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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 1931)
PAfJE FOUR The QSECON STATCSJ.1AN. Salem, Oregon, Tuesday Morning, October 20. 1931 I HERE'S HOW By EDSON "Th By SIDNEY WARWICK dinn e czarina s rvuDies Cleanliness I . . " " 11 1 11111 ' ii ) "No Favor Sways. U; No Fear Shall Awe" From First Statesman March 23, 18S1 J THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. -- Charles A. SraicuE, Shixdok F. Sackctt, Publisker$ Charles A. SrxaccE - - Editor-llanager : Sheldon F. Sackett - - - - - Managing Editor :?;:; Member of . the Associated Frees; The Associated Press ts etclusf-rely entitled te the as Cor publica tion of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited la this pajwr. . .- -i ' - - . !: s i .- -- Pacific Coast Advertising Representatives: Arthur W. Stypea, Ine, Portland. Security Btdg. I . Baa Francisco. Sharon Bide; Uis Angetea. W. Fee. Bid. Eastern Advertising Representatives: Forw-Paraotis-Stecher. Iihv. New Tor k. STI Madison Ave. t U Chicago. JS( N Jllchisaa Are. - EnUred at tke Potto ff ice at Salem, Oregon, at Seeond-Clatt Hatter. Published every morning exeept Monday. Busmen office, SIS S. Commercial Street. : .i -'. , SUBSCRIPTION RATES: I Mall Subscription Rats. fn AJTsrce. Within Oregon: Dally t a-a Sunday. 1 Mo. cents: Mo. $Lj - Mo. U. : I year $4.00. ' Elsewhere i cents per Uw or S5.0O tor 1 year la advance. " By City Carrier: S.ents a month; $i.09 a year In advance, Per Copy S centa , On trains and Newa Stands I cents. i i Edison Ends His Labors Br C. C. -DAUER: M. D Marion County Dept. of Health - Most people prefer to be clean : because it rives them a sense of personal satisfaction. Lack Of cleanliness -le apt to lay one opea to adverse criticism: peo ple I usually do not care to as sociate j wit a those who r.re not; cleanly. a filthy clerk in a grocery store or meat mar ket - does - not bring i that store any- pres tige or new i business., Em- p 1 ojers la Pr. a o. Dseer many places do not want an unclean employee an less the work Itself is such that soiled clothing should be worn. A clean skin is as Important as clean clothes, from the standpoint of health as well as aesthetics. A dirty finger when .. cut will be come infected more easily than a clean one. taspetigo develops among ' unclean children more rr n V ..-, - - k i - common! v than ambneri claan ones. rnHOMAS A. EDISON harnessed science. Some nave said it has been demonstrated that: 1 that he had no ratinir as a scientist Perhaps not, so far J will ward off disease ,as nmre science goes. xut r.aisun wo& me j.-u u, 48km. l i lnd "gave them useful application. He was essentially the in- . Dirt Breeds Bacteria' writer, the "wizard" whose ceaseless experimenting contrived Dirty skins are covered not a. . a t I . M - m .If new devices to lighten the burden of human laoor, to snorten on.y Dj WA time requirei in -performing, tasks, and to make. 'life more UJ.,. convenient. Jt He made no explorations into uie nwu u.w w such akin and often penetrato nnknown and develoned no new SCientlilC tneones or discover- l the other layers. When they Jiave ed new laws of physics and chemistry he did utilize the facts once penetrated this! protectivo OX UUre BCICHCe U act lucm w I miV iI.v.Iati Hollo nA An. nf- Edison came to the laboratory through a native curios-1 tionmoro commonly. On tho oth- ity. not through school or college studies. His Tooling witn er hand. bacetrU on a clean skin DhosDhorus while a news butcher on a Grant Trunk train wwfJ? l- VtLlJ cost him his job and impaired his hearing when the irate con- ;"Von tir unclean! . kin the? nA cuffed him. Fortunately for the world L., - nrvlrs for Innr rtArlnla nf this rouirh treatment did not stifle that inner ;urge for mak- time. i ...Ki a .r ov4n1arlv fhi new sitiiff of elec-l .Cleanliness of a city or com- - P.. , i . i tjj i.u j in fmunlty not only means a more at' iriClty wnose cniei practical use in xujwiib wjuwu " traeUve nlace but also a healthier telegraphy. ! 3 " I place. Filth provides means for Sn Edison became the patron saint of all boys who like to disease producing germs. Flies wapV uritfc their hnnda. rnake radio sets, flv kites, make toy and other insects which may cati- fii u;, n nf;nvi f "Pnntilnr MT disease find filthy lpcaUoa e- enjjmes uwv " - j li I cellent place in which to breed. Mechanics' and he has been the inspiration of thousands of clean peopi usually win not tol erate filthy surroundings, so a dirty community usually indicates a careless, unclean peoplej. WHEN A TW CAN, flXED WITH STONEl tS TIED TO ITS SADOUL fVC HORST WONT RUN WITHOOT ITS RATTLE! J MOTC . N . .... r P. 1-"'' 7. Ik r-. I fcrc . j Opiki StMiwai ..- w, .tm Tomorrow: 'She Shakes Wicked Hoof BITS for BREAKFAST -By B. J. HENDRICKS "Following the Flag: I : Tho little book with tho above title was! briefly reviewed in Sun day's issue. It is diary ot 1 1 soldier's wife, well and pleasant- lads for two generations. ? s What a contrast there is in the world of our own day "with that civil war days when Edison, a mere lad, started out for himself. And how much of that transformation is due to his mechanical genius! He was born in the steam age and died in the electrical, age. ! Edison took the crude telegraph on which he clicked out messages and Invented the automatic telegraph. He improved the transmitter of telephones. He built the first electric rail way anil the trolley replaced the horse car. He found a world dim! v lit at nieht with oil lamps and gas lights. He invented the incandescent light which has changed night to day. The dictaphone, the phonograph are others on the long list of his invention or of his improvements of existing crude de vices.'; ""."-: , - ir. '? ; . : : To Edison were allotted 84 years of life, and his mature . years were devoted to labor unceasingly. He slept but u few hours each night and spent the remainder of his time in his laboratory carrying forward his experiments, j Yet he was thorouirhlv human, enjoying the friendship Of John Bur roughs, Henry Ford, Harvey Firestone. Contacts with Ford and Firestone gave him the idea for the problem he was work ing on at the time of his death, the extraction of rubber ,! from some domestic plant, so as to make America free from need for rubber imports. ' It is not surprising that one so objectively minded was not a "believer" in the common meaning of the term. He dealt i with facts, with things. If he was a dreamer, his dreams were i with matters material not with speculations of religion or i philosophy. He was not an atheist, and he reverenced a su preme intelligence ; but he formulated no creed of his own and accepted none of the histonc creeds. In his last illness, when asked about his belief In immortality he said: No one kaows"; "If there is life hereafter or if there Is none, it does not matter'. Edison at least was one who needed no promise ytt heavenly reward or threat of eternal punishment to keep him working and laboring, and devising things for the ser rice of humanity. Whether to Edison's soul or body be vouch .aafed Immortality, we do not know; but his name and his in ventions have won for his name, a permanence beyond oar present measure. v 1 i - 1 ' T ' -k I ... '' I , . . Correct This -Sentence DR. FRANK H. VIZETELLY, noted grammarian and lexicographer, the Detroit Free Press and the Portland Oregonian have been debating the correctness of the f ol lowing sentence by Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, president of wiuiuuie tuuci9tlj .. ..... . ! ' ' - - --1 ----- i : . "Save the ancient Roman empire and Great Britain, no peo ple In history has ever been so closely intertwined with tho whole i civilized world as are tho American oeoole today. ; Their debate is whether Dr. Butler should have said "no other people in history"; Dr. Vizetelly asserting that the word "other" should have been used. The Detroit paper aided and abetted by the Oregonian points out that .roiher" is not required, the phrase beginning with the word "save" operat- "K w iati aa a tutvinK ciause . iney recast tne sentence thus : ; - ; , . ...... ; ; ;- ; -: : : . . . j . . ? ": "No people in history, save the ancient Roman empire and Great Britain, has ever been so closely ; intertwined with tho i whole civilized world as are the American people today. : ' What seems queer to us is that all parties have over- looKea tne oaa grammar of a change in numoer of the verb form with the same word "people" for subject, thus: "no peopie in nistory nas ever been"; and "the American people are'V In the former clause people is considered collectively uu -"c otuuiai loruigiiaeveru is usea; ana there should be no changein construction for the'second clause. When Pres. Elliot of Harvard aa ii,m. .t side- position In many papers. whUo Rudolpa Valentino, movie star! Iftvf-ii! "m? W Tho paper. 7, " uuaiaae- again, suno ay The Statesman had Al CaponO conxlction and Kdlson's death, and although the Edison story did n6t come in tUl lt:o a, m. the front page was remade and !i!LreSrt 'detnt e great inventor given the most promin ence. The Statesman was th onlv nmi la tm. -itv v till rV Vath f E4Uon nd W Wography in its roll Sunday edi- : . . '"i"'5 uviw aia nex navo oven a bnlletln of ;,u",h;, In wder to make the country .oints tho Rrtland pSers hava to closo their forms' about two hnnn .rn. m.. sT.Kl. man. which gives this paper eoMldftrnbl.ivaitagT happenings ot well past midnight. . in. reporung f "" . "aMl',"""oaSBnwjwswsMwnwji ' -. I - j Tho Recister-Gua wholly to blame; for ths board of higher oducatioa thoarht the? had rhie0w.se aatSSSlf! .T audlt -h0 mV. VneVJ w" "tlcipated June SOth, The board immodlatelr nut a Mam on the money for redUtributlon, so they gave Th7iWMB n.!T Present th. Idea that Sero wU lufSlTSTSS' Waal health problems save yoaf f the above article rsiaes any question la your mind, write that question eat n ad it either ts The Statesaea ee the Marioa eonntr deesrtatent et health. The answer will appear is this eelowa, Kaase shonld be alrned. fcot will not he seed in New Views Yesterday Statesmen: reporters asked this question: "What is: your belief about the place of Thomas Edison. in history?" O. F. west. Boy scoot execu tive: "He was ne of tho most outstanding men of tho country,! or tho world, for that matter.; Why. ho did more than i George 1 Washington did." , - ly written by Alico Applegate Sargent, daughter of Lindsay and niece of Jesse Applegate, noted Oregon (pioneers. . Her soldier husband I was CoL .'Herbert H. Sargent, brave fighter, able com mander, and author of tho best book on our campaign in Cuba. according to President Hoosevelt. For tho closing pages of her little book, Mrs. Sargent wrote: 'Every war has its great poem. Out ot tho World war camo 'In Flanders I Field one ot the most widely known and most popular ot all tho poems written during that conflict. ' It has been claim ed that this beautiful poem did mora to encourage enlistment than any one thing during tho war. This poem was written .by Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae or tho Canadian medical . corDS He was working fn a base hospi tal when the poem was written. and died soon after. Ho was stricken with pneumonia, menin gitis developed, and on the fifth day he dies. Tho poem follows: IN FLANDERS FIELDS " 'By John McCrae J. C. Nelson, head of! tho high school history department: "As near representative of this indus trial age in this country of any one we've produced. This is a ma chine, an industrial age. I If you hare to pick any man to represent It, I think Edison is the nearest. Ha W. A. Delaell, democrat leader:! "Eaison was a wonderful man. one of the world's greatest. One notes that he cared little for money; he always thought in terms of humanity's welfare. Flanders fields tho popples grow - Between the crosses, row on row. That mark our place, and in the aky; The larks, stilt bravely slnrinr. fly. i i Scarce heard among the guns be low. . -., j . We are the dead: abort days aro We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow. -Loved and were loved, and now we Ho : ! In Flanders fields. Al Adolph, Warner Bros, thea ters: "Edison made it possible for the marvelous sound i pictures with which the . public lis being presented today. His place in his tory wlll.be hard to measure. : Take up foot our quarrel with the Marian avniycrslty Morange. instructor: Willamette "I am not an authority on science, but ft seems to j me that Edison did more to make scientific inven tions useful to tho world at largo than any other scientist of his tory." To I you from failing hands we throw The torch; bo yours to hold it high! If ye break faith with us who die.l V. ! .- : I Wo shall Sot-, sleep, though pop pies grow r I., : la Flanders fields. i ' ; S "Many answers , have - been written to this poem. I was deeply affected when X read it. and resolved, to pnt my feelings into an answer. My versise may not be called poetry by the crit ics. bt In no other way could I express my emotion. : VI v s s ! "My Answer ; "Sleep waU, beloved dead who lie in Flanders fields: Tho soft Iwinds bend the poppies' heads. ! They shed slow tears above your beds. Sleep well, we have kept faith with you; And still tight on The great guns boom, the deadly missiles fly; The torch you gave we still lift high, To light! brave men to victory. Sleep well, oh valiant dead. where larks sing low I i And alt the brilliant PODBies bloom and glow In Flanders ' fields. Washington, j D. C. Oct. 2f. 1918. t ' - - w . . My years with the army con vinced me of the necessity ot preparedness; preparedness as advocated by George Washing ton, by Theodore Roosevelt, and by .the leading officers of our army and navy. To be ho well prepared! that nO other nation shall dare molest or ; make us afraid. "Nobody wants war. . Chanter XLTTH - ' . "A shame to startle yon tike that, my dear! Martell Uughed, like one who has played a boyish practical Joke. - "But I i couldn't resist making yon Jump!" L But that had not been hit real reason, Jim Wynter knew. And what had Helen been about to say that this listening man. of whose nresence behind the cur tains ifeithed had dreamed,- must have -suspected and had . deliber ately arrested before those further whispered : words could be spok- ent ;'; ;-: -"""I -' ----:-J..-: Jim's mind. These anonymous let ters, addressed in. what looked like a disguised woman's hand; l had Helen Blair been the writer? The postmark, of the first had been Trayne and . she" had been, stay ing at Trayne. Who else but she could have written them? Marten's laugh cut across those swiftly crowding thoughts. -1 Explanation "I should think Mr. Wynter hardly needs your warning hut a very kindly thought, my dear! And Jim wou)d ' hare liked to strike the speaker's mouth i with V?r?S:JT' wrAte" the faint sneer behind its smooth Martell added with apparent cor- lmii. r .r." . dUUty,?ltoIdlng out hla hand i hand that Jim had to take. girl she how smile. "It has been renr Interest lag to me to see Beggar's Court, Mr.. Wynter," Martell added, cross ing toward the btber two men and ahaking hands (with Bill. "These old houses make a strong appeal to me. And, of course, it's a great pleasure to meet you again, Mr. Wynter, on my first visit here. For TV as a friend of Mr. Severn's must oe.a painful place now. 1 n afraid, wkh this grim inex plicable mysterjf haaging over it." o paused, turning to Sant. B?fs?r' Court two night ago." he Sant looked at MarteU with ad mirably simulated aurnris. i "As you khow. I'm ttii,.Lifi, ber Jrther medico at Trayne." Mar- l wl,o, ' and I drove over hope I didn't Intrude tactlessly 6a any private conversation?" he added . with bland smiling smootnness. "No, nothing private! the forced herself to say. Jim . bad the feeling that was wondering desperately much - Martell had overheard. Perhaps she ' guessed he must have overheard those last "words and felt she must attempt to ex plain; them away, for she Went on:. . -. . , ;,:-,v .,t ; "I I was only, going ! to warn Mr. Wynter" ! - : j -. Warn him? But what on Brw saoma - you nave to warn Mr. wynter. about,' Helen?" stepfather said suavely, j i V ; A Hard man , . lo patient in the rne oearded un-English Iface!;"8 ner. the wife of the land was smiling with a glint of white J l0JJ th ia,-- forget its name." teetn. uut there was no aincAritw I e cross .Keys." turnip vuw o"ir. dim. an 7l nrTPiort l i i I. - . " . ku a uuafccuV I fc -.uuig suvil i oniy partir hid, wondered how he "r. " I ' l ceuia ever have been deceived; for .v-V m"ea inwardly. He ;real- a moment into thinking of this penecuy tnat a little comedy man as a Kindly, good Samaritan. Zf beIn Plr4d for his benefit. Ruthless, deadly. As dangerous as heso tvfo rogiies suspected j that a beast of prey In the shadows of ,wa e wbo aM run P Martell a Jungle. ; 1 at th Cross Keys,, giving his name eien forced a lan gh. The jplt-1 M aia an Martell'a words nut gnosc or a laugh. Jim knew ,WV empt, a very un- " one was.shakinr with fr. I "'acia aueaapt, at a disarm. She could not keen that feariont of her eyes and behind her fear was a gleam of desperate hatred of tais smooth smiling man. lag explanation. It -was rather Jim felt, that an odd situation. appealed a little grimly to one's tense of humor . . "Oh 1nnt a nl,Wni m. ,, I to be sittine here an ft in f.i..4i. sue aaio, trying to make her ton as I wlLU very man iwha sound lieht. "Mr Sanf k. I engineered that apeaking of the collapse of a Wall CP vcy- In8t Frank Severn soon aiter Mr. Wynter had been 1 Trvf front the exploring the ruins. More In Jest I .artner cold-blodded crime of mur- than anything else I was rnlnr to warn him not to run further risks there.. . . j - Her explanation . was a ! make shift, of course; Jim knew that. And was so lame and haltrngj an oxpUnatlon likely to have deceiv ed Martell for a moment? L And what Was it this girl had wished to warn him of? Waa it aome danger?, Her voice had been desperately in earnest. Well, what ever it was. nrobahlr. aha am not dare to convey that unspoken warning now. . i ... And with these thoughts anoth der. jFrom across the room the vio- VvT , . ,t? -UiI drifted through their talk, tho atraina of "Chan son Triste" that Katharine once played with such exquisite feeling, to draw Jim's thoughts intermit tently away from that dark web of mystery thaf! hod fallen' over SSS&ST "- Jim's eyes windrmt e.rn.. TT.I 1. IV " sue sat almost, si lent, her face still looking white -u uuueryea. Vnat was it she wgua to warn him of? Jim was flung open with an undeeor ous lack of .ceremony on the part of the man of whom they had Just spoken. j. t Martin's face at the. open dooi way was white and incredibly startled, as if from some shock. He was breathing like a man who had been running hard. His scared eyes seemed to be starting out of his head. :- jj. - "Good Lord. Martin began Sant in frowning displeasure. "Mr. Sant! Mr. Santl" broke out the man. "Can I speak to you at once?' f With the first sight of his white unnenred face Sant had started up. He went quickly out into the hall, shutting the door after him. Through the closed door those within -the room could hear low excited voices, and then suddenly one of the voices, Martin's voice, went involuntarily shrill in hU. strangely excited mood. The raised, shaking voice float ed into the room audible to every one there above the dying strains of the gramophone: ' "I tell you' I saw hlmt Escaped! 4 Who had escaped? A startled gleam had crept Into Jim Wynter'a eyes as the odd phrase reached him. Who had escaped and what had happened? The atmosphere had suddenly become electric Jim glanced sud denly across at Martell. He could see that the other man was no Jess, startled, on! tenterhooks of sus pense; : ' N- - ; -- "Escaped!" Martell had started up from his chairj as If his first unguarded Impulse had been to run out after Sant into the hall to learn the news Martin had brought newa no doubt that meant as much to him as to Sant. 1 Tapping; j ' . And Just then a&IT! eTn sTa stnilrlnM sharp tap on one of the curtained wmaows. j Just for a moment as though ev eryone present was too ran h rav en by surprise, no one. moved. Again tao sound, tap-tap! Simultaneously Jim Wynter and 11 wero on, their tnt m. . dash across to the window Jim was reacned It first. ir rii-.. ged aside th curUins. rom the; misty night outside, rown uo viridlw f t.. nt.. from the room, a faa in at them.-! whit.- h perate. A cry broke fram ri "My God! Frank!" .(To be continued) Bill or new thought had flashed into to,lehet1 y a measureless pity. ifju now mis girl's spirit efrelArVfn ... I T uum'uolc(1 na crusned .V1 Vv iney ny me sieprather she so evldentlv V desperately break! free least had it of to o- - ' ; r I MORROW'S HUMAN QUALITY MADE HIM POPULAR! v ' . al! those- who- have face; we want peace, oer to navo peace wo prepared to fight. " 'For our conn try and our fires. For tho green graves of oar airea, i God and our native land. 1 . ' !-.- I two ociocK one morning ii ju. Applegate. ,12S Che- aeus mo newsDoys in lTupont I street, salem, daughters or two prominent Oregon pioneer families. The Barren ts missed rri nf tne armistice. v - sw soon arter the close; of the war . my husband was relieved from active service: for over tw years he had been on duty. We left Washington on TtinVHr. ing day, and I cannot omr low T fal v . .. . out for. tho west, and th. nii. , i Ptty soonl" seemed to click this r.fr.n. r.i im aimself now. I war fa rr vA - are going home; we are goihg It32 wa! home! -iB By th wiriTsant" . i i- I sanng; :i This ends mv llttu numti,. I am proud and thankful to havel!?nrnt Martin, ust a alight chiu. been for so manr nin nf 1 1 ro told him what to dn fn, sne mignt long u to OfcJ his domlnstlnn could not or doted, not seek that Well, It might bo that freedom was coming fori her' sooner than she could have hoped for and la a way sne .uue areamed. 0Ta. : e. - . i l won ae onr fanif in aiuuelf now. Insp.or Haste's nam was Martell was floa t think ' thara's uuca me matter with vonr m . n life with the arm-r nt th Trnt I Ton were aoeiklnr nf ti . . . I O..... m.. ; v""lf . - ."-Vl, .nni ia o,.ifl army mat Has never J r just now, xnat s where Mar wo must oei own aeieai.- ; un nas a crony, eh?" drawled Bill - I "w jurayson rrora the depths Of ! his Col. Sargent died oeversi veara Uasy chair. "A i connia ago. .'Mrs. Sarxent. nrnniu Jbrtrht lads. M.Win . j v una. nwa mem xney nearly got aw am. aBuu w ax irwrnn mm wmmmk- inniMsi - nan as. am Aw a aw 4BI S. un as U sa BL 1 .lillBH MM. aaawiO III aavwa Y I Iw 1IB aiA .V W pa- nlght J - - !?) A - J 1 I - I, - ;';:v' . J i it-; V Ax London Mavjm, okterckce. ' 1 1 -(V T II -1 't-J iieni, ur. Martell, on the you speak of." 1 MarteU frowned. r j "Sant was tellihg me about that Thisman rFronie, I think you said bis name was? firing at ran- rf ea.A m cross the sea la the Worldvir rn . -opposed tres- ZT yearned for after Yhe ftfei ?.?M.h- tallu- ejupidity is crim- MarteC stoppei dead In the mid dle of his wordsj his head turned in a sudden-llstehing attitude. The sound of footsteps running i ex- wwaiy across thd hall had broken I. . . a - wu olubs ata a v I a rikii wat Although recommended for coat- mana . of a - brigade by former President Roosevelt and At rM. eral officers of, the U. 8. army. Col.! Sargent was not named, giv ing him the most bitter d. -.ap pointment of . his life. - Mrs. Sar gent, hoping with her h n aha nil fn luuow me- nas: in thst-Mnm continued la - tho hospital work I dr nd UMr in which ' she had been a ; helper "rv in upon them. There came a hurried tap afthe upon it the door Sewath' ' o, 1 I . . ' -, wu uuiu camnairna- - an addition she trained far Fr.. br taking ' both conrnAs. tn laid. She received her certificate and rwa registered In Washing ton as acadef? or nurse's help- er niy io iearn later that the a-e i limit tor cadets was 35 so sne was -too old to one wrote in her i bona- nf ) luoeung m Washington with Madam ; Maria Bochkamra mander of the Russian womon 'a 'battalion of death." thm bers; of which wera nufi. .11 killed or wounded, i When she bad aufficiently recovered from severa wounds for traveL she came to America hoping to se cure help for her people. , iflt tsiis man nan fnn.4 t.. auc9 Appiegate Sargent book a very human story, and intensely interesting. . I O- Th e Safetv Valve - - t ', i Letter, freaa Statesman Reader Editor statesman, ' f ' 'V m .wm appeari in your Issuo of October 15, mentioning the Possibilities of Another o? those nnslxhtly. hi . about the only wooden bridge of itsind left ia town.. Z I am not posted on the finan- V1 iltT conneil 1 bftl,e I of the horse and buggy iaya dld ?w Wr5f drying into 1U buggy shed. The cracker to his whin , caught in tho crack above, ill , watched th whi -!r"- ! thobwS5ndhat save the Whip. .The Old farmer replied: "Hell. man. t M- pose I would stop when I was so Hell bad cracked. Wo bare nearly finiht . ! concrete bridge program. Lefa necessary wait for a tim. mi f can finance a brldsra ! . with tho others and ,7r rir"'. V city. Let's fmlsh it iFKai.."" EUGENE T. PRESCOTT ' i. .1 ie4 Oak st, : - ESCAPES ( Daily Hiought ) Jt?iXEiRccfT. FtoxfHCvXJWwc. Vest ttszOaus Klsao. I i Dwlgkt W. Merrew U ssowrmW by' net waly salllieae f kle fellww eeaatrymow, Ut by a, W of poepl.' tsj i wtkew Uaals wW. fraemdaU ante! emfUeace kw bad worn by bis sincerity and wns.retsnaing f their haw Morraa, Mecrem always aad tiaaa to Dewpit has wMMdM with tbe financial kwwa f BUS easstr aad r.nn.l. J I, .a V .1 it .L . an; l a ... Cna, far which be was bonarad by all the participatina; natiwaa. A claasmata af ax-rrweleUat Calrin CMtMlga at Aamaacaty lirrw waa called U by tka than Chief Exacntiva and sant as Asabassadar to Mexico at a bssa when reUueaa WtwMa tat ceaabry aad tha Ualtad State war etrained alasast ta braaklag j j lf S frl taTka with PreJe.t CaiUe mi Mesica, MewsWa cbaraa af paraanalicy r.Tv'!! i V ,r cUrsl. way tba Und af dawbt and eliatmat. Dwigkf Marrow was u i! US: r-nr aga by a atajarity taft tcstifiad to bis papalarUy ia New Jersey Jil!!5?. rUlBtr wwnU have pUyad an isanortant rala 'm the 1932 RwaabUcasi nraelaW tial caatpaign if o bad UvwaV.f ..i.0..J" "Laughter, while It lasts, .l.nir ena and unbraces the mind, weak ens faculties, and causes a kind of remissness and dissolutloa of all tho powers of the soul; and thus far it may bo looked naa aa a weakness In tho composition of human nature. But If wa consid er tho frequent reliefs we receive from it. and how often ft break tho gloom which is apt to depress tho mind and damnen our snirtta. with transient, unexpected rleams of joy, one would take care not to grow too wise for so great a ' pleasure of life." Addison,, . ' -'. '- - ' ' ' ' - ' - 1 ' :X: : - aL - ' - . .-. j-' Veneta Bella Patterson r above. IT, kin of Mrs. Carrie Simmons, oat trial at Lebanon, Ind. for tho poison murder of One of ber young aauzhters. stormed eatins tha ; ale sandwich she was enjoying when- she bit Into arid discovered a capsule, which later was found to contain strychnine, according to authorities, lliss Patterson was used by tao prosecution aa a wf , ness astinsx ura. 2iramons. Yesterdays . . . . Of Oli Salca Towa Talks from The Stetetv of nrUar Daya Octobrv ' Oil ana : - inithat0'0"11 81 tt- r?tw Hfthey Wkoa.Iato tha city limits against their will, de- S-J FlU make tW selves felt In the coming munici pal election, demanding that ther receivo police - protection. iJe light and water serylce of which tney now have none. ?Wr?Ja th prlc o tops are Hnwf queUy- HP wero sel ling in New Tori yesterday for tS cents, meaning a good profit for growers, v v CHICAGO Reseat nf th- amendment to the romiH.iA. will he sought by Governor Farde man of Mlssissiooi If ha ta -io ed United States senator, it was announced today, it. t-ia - crUis xlsU in the south on tho matter of white snpremacy or ne gro domination. ' - : October 20, 1021 ROSEBURO A olrnf 4 .,.n eht broabt In a verdict of goilty of first degree murder la the case Of Dr. Richard ir rtrnM- field charged with tha elai- July 1J of . Dennis RuseUA n farmer. More than S.0a last night at the armory in the greatest' community sing ever held in the northwest. Olcott, Mayor George L. Baker ot Portland and Mayor HalmmAn or Salem were present. PARIS A bomb, sent labeled as a gift ot perfume, exploded in tho apartment of American Am- oatsador Myroa-T. Ilerrick here yesterday morning. No one was injured-