a few moments before he had seen- a moving light. -; : . " '. Wynter stood listening! through the 'strained silence of tUe nig lit asereeplng thrill qulverlteg along ms; nerves. The great (rambling house confronting him wys dark and soundless but almost cer tainly the man or men guilty of - this were there within i Its walls. - and almost, certainly, too, that man; he had seen earlier in the car4 with the white, , unconscious face-i his friend, i Frank Severn. Indecision j Then as Wynter stood irreso lute wondering what his next step should be in view of hie grim dis covery, the light flashed up. again behind the curtained window of an upper room. f Should he steal quietly off wit!. his! news to the police?! That would mean, of course, inevitable , delay, with the possible rsk that he and the representatives! of the law might come back to find those unknown; criminals gone fwithout a trace. 1 Faintly through the breathless night a sound: reached him, : as Wynter stood hesitating, a sound; that seemed to come from 'he up per, room where that light! was a long, shuddering moah.Was It from Frank Severn? Throwing all restraining prudence to the winds, Jlnt Wynter stole on tipto4 across the' graveled opened spacrf to the front door. 1 ' And unexpectedly the door was ajar! He paused listening! for a second, then softly pushed tue door a little way baqk; itfopened on a broad, dark halL - On Its threshold that moanlnr f 1 sound reached him again. ii (To be Continued Tomorrow) ' China Prepares For W&r After I X Month of Peace . SHANGHAI. Sept. 1 0 I AP -i. Only 'one - month of peace has elapsed sinc .the ill-timed i rebel lion 01 General Shih Yu-San was crashed In the north, bu China today was girding herself or an other civil war. f With the Cantonese invasion et Huna province confirmed.) Nan king, while repeatedly professing a desire: for peace, is energetical ly ' preparing fOr. conflict,!! Presi dent Chiang Kai-Shek's activities have been diverted from flood re lief measures to, war preparation. Five Killed as. Safety Mining WPlarii Burns up ' ;. J : BENTON, Iilii Sept. 10-4-f AP Five: men were killed and One ser iously injured "Wed. when powder used In the manufacture of card ox shells : in one of the buildings of the; safety Mining company, plant here; Ignited; trapping six men- in blazing inferno. Four others at work in the building escaped with minor burns. ' - . ; ?j : . The dead, alt of Bentoal are: Herbert Smith. lfL Carl Moon- eyham. 20; dtandall Scarborough. zo: James Dohrey. 19. and Joe Hasklns? . .; M-t ' ' ' - ' ' Bilry Laval; i South Carolina football coach.: says his football squad this rear will play ai defen sive game. 1 4 III W