Thj OtlCCOrr ITTATCSMAN,' Salest, Oregon, Tuesday Morning, October 6. 193t- i i ?!2Vo Favor Sway U$; No Fear Shall Aw$' From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Charles A. SnucuB, Shixdom Ft Sackctt, Pulluhtrt Cbaslcs A. SpragusV i - - l - Editor-Manager Sheldon F. Sackstt i- - - - Mama pine Editor Member of the Associated Presa i ; , r Ths Associated Press la sxeluslvsty enuaed to the use tor PuMlca tion of tU iun despatches credited to It or not otherwise erUtd la paper, i i Pacific Coast Advertising Representatives: m BtMi Tito TVrttn1 fVrurftr Bid. Baa Francisco, Sharon Bldg. : Loa Angelea, W. Pac Bllg. Eastern Advertising Representatives i Ford-Parsona-Steclier. Ine New Tor, til Madison Are. I Cnlcjuco. 3(9 Entered at the Pottoffice at Salem, Oregon. aa Second-ClasM Matter. Published every morning except Monday. Buetneee office, tlS S. Commercial Street. h I SUBSCRIPTION BATES: j I Mail Subscription Rates. Advice, thln pa: DIy a-a SuadAy. 1 Mo. 60 cents : S Mo. 1.: Ma. f 2.J5 ; 1 year 4.00. BUsewhere 60 cents pr Ma. or f .00 tor 1 year In advance. ! By City Carrier: 15 cents a month: $5.00 a, year la advance. Per Copy t cents. On trains and Mews Stand 8 cents. j 1 I Fire Prevention Week r ; ImHIS wppIc beincr fire Drevention week, we take the odea X sion to suggest to the careful householder that he make a thorough inspection of the fire possibilities of his own res iidence, tdre or factory The common causes 01 iires are ae fective flues or wiring, hazards about the furnace or stove, alies of refuse, oily rags, etc. How good are your flues?. . How well do stove pipes fit into the flue3? ; Are paper or wood close to flues or to atove or furnace Lloors? ' -. r' ' ' -j; : , ' Is your basement clean? And your attic? ; i Go over your place from roof to cellar and fix up your Premises without fail agajnst the heavy firing season of win ter. This applies equally to the country as to the city. More w. because there the chance of putting out a fire which areaks out 13 very slim as compared with towns where fire departments give quick response. In the literature which came to this desk urging the f calling of public attention to the week, we find a story which reminds us that Ben Franklin, long regarded as the patron saint for" printers, is likewise "almost a patron saint for fire fighters. Here is the account: I I "Benjamin Franklin,! whose alert mind saw the necessity -, of getting aid to home owners before the truck arrived, with ! (oar other friends formed the Union Fire company in 1736. 1 There were, thirty men In this mutual assistance company and 1 each one equipped himself with six leather buckets for water ; and two linen bags for salvaging household goods. The company J met eight times a year at a dinner for which they paid three ! chlllings. This is believed to be the first service club. Whenever "i a eonflaeraton started in a neighborhood. Union members in the vicinity put a light in! their front window, and brother mem 1 ben so recognized the house which they were to protest. Later a ; "metal 'fire mark was put on each Union house. The Union lasted years, and was the: basis for fire fighting units long after j Franklin passed on. j - 1 "Besides organizing fire fighting. Franklin also introduced ! naanjr-fire prevention laws for building, and, public use. He ad-, i Tocated use of brick, stone and stucco; cleaning chimneys reg ! ularly; and building; deep nd fireproof hearths. In 1752. Frank i lia organized the first fire insurance company, a company still j doing business in Philadelphia." ''.'." T - . v Sol Bloom and G. Washington ntrRITING his 'Daily Mirror of Washington" for an east f ? em daily Clinton W. Gilbert describes Sol Bloom, who - associate director of the Washington Bicentennial com nission is promoting the 1932 celebration of the 200th anni- ersary of the birth of the Father of the country. His descnp ion amply corroborates the opinion which has been formed of the energetic Mr. Bloom by those of us who have been on - he receiving end of his publicity clip-sheets. y rites Mr. Gil: jert " ' i ."A resident of Washington being presented the other day to the Honorable Sol Bloom remarked, pleasantly, of course, "I know Mr. Bloom. But who Is that guy George Washington? What is he hooked up with?" Well, when Mr. Bloom gets through the country will know George Washington as well as it knows Representative Sol Bloom. For the benefit of the uninformed It . honld be said that Mr. Bloom, besides being a democratic mem- . ber of the House of Representatives trom the nineteenth con gress district In New York City, is associate director of the George Washington Bicentennial commission, which Is In charge of tha celebration of the) 200th anniversary of the birth of Geerge Washington, not merely on February 22, 1932, but all through the year 1932. "The ex-offlclo chairman of the commission Is Herbert Hoo ver, president of the United States. And the vice chairman is Simeon D. Fees, senator from Ohio, and the chairman of the . Republican National committee. But Mr. Bloom Is the works. . There was to be another associate director, a Republican, and indeed, there once was one, Colonel Ulysses ft. Grant, U. S. A., grandson of the Civil War general of the name, but Colonel Grant resigned his peat and now the associate directorate con aists of, according te the Congressional Directory. "Vacancy" and Sol Bloom. According to the letterhead of the commission, it consists of Soi Bloom and Vacancy. Deeply as politics abhors a vacuum, this vacuum In the associate directorate has long ex isted end is not likely to be filled. j j And -Quite appropriately, the tremendous energy of Sol Bloom fills the field. There IsnoTeason for another associate directer. Not since that first of book agents. Parson Weems, who wrote books and then sold them. Invented the story of the cherry tree, has any one done so much to put over George Washington as Mr, Bloom has. A floor full of press agents turns out dally coipy about George Washington. Every heuse in which George Washington once slept and you know how many that was Is Hated. PlcUres of them all maj be had a application. So thor ough Is Mr. Bloom in finding out all that may be known about George Washington." - -1 - ' - . ! Two men came hvto this office last week, local m erf, who had been working in a nut orchard near Salem. After working a week or two they called for their wages and were promptly fired because they asked for their pay. They felt sore; because while they had earned only about a dollar a day they didn't want to lose the work. Such treatment even if based only on a misunderstanding" is unfair to the worker. If the employer doesn't want to pay nntil the end of the job the terms should be made clear when the men are taken on. Labor i taking the rough end of the business depression; but abuse of labor only breeds discontent, and discontent born of real injustice is social dynamite. ; . i s : . ? I ? - s ; Ia former years the man was rated a success who made two blades of grasa grow where only one-did before. Nowadays lunch counters seem to multiply like blades of grass, enly that doesn't seem to be much proof of a man's success. -- J - - - The tax reduction leagne In Multnomah county has got off to a good start. The Increase in the county tax rate will be only one mill and the ras have decided the teachers' salaries can't be cut, 'I.. H.Va!a Tnd ?nbor1n lr made it la time to get back to groan1sV 7ar doln5 Uxl the fair SMator Borah la erediid - - . uryi rioa will enu. ,sUty days before anyone knows it, Okey. aenatar. but the sixtr dars i were up last March and still we don't know It. T 4l, 'te Jr clo& ,n blaze of glory" says Oregouian headline. So? It looked to us like an old-fashioned Oregon rain. All the riarmtlM im .m "... 1. ... mmT 7,." ."?: j w iwi auubuvr year. .... witii th, .r. 1,, , uco aua an oustea open now we are nTen4i Port the Salem hunter, a, all present or aecoTntel for. L ,. Trem the showing of the big Oregon schools Saturday tL alnma will soea be heard caUlng tor new coaches. ' , , . Russlant can heat their homog now every third day Thev - - - & - . N Aitcnigaa a. vs. HDUl in ouagets are "" i Overweight Br C. O. DATJER. C.D. 3Iarioa Coanty Dept. of Health There if ao doubt that over weight or obesity la prejudicial to both health and longevity, and it i certainly redno- ea t efficiency, i The manner la which one de termiaea wheth er ; overweight Is . present ' la by calculation from a weight and height-ta ble. Much has been written in recent years -41 1 concerning the weight - height fallacy ! end it must be grant ed that there la ox. o. a paaer , no fixed reia- tnn AtaAn the helaht and a proper weight. Pennla differ in body! type as much as do the thoroughbred racer and the draught horse. Some people are normally, tall and alen- rinr and others are snort ana heavy without being at au obese it must be clearly unaerstooa mat the weights given in a weight- heiaht table are leverage weights mi) tint ideal weights. The obser vations of the Metropolitan Life Insurance company indicate that after the age of 3 5- the most de- airahlft weizht in relation to lenerth of life is considerably on der the average figures given la a height-weight table. But any con siderable ; excess over these welehts. unless caused by unusu ally large bones and muscles, may be termed obesity, especially when the waist measure exceeds that of the chest. I Glands May be Cause There are a number of causes of obesity. Food consumed in ex cess of the body requirements Is stored aa fat, and the more tat la laid on. the less energy is ex pended, and less foad Is. needed. Therefore, after fat has once been deposited, it is laid on with in creasing rapidity, although there be no increase in the diet. Obes ity can therefore be said to be caused by habitual pleating due J either to ienorance or to an undue I condness for eating. In some cases excessive amounts are not eaten. but the diet contains an (unusual proportion of highly fattening foods. Overeating is by far the com monest cause of obesity. In a few cases there is a disturbance in the internal secretions, particularly of the thyroid, as a result of which the basal metabolism Is i greatly lowered, and tat will be; laid on even on a very mch reduced diet. Dlstur" ances In the pituitary gland may also be a factor in in ducing obesity. For these j reasons any one contemplating reducing will do welt to consult a physician and have a" careful physical ex amination ! Including a study of his basal metabolism before going on a reduced diet. But such cases are the exception and not the rule. The great majority of fat people have no disturbance of metabolism. What health nr&lklemm itT( rout If the ahova articl raises any .oestiom ia end it either to Tl:a Statesman or tko I Marioa county department cf health. Tha I answer win appear in inia couma. aidi i hou!d ba !icneJ. bat will not ba ued la thr niDrr I h Yesterdays ... Of Old Salem i Town Talks from The States man of Earlier Days October 6, 19 ' Classes la stenography and I typewriting will pegin toaay at Willamette university. This is a new department there. ! HARRISBURO Presld e n t Roosevelt made a Hylnal trip to I 19 AAA AAA .aOnl Ka.. W made a speech from theitraik at eacuestnroigh & eacn city, ne passea wrougn. wiRmvr.TftX TTnJtfJi state intervention at Cuba was sought early last month by Palma, the Cuban president. Secretary Root I made known here yesterday.' The I Cuban leader requested the secre-1 tarr to send two warships to the I island to quell the rebellion and protect life and property! . ij I October , 1921; 1 Arthur Wilson, dressed as a woman, for a Cherrlans' publicity I stunt, created a sensation on j downtown streets yesterday I when he walked out ofi a store smoking a cigarette. Salem ma- Heaven saved tbia coast from g-o-trons were ahocked at wjiat they laf. under th British flag; ex- thonght was an ! 18-year wiu ? i smoking. ' NEW YORK Carl Mays pitch ed ther Yankees a well-earned " V T1- h-Tiest 7, the first game of the 1931 world . series yesterday. The Salem Cherrians came back from Albany last night with the 350 cash prize offered by that city for the -best showing of uni formed organizations In jcompeti- tive drill. Captain Carl j Gabriel son directed the winners. The Safety Valve 4- i Letters from f Statesman Readers WHERE WERE PRUNES? To the Editor: The Oregon state fair was a great fair and a big success, with the counties all making: wonder ful displays of products and re sources enjoyed la the different localities, but what was the mat ter with Marion county, ' not a single dried prune on; display. The prune Is one of the biggest crops grown in this) connty, Something was wrong. Have the prune men become too disheart ened with the present depression f to continue to boost their pro ducts or are they like the wise old owL The districts south of large tooage and 11 j, HERE'S HOW meaSui?w(; -me? TCMPc-RruR5- m rem. et mtaaoy, Avcconsoj ,Wi laenwoeovpis. TW InrfniMent b So SsesUve Tk, PUced ! n VaciHiM, ft Rescti to Hcst from a DsnteJ Mstch 100 Miles A.iv, Tomorrows "Tht Automatic Interpreter" BITS for BREAKFAST By R. J. HENDRICKS- Why was a pioneext S (Continuing from T u e d a y. Sept. 21:) "But whatever might have been the motive of the early settlers, their labors resulted in the acquisition of one of the most valuable portions of the American Union, and their efforts in that be- half will be recognised and ap preciated by posterity. "m V So spoke Oregon's outstanding war senator who ' served la the upper house of congress during the I armed conflict from '61 to '65; who had come a husky, homeless youth with the Apple gate covered wagon train of 184S. Jesse Applegate himself wrote to his brother. Lisbon, that he could give no good reason for his decision upon his proposed Jour ney to the Oregon country said it was perhaps "destiny," ana thus unwittingly uttered a proph ecy.? It became his destiny to have leadership la piloting the first large wagon train clear across: to whip into snape me loose ends of the provisional gov ernment; to be at the conference of the two men, himself and Dr. John McLoughlln, whose conclu sions in 1S45 prevented a third war I with Great Britain; to take a leading part in forming a con StitUtion for his adopted State; to have a hand in heading off the raah .tamT,t flftnArat I n in ra3a attempt or uenerai i.ane, in 1861. wh&u he was upon, the point of starting an armed movement for a Pacific republic, looking to the secession of the country west of the Rockies and who was, as Nesmith said of him in the ad' dress quoted above, "the noblest Roman of them all," meaning that ' he was the outstanding plo neer of his period la old Oregon. U The fling that Nesmith took, at the mission nrooaranda concern- their work that oreceded the Uomine of the nioneers for settle- ment waa not entirely Just. Ja .An T art waa tailing t)A Aflat thllt f n,. rttT wa. .Arth ... m ,,.,,..,.. wa1i uiciuim. "V c - - - tra,n la thftlr faces westward; before those of th 184. oartr naer Dr. White had the vision; before the Peoria Party of 1839 had the urge. Ia fact, his teaching and preaching. in wnicn ne aounaea ia umwn call that there was la the Oregon country the making of an empire, started the Peoria party, the White contingent, and the Apple- gate train. But for Leo. nesmitn I would not have come; nor tne Applegates. Waldos, Burnetta. Loveloys and the rest. Lee was the pioneer of the pioneers. His resnonse to the Macedonian call or the Indians for the white man's r.na ta the -white man's Book of tended the are of tne Repunue . . . A m . irom tne crest oi iu nocaioa the sands of the Pacific. - Tt Mnraln thai Ro!l1lM Joney. as told in the Oregon i on.rt.rir. a mantion- Historical Quarterly, as mention ed by the Portland Oregonian. quoted at the beginning of this series: V Mrs. Castle, reviewing and ex panding the Journal of George Belshaw of the 1853 immigration. presents a picture of the covered wagon days much like scores ana hundreds of others that are fa miliar to all who are -acquainted with the history of the great days when our tfathers: and mothers and their fathers and -mothera spanned a continent with plod ding . oxen were part of a host of more than 350,009 who came across the plains and over the mountains before the last spike had been driven at Promontory Point Joining the steel highway for the iron horse. Came, all et them except the 30,000 or there about who perished on "the way and He in unmarked graves;' all of ithe great host of them except one lone Mormoa woman whose resting' place waa by a fortuitous incident reserved for a marker to be replaced by a monument. . I- : V )S -,- After interesting introductory explanations, Mrs. Castle writes that "George Belshaw made his firpt entry on March 23. 183, ana, and traveled to Momence, 12 were much disappointed In not finding a" big display of prases By, EPSON I ; to o e Mentitfs Whs Matrd ll miles," and a note of hen says: "George Belshair, captain of the train, led 10 wagons, which at Laramie. Wyoming, had Increased to 2. He was accompanied by his wife Candace (McCartyj, and three children, William;! Marsh and Annie; his father George Bel shaw Sr., and mother -Elisabeth Archer); his brothers Thomas, Samuel and Charles; the wife of Thomas, Maria (Parsons): her father and mother of the family named Parsons; their sons Hen ry, William and Oscar, and two daughters besides Maria who was the wife of Thomas Belshaw; the wife and son of "Stephen Martin; Avery Smith; Morgan Green Mc carty, Fayette McCarty and Jon athan McCarty, brothers of Mrs. Candace Belshaw; and Maria Dar ling. These persons numbered 25. The Belshaws settled In Lane county, near Chri3man's slough, four miles north of Eugene." Con tinuing with excerpts from the diary of George Belshaw, and ex planations of Mrs. Castle, taken largely from the recollections of Annie Belshaw Howell of San Francisco, who was a Bmall girl of the George Belshaw family on the Journey: V " j March 2 other teams Joined tnem, and they camped by the Illinois river." April 4 they had a runaway stampede. Wagons were turned over and lniured and much damage done to harness and supplies. The ' diary says: "After we got the cattle back, we went to work and fixed the wag ons up agala and drove about three miles and camped close to Rock river; the next day two and a half miles, across Rock river to the Mississippi, into the town of Rock Island. Illinois. Delayed in ferrying, but got over the Missis sippi the next day, and drove 10 miles into Scott county, Iowa. April 7, reached the home of a family connection, brother of Stephen Martin. Remained there several days, 'fixing up to start." Joined by the parents of George Belhaw there. Crossed Skunk river; passed through the towns of Oakaloosa and Pella, Iowa, and another small, town. . Arrived at Des Moines ; river, Iowa, April 28; 140 miles from Council Bluffs. When 10 miles from Council Bluffs met a party of Indians who frightened the AIRPLANE SPEED o : t , .th i H . rti - " 'r 111 CITY ; -V: tW1-- ' y " AWQoERqm . vM -'W Major J.M DoelitUe ef 11 heora 16 iL.uL B-t a. IT! .. lrJ.! V n reeerd ef Hewk. ref te accept Os J n Jj tl??? C,tal. Frank that there b ae limit t. tL. .uTri?. " !f "??U . IfU PL Major Deelittle asserts j- . . , . mj m wiaiaea te thm mmA tr l.. i. pTt" a tew years 500 aa!W Th e vzarina s Charter XXXYI i But luck waa with him. His groping hand touched the great exposed roots, still partly cov ered with the clinging earth out of which they had been torn. Jim Wynter felt several degrees hap pier as he slipped behind this cover. . And still no sign oa his en emy's part. . I "I Jim had spent the last few mo ments thinking: hard.: The man who had dogged him was not far away, might evea be aearer than he thought The question waa whether he was to wait for hat figure in the shadow to take the Initiative, or to take it himself. Perhaps It was the uncertainty as to his now invisible quarry s movements that made this furtive gunman apparently so wary about - showing himself . in the opea after those two : shots had gone wide. Contempt It might be that this specialist la treacherous murder,4 skulking in the dark, shooting ; from the dark. Jim told himself contemat uously. was out to run no risks f himself. Waa he apprehensive lest it ne ventured out - of cover the man he had stalked might seize advantage of the confusing ob scurity in this grim ! game I of blind man's bluff to spring out on mm from some unsuspected hid ing place, take him by surprise? Thought it less risky to bide his time on the chance of getting in another shot? Well, what, if he could strike at a weak spdt In this i seemingly none ' too confident : enemy's nerveer A thought had suddenly flashed across Jim Wynter'a mind with the remembrance of something In his pocket something ho had bought at Pensholt before he and Bill had motored back to Beg' gar's court. Something he had planned to use tonight, though not la this way or to meet any such emergency of I danger. A wonderful bit of luck that par- chase! Thanks to it Jim saw suddea chance of turning the tables a sporting chance worth gambling on! And in those wait ing moments of suspended hos unties he began to make his preparations swiftly and silently. was tnat a movement-in the shadows T Jim's ears caught -1 t faint rustle as of stealthy foot steps, as It his . enemy ! was tired of watchful Inaction; And slmal taneously came a sound from the boathouse, too. Above, the faint lappings of the waters of the es tuary against the bank he heard a sound as of some one stepping into a boat moored by the land ing steps there. . I The man calling himself John Iloham, who had never been seen in the village without his crutch es, must have been able to move very expeditiously without their help. Jim Wynter caught the sjbo jo qseida peijjnui ueppas dipping into the water. And then out of the darkness came a swift rush of: feet toward the bank of the stream and then Jim knew that he had two enemies,, not one, to reckon with; He's got away by ' water-H supped through out hands, damn him.'" he heard a low voice mut ter in furious chagrin not very far away. j - j; ! So those unknown; enemies of his he could fanltly . make out the two shadowy figures j as they raced to the bank to peer out into the dark of the estuary imag ined that the man now pulling out Into midstream, to be carried along swiftly by the tide, was their Intended quarry, Jim Wyn ter. . i i . j Thongh they were ' less than a dosea yards away, their features were still Indistinguishable in the dim obscurity, though, one of them impressed Jim with a sense of vague familiarity. He was pret women and children.; : This was May 8. t S Found little town i of ! Council Bluffs full of emigrants; "never saw so small a place, so full ot business. At least 10 wagons were waiting to be ferried across the Missouri. ; 11 s (Continued tomorrow.) ; j RECORD INDICATION OF FUTURE R ty certain it. was Martin a fact his eyes blasingi" ? that Would n6t be in the least I His arm shot out had behind surprising.' ! the blow was all the released Martin, who knew the . secret passionate fury of; a I man with behind that underground 'door good cause to see red; an upper was suspected. , - ' i cut that made the other's teeth Xt was the ! other ? silhouetted click, almost lifting him off his' figure who flung up an arm as If feet. With a gasping Sob the man to tire after the escaping . man staggered and collapsed. , they believed to be Wynter; then And that's that!": Jim Wya- evidently thought better of ' the ter remarked to himeslf, with a Impulse. - M jf, sudden gTim satiafactloa In his "What does that: Interfering face. ik 'toot. l Wynter,!' suspect, to bring t Without a second glance at the hint nosing about here? We've fallen man he picked up the gotjto stop him, Frome, before h long-barrelled automatic that had can! find out anything to . make been responsible for the narrow- hlm dangerous. He may even be est shave In his life. u dangerous now. j j N Martin, his face expressionless It was Martin's ii voice, ?:nd no longer, with terror staring out there' was -an Ugly, ring about the 0f his eyes, was clinging for dear words that were Just loud- enough life to a post of the landing steps to reach the man about whom of the boathouse. wlhch he had they were spoken. . clutched at desperately as the And almost simultaneously current swept him down. He, was there came faintly to Jim's .ears in no immediate danger as Jim the sound of ai distant car. Ws It saw nd was . hard-h ear ted Bill Grayson's ;car?' enough to turn a face of stone to But whether Bill's car or not, a the terrified screaming man. swift Impulse I had decided -Jim Therei came two hoots on the Wynter that he was going to take hQrn ot a car that had stopped by an active hand In the game now, the side gate of Beggar's Court ; try -OuV that sporting. hance .,- jAs Jim gave ; ans answering It might be a reckless impulse, ghout o furnish Bill Grayson since jthese men were underlie with a clue to his direction, from impression thatjhe had escaped the house itself a I figure came by boat and he! had only to lie low running across the grounds to- to be; in no further danger. -But ward them, evidently puzzled and his blood was up and with rthat sUrtled by that fleeting white sense, of mounUng passionate glare that must have touched the wrath against thee men who had dark distant windows of Beggar's planned treacherous cold-blood- court. Jim recognized the hurry- ed murder, Jim Wynter was la no ingr panting : figure i before he lUBUtt w jrm w Martin he had already ; recog nized: he was i determined to see who that second would-be killer wasJ Whatever the risk, he was ready; to take It it was worth taking! And the sheer unexpect edness, the very audacity of his plan ahould carry it through. Besides, if Bill were in that nearlng motor car i . Ss; , Now't the moment, Jimmy- nowj'1 tJ U..ru - hifnl Itnti crept about his lips. But his eye wor ; nn - .mlllnr : n.nrtrou. There was just the faintest scratch, of a match, and then as if a vivid searchlight had lit up white jglare swallowed up Hhe darkness In one swift moment; the suddenly startled faces of fhm tVn wrtiilit.ha cerrat al altars I t . . v - Clicked out Jim sharply, simul- taneously with that white -explo- sion of light, to the two men whosei Identity was ho longer a mystery: 1 Martin, as he had guessed and the man he -had seen with Martell in that upper ronm af th nrnm Kpvh Inn "Ami UVL JVU WWU UfWiJ W7VA it won i e neaiiny ror ins jirsi man! who i moves! Nninmc mnra tnin a. ; an nor- dose of flash-powder f that press photographers use! But to the two Incredibly startled men. Who I -P. Q. ftfacDonald, paper sales had never dreamed that their in-1: "I have really no surirpa- an1k' victim WKQ .tlM wltht a I tioUa tn maW" 1 65 few yards of them, had come the swift Unnerving sense of having been Caught in a trap. p In that vivid white-lit moment Jim Wynter, with that ery on.hU Hps. could see the" sudden 'Jump the; swarthy-faced man from the inn gave; the long-barreled-auto- matic had spun from his hand; As longer Ha Martin, visible, on the j sana Before I that ' blinding flash Martin near the edge of the bank, had stepped back Involun - tartly with a scared start, lost his footing on the sloping, slip- pery brink, to disappear back- ward with a wild half-uttered cry that the turbid waters drowned. Swiftly, the fleeting glare had sunk and .died out, and the dark ness swam up again like a flood. And scarcely less swiftly Jim had leapt out from covers to make a dash to where now one figure alone stook on the bank. j I i -l-.i SorprlM The unnerved man heard rath-1 er than saw Jim's, rush in the swlftlyi! falling. Intensified dark ness. In a panic he pulled himself out of that first dazed consterna tion to stoop for that fallen i weapon, but his fingers had hot time te close on it. "You treacherous. ?l murderous swine!'f! broke, from Jim fiercely. f Rv SIDNEY UDies ; Warwick COUia aiStlngUlsh hla faattirA s -I "Hard lnk- Ci.ii . l-t 'Hard luck-. with .a smllinr ahrur. "Afraid see the you're Just too late to fun !'';- . - - -i (To Be Conllaued Tomorrow) Yesterday StatsEEiant rnnnrl arm asled this question: . "What im. ff? Lnl" yo BUgs&3t for I lDf State fair?" . ..rr'i "T' ? fewirei It suits ma all Hrhf fh. S.. ... , ... ;. , ,E tf, LKKrov Chamberlain, beauty opLeraUi "l don't know. iuubo u year was very Z-Z-. v mey nave that next I ii- . ' V ' : - i lr: j m r' niaey, visitor t "I think aerlous oversight on Salem's fart ,n Preparations for fair vlsl- tot wa lack of signs pointing the waT to the fairgrounds. Visitors op1 distant points whrhad never attended the fair had to do much Unnecessary drlrinc an ln...i. w lu giuunm, - s vwiia ivonnni. anvan.. I sted too many days.". t I . I Gussie Aminann. elevator aw tor: "I don't know how the tw I could be imnroveri a , thought it was fine" Hi -"'p . --"lit . H Mrs. Bertha Loveland hatmL maker: "l don't thlnfry h improve it very much m.f t vrfilL-: could be done tn imnL. 7t. Z??1 1 1 waa verr much ni.,4 fair aa it w f " improvement had been"mad t tt seemed to me." iim e' Daily Thought -tn BOO1 People -j la their Jl la5om na11 fit to keep sit ia !? ?ckground. I have be iooramiiUr with disappointments I VV- very rauca Chagrined." U "u Lincoln. Plots Are Sold on Bourse j In German Cafe . iU fi BERLIN f API Dhir. arlo writers' Uvea were made rosier by the inauguration here , '"a oourse'i la a po ulaf cafe. The i . i k5K' German moving picture producers and? scenario writers together. Because of office red tape few scenario writers, outside the mag ic circle, were able to get audi ences with the producers. Under the new plan producers send readers, to the cafe to cull out the amateurish ufamm. ... submit the better plots to the front office. writers sell Ideas, pro ducers anteroom, are lass crowd. citbnferl9 ..additional Wedding March Palls if Heard Over 300 Times .LONDON. (AP) London has a girl who has walked : up the aisle in wedding dress 800 timea -butis still without a husband She la Miss Lucy Clayton, man nequin, i a "I have heard the Hweddins marJ!80 ften th4t 1 Could whis tle it backwards," she commenta 'Fop my own marriage, when tt comes, I shall want only a regis ter office ceremony, a Jweed cost ouu sain, no iiowers iand no music. That will be thrilling. "No, I'm not even ? engaged. The right man hasn't come alonr Two Homes Entered : i met oeeks money ELDRIEDGE, Oct. I While the Al Keene and Carter Keens families were attending; the state iair one nay last week a thief or thieves entered and ransacked their homes. Apparently money was sought as the contents of dresser draw ers were strewn about the rooms. The amount taken waa not learn ed but some of the earninga of 9.- . si - . t ij j New Views V I. 1