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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1932)
PAGE FOUR The PRECOX STATES3IAN, Salens Oregon. Thursday Mornlnir, Jannarf 21. 1932 "No Favor Sways Us; No Fear Skall Am" From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO" Cauuxs A. Spracue, Shkidon F. Sackett, Pbliakri Charles A. Spracub ... ' .KZ. Sw-xdon F. Sackett - - - - - Managtng Editor ft- Member of the Aasociated Presa Th. Associated rMb 0iJ.SaSffi,uI tkm of all aawe dispatches credited to tt or not otnerw-is "" thta paper. . ' ' Pacific Coast Advertising Representatives: Arthur W. Rtype trie, rtland. Security Bld a., Khirnn Bide i Los Anselea. . pac B1J. Eastern Advertising Representatives: Ford-Par.o.-Stch.r. Ic? KW Torfc, Twm Biifc . 11 w. 2adSt; CbtaMr WW. Michigan Ave. Satsred at tA Postoffice at Salem, Oregon, a Sacowliasi Matter. PasKsasd vrj minting except Monday. Bueinee office, tlS S. Commercial Street. ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Mall Sutacrlptton Rata. t . '".S?? i ! JLi&t Sunday. 1 Ma. EO cenu: X Mo. $Lt; S.Mo. SS.JS. year ." naewheri SO cent per Ma. oe i.M tor I fear to advance. By City Carrier: 4S cema a month; I. a year li advance. Per Cop t cec'a. On train and Newt Standa 6 cent Yesterdays m - . . Of OH Salci ZaOmtroaaXlMBia maja of BrnoQm Day January 20, 1&07 f Establishment ot an orphans' home la Salem, receiving .the In terest from a 125,000 bequest left by the late air. aa lira. A. R. Bur bank, la being arced, aa the legislature consider placing the land In treat with Governor Chamberlain, Secretary of State Benson and State Treasurer Steele. J! HERE'S HOW By EPSON T(?ANSPAI?EMT UMBRcLLAJ V?v ' AA3P HEU A-VOIP OOCUSlOAf h GAP The new city dads, elected on a platform of more paving for Sa lem, are expected to devote their first session tomorrow ntght t this matter. Borings to cost 11000 are to ba made- at Durfur in search of oil. ! World Achievement rjUCH is the title for a special edition of the "Christian O Science Monitor" for Jan. 7th. There are two regular news sections, the special features being rotogravures, four sections of them. From far corners of the earth pictures have come to grace this beautifully printed edition. It is all in sepia, no multicolored work being attempted. The, edi tion is largely pictorial too; and that is well because pic tures tell the store more quickly and more graphically than type. What impresses us in thi3 review of achievement of the world in 1931 is the prominence of engineering. Perhaps it i Wanste thinirs like tall buildings and bridges and steamships lend themselves to illustration while subjects of research like hunting for influenza germs or learning what tricks the gamma ray can perform are not material for photography. - 1931, far from being a year of "stillhaltung", standstill, was a year of real achievement, as these pictures testify. We may call the roll: GREAT BRIDGES: A 1650- ft steel arch bridge over Sydney harbor, Australia ; .the Kill van Kull bridge, with longest arch span in the world, connecting Staten island with Jersey shore; the George Washington bridge across the Hudson with longest span, 3500 ft., suspension type; thev St. Johns bridge at Portland over the Willamette with a clear span of 1200 ft. HYDRO-ELECTRIC AND IRRIGATION DAMS: Bagnell dam in Missouri; Dniepr river dam in Russia which will generate over 800,000 hp.; Westphalia project, one of larg est in Europe, utilizing water drop of 500 ft.; enlarging the great dam on the Nile. BUILDINGS: Empire State building in New York city, 102 stories, 1250 ft. high, tallest structure ever built by . a ! i " n ? man; new national liorary Duiiaing in reipmg, t,mna; new parliament house for northern Ireland; viceregal lodge in New Delhi. India: modernistic Berlin Broadcasting company building; Karl Marx Hof in Vienna, housing project where 40,000 may live. Add to these highway construction, shipbuilding, port projects, terminals, airplane construction, it becomes in creasingly evident that modern civilization in large measure v is built on the work of the engineer. The section devoted to "Social and Economic Progress" nlctures the buildinir of a wall, with separate blocks bearing labels such as "Court Procedure Speeded"; "Status of Work ers Improved"; "Wickersham Commission Reports"; "Bil lion Dollar Credit Pool": "Home Loan Credit Pool", indeed not a very imposing assortment. Some are indefinite ; others like "Status of Workers Improved", of doubtful validity. The text however asserts that in China and Mexico definite progress was made toward protection of labor. 1931 was a w - . - . ...... - i . . year ol a vast deal or. tniniung ana laimng ana wrimig about social and economic progress, but there was real eco nomic recession all over the world, outside of Russia. Research progressed apace in 1931. What care men who browse about in the stellar spaces, who crack open atoms and compute their densities, who peer through microscopes at concerous tissues, what care they about volume of trade and credit balances? So it is reported that during the year the disintegration of the atom was successfully photo r graphed at Pasadena ; Orion was found to be three times as jfar away from the earth as previously believed ; metallurgists ; ' rliarAverprl new wavs of mixintr metals Jaanary 21, lQ'Xl The police department has re ceived many complaints concern ing; the alleged gambling at the Elks Mardi Gras. A persistent ru mor was about, that the gamea might be stopped. Idaho won an unquestioned vie tory over the Bearcats last night. tne score standing 14 to 5 at the end of the first halt and 32 to 10 at the bitter end. ROME The condition of Pope Benedict Is slowly growing worse and now is extremely grave. Ex treme unction was administered to the pontiff early this morning. I hi ' 1'. V XJmSSS JOS COHlTtS V7. ftylri&m TMssAax ijm t v. h a ir fj tj trz r w m e a i ir at . j uMj'-.a? m mm ' ar jss, jit n- Jim "The Gay Bandit Border" B?M IS Ar CAVE? eoooreiAiaria LA6A4rm Tomorrow: '-Beefsteak From Pint) Logs" New Views Yesterday Statesman reporters asked the question: "Do you fav or the selling of 'C grade milk la Salem?" JT. K. Blinkhorn, county dairy and food inspector: "I don't fa vor "C" grade milk la Salem. The reason I don't from our stand point is that It is a very inferior milk produced with little super vision because It is Intended for factory use rather than home con sumption. Milk consumed by ln- vauas and babies should be the best because they are the most liable to contract disease." Mrs. C. S. Russell, housewife: I don't think so. I think ft shmiM be the better grades only. You want to give the children milk and you want to know what they are getting." A. C. Bohrnstedt. real estate dealer: "No. I don't favor seiHne- C" grado milk." Bfaxlne Welch, 531 North Cot tage: ! don't know a great deal aoout it, but personally I don't tnmk it should be sold." Daily Thought "Beauty is truth, truth bcautv.' Keats. TURNER, Jan. 20. The fol lowing officers were reelected to the Turner State bank at its re cent annual meeting. President E i. Jfierce; vice-president. C. A Bear; cashier, Mrs. Ursula Pierce; assistant cashier, Mrs. Mae B laiDot; board of directors, E. T fierce, j. E. Whitehead, C. A. Bear, Mrs. Ursula B. Pierce. Resources of the bank total All in all. 1931 will be a date that will be Quoted in the $62,397.25; time certificates and future for many achievements, other than that of being P"131 .rediscounts ag the worst hard times year in forty years. The "Monitor" srfie JLlv J V,.. should be thanked for giving us this review of the year in ties company are: President. E. T. a form so easy to take. PIERCE REELEGTED BANK PRESIDENT BITS for BREAKFAST SYNOPSIS For a time they drove on through bow lay helpless, snfferinewrhapa ;WM yeara, Paaa Moral ruled tb the aight. Then, uneasy at th long don. And in all th borderland ti peosu in SAtalco with, am iron hand, aUea, Ted asked, Tired, Bohr could look nowhere for aid. con war Hag their land asd drfvteg No anewer. Th weight of the Before dawn Bob's fac was burn, them from their bom, but th crisis older, mae teemed; heavier, and as iag. Quickly th fever mounted and baa com. mU Coyote," th my- ajram Ted looked down Bob' head lie tossed restlessly, throwing th tartoos bandit, avenfe tytrj out- wyd limply forward with a lilt! light blanket from the bed. Vainly rag perpetrated by Moral. Th -. Jamming 0o th brake . Ted Ted tried to sooth bin. Aa hour raocbara await their tmksowii pro- took tb.nUa' shoulders in his Uter h lay i deiiriam, bis voice factor word to revolt Morales, arms and raised bim. The fac was rambling Ja a low atonoton One with th aid ol th U S, Cavalry dcad-whiu, but in a minut th gray Trd laid his hand on the man's hot up4r Major Blount, baa rch4 jes opened and the. lips moved. forehead, and Bob's eyes for an in. for th bandit in vaia. . Te4 Rad- Very faiatly Ted heard the words, itaat opened. clig,a ftnaerlrsn who kte father "Panctured la th aid. Take tne Tell Ann." be repeated. w rla4 by Moraksv i m law out. to thecanch.". Agi the eyes la desperation Ted re. Rnnnina wfefc Adda, tb Sfeaard't fcatiml flickered. "Sorry." be whispered, and to the servant', auaiiers. b tanoed Vif. Jit Morale ward, kalo farted, ' 0a the ox of BobexicaJ iSSu Of Ted. Bob Harkness. TTi frbmd. For a brief moment ta the sUence She came, grumbling and sWeov te taHevbiaa ha ha plana lot MttUng of the starlit desert Ted sat very the entrance, tb ecor with Moral. While em iU, while one by one past memo- . "Your master." he whisoered iwt m m iMiw wn HNjrwijiiH avwoc n vn wn, ww n uk wovsotf, Mo one must know I aad pnd th aught m th desert, 1 they bad formed themselves into aalgo to bring belo. Stav with him. By R. J. HENDRICKS Pierce; vice-president, C. Bear; secretary-treasurer. J. Whitehead. A. E. . En Character GHARLIE DAWES as president of the reconstruction fi nance corporation seems far more appropriate than Charlie Dawes as master of the dove-cote at Geneva. In fact the only way we could feature him as head of the dis armament delegation was that it might take a fighting cock to crack a few heads together and get some action. t But in the field of big busniess where "damns" and Shells'" are insignia ,of executive ability (supposedly) Charlie pawes ought to be in fine feather. He knows how to bluff and that is what the business man of the present lacks. In fact he is almost bletffed out; Dawes can talk turkey to Wall street, is a household god on Laballe street, and the people on Main street know his language. So if there is anyone who can cuss or cajole prosperity into parking justl around the next corner it must be Dawes. We do not think he. will throw that two billion dollars around recklessly either. He is cold-blooded banker enough to call for good security first. He is more apt to kick busi-j ness in the pants and set it to work than to try coaxing it along with lollypops and nursing bottles. - i Dawes will alter business psychology too. None of the! drooping and sniveling about hard times and depression will go with him. " He may take some hard blows on the chin. but before he gets through old man depression will take the count. r The country may well give nine raws for Dawes, new president ot tne Hoover second-aid to business. Where News is Graded , pHE following "made page one of the Oregon Emerald oiuucui, luuiy ai tne umversiry: . Body by Fisher Hooey by Hnlet Swing the searchlight back to the Willamette valley. Congressman Willis C. Hawley of Grundy tariff fame must fac Grangemaster CJ C. Hulet In a contest for hi seat Hulet makes no mention of destitute widows and orphans, bat ee ld nd long for the industrial needs and individual problems ot mv district.' v mmhuu kn lS?Jt!t-'th'7001 VollUtHmM, h straddle prohiblUon, lump ZZTS"ti'Jt tha -common . Ttn lw. .t.. A II v ..... . . .,::Z.7Z UCT" "om. nuwi MTon anempioyment aad old! " more peace ana what hare you But POOr Old C. C. ( cubie can Mm t a blindly takes one on tha chla by ailing to call Hawley on th tariff r in fact he want more protection. Pag Dr. Mast ' ' . Charitably, WEBFOOT CHARLEY. Douglas, th "gras man": m S Th Quarterly of th Oregon j Historical society for September, j 131M. contains a great deal of matter concerning David Doualaa. the celebrated Scottish botanist and traveler, who explored the Oregon coantry for specimens more than 100 years ago, and In troduced into botany 154 speci mens of trees and plants indigen ous to this section. He was the man who discovered the Doug lass spruce, named for him. S . The account of his travels In this then wild wilderness, mostly irom his journals. Is more Inter esting to students In the field ia which he excelled than to the lay man hut there are some mat ters of general historical value connected with bis account of what he saw and experienced. He was laboring under the ausnice-s of the Royal Horticultural society or London, through th coopera tion of the Hudson's Bay company. a S Leaving England July 25. 1824. on the ship William and Anne of that company, the vessel. having coma around Cape Horn, was off the mouth of the Colum Ma Feb. 12. 1825, but storms pre vented entrance until April 7, and It was the 20th when he arrived In a small boat with Dr. John Mc Loughlin, ahead of the ship, at th point where the construction there of the first buildings was begun. He lived in a tent there at first, exploring for plants aad seeds un til June 20, when a company boat with an Indian crew took him to a point above CeJilo falls. He told of th salmon fishing scenes there, that had been annually enacted for centurtes by the In dians and are still seen, little changed excepting that then the red men made their lines of wild native flax, or a plant that yielded fiber similar there to. . After a month in that district. he went down the Columbia for additional specimens, and on Aug. 1$ came up the Multnomah (Wil lamette) river, and camped 24 miles above the falls. While he was there an Indian party of hun ters went west over the Coast range. Douglas said his camp was made near a village of the Cala poori (Calapooia) Indians, "a Daily Health Talks By ROYAL S. COl'ELAND, M. D. T KNOW a man who for many years suffered from a hacking cough. His family continuously urged him to consult with a phy sician. His reply was always the same: "ine cough does not bother ma and I feel fine. Why should I ro to a doctor?" H con tracted an acute infection and was confined ta hi bed. A phy. aieiaa vn called and dia- tovered thatth nan was suffer ing from rather advanced tuber- culsis. . ' Dr.Copelaad This atorv la all to tvnieaL To little attention ia paid to tha dan ger signals.- N on should tab a Ttw on tuberculosis. If nrner car ia not taken, th course of. th disease la vecyrasid. When th disease 1 re raised In It early stagej and proper car ia riven, tubereuloala la curabta. Early symptom ot thla diseaa ar rather vaa-ue and indafintt. N mat. tor how aught the symptoms may " you. ttey a&ould be givea immediate attention. A coarh. Ism C weight, poor appetite, cheat, or ooar pau, rover aad ntght weat ar alms that must be tnveetlgated Immediately. On wh show any tendency to ward toberculoeU or who ha early taoerenlosla su k (natrf The treatment ia hMflcu mi if tMtructlon ar carefully followed. Complete rt m bed tor on month or longer la imperative. During this tlm meal should be served in bed. A daily procram is of treat vaiao. The following surgestlona may be f service to you lit forming a sched ale: At eight o'clock serve breakfast. Including a glaaa of milk. At tea 'clock, another glaaa of milk t served. At 12:31 lunch la given, and taia too should Include a glaa ex milkb and at 4 p. m. milk Is agaia served. Early dinner Is important. It ahonld not bo served later than 130 and must lnctud a glass t milk. Before retiring at p. m. another glass of milk should a served. Tb paUent ahould remain la sea antU ordered out by his physician. Between tne hours of two aaa soar th patient must sleep or have com piet rest. A sponge hath followed by an alcohol rub should h gtvaa very merntag. Th windows rf th sodrosm as to b kept wide open at all times. Protect against draught and cold by placing a screen around the bed and keeping th patient welt covered. Smoking ana aicenoi are absolutory prohibited. Too much oempaay should b avoided. Talking that Urea th patient ahould so forbidden. It Is tmportaat that hygieoi measure h practiced at all times. Precaution must h taken to guard others against th spray coming from spitting, coughing ar annexing. These vrscautions moat be closely observed whoa there ar catHdroa ta th household. Remember that chH areo ar mor ausceptibl to this 41 as tbaa adults. By th ns of common sans la th early stages c this dread dis ease, Ks control t practioafly ct tain. Be sensibls about tt nd tel. tow th advice c your doctor. A few week of sacrlflc will gtv premiss of a long ttf ot health. ; Ctesrdsm IMS, KSs Tmum mittmH. BM... : Anawera to Ileal th Qucr-tea" . a What causes shlnglest kind of hod aaiuw responsibU for tb trouble as a rule, but the exact cause U uncertain. "Aa ApprectaUv Rtader." O What cause dreaming every night r A. This is oftsa dua ta aom In tostlnal metarbanes or norvousness. uavacav Jsv Kiae natatas peaceful, well disposed DODl. Ha wroU: "Near my mcamn. ment was a salln spring, to which th der frequently resort ed, as well aa the beautiful ringed species of Columba (nlaeons). whoso elegant movements when picking up and licking th salin particles that were round aroand tha edge afforded me great amusement." (What reader can tell where the camp ot Douglas was and the saline snrlnr. or deer lick? It must have been near the Willamette river, and not far below the site of Salem.) W S Douglas wrote: "I killed sev eral of the Cervus Leucurus, or long white tailed deer, as well a some of the black tailed kind C. macrotiss." Ho spoke in other places of the great abundance of deer then in the Willamette val ley, and of elk. and of other animals and birds, some of them now extinct, including vast flocks of swans. He found three kinds of swans. Ha wrote: "I procured some curious kinds of Myoxus Mus, Arctomys, a new species of Canls. of singular habits, and a genus of animals which had been hitherto undescribed." (A commentator thinks these may have been our pouch gophers.) S Douglas said: "la the extensive plains, bounded on the west by the mountainous woody part of the coast, and on the east by high mountains (describing the Wil iamette valley), as also on tha banks of the River Sandiam (Sau- tiam), one of tho rapid branches of the Multnomah (Willamette), grows an abundance of the Es- choltzia Californica . . . also Iris tenaz (flags), Nicotlana multlval vl (wild tobacco plant), two new species of Trichostemma (black sage or pennyroyal), and many other delightful plants." This column some months (or years) ago contained a statement concerning the wild tobacco plants found by our pioneers on the banks of the Santiam river. Douglas found such plants in oth er Sections of the Oregon coun try some of them, ho said, from needs brought by the Indians from east of the Rockies and sown on burned over patches of soil and pringing up and grow ing luxuriantly without cultiva tion. The Indians used the cured plant for smoking. V As to the Escholtzia Californica (California popples) which Doug las found In such abundance la the Willamette valley, especially along the banks of the Santiam, as some readers will remember, this column not long sgo printed th finding in the same field of W. D. Breckenrldge. the natural ist with the Wilkes expedition la 841: U. S. government expedi tion. That naturalist found Cali fornia popples on the we3t side ot the Willamette river, in the pres ent Polk, Yamhill and Benton counties. As wa said by the writ er then, the California poppy Is a much entitled to be called th Oregon poppy. S Going out from his camp on hi collecting tours from th aaliae spring, Douglas must have been on the banks ot the Santiam riv er. He traveled from Fort Van couver In an Indian caaoe. which ha said gave a hard task in :th portage at tha falls, and he prob ably used that means la getting up a srar as tha mouth of tha Santiam; and also la navigating that stream, stopping at conveni ent points to examina aad collect specimens. This part of his work was necessarily dona on toot; la fact aa walked much; was tha greatest white tramp la tha Ore gon couatry la th period before tha missionaries aad settlers cam. Evry day ha- faced dangers, aad ba barely escaped death many, maay time. Tha Indians could aot understand him. They called aim tha "grass man," and his work seemed so useless to thm that they regarded him with superstitious awe, which he en couraged, as a matter ot safety. , V- Ha was a woaderful marksman and frequently showed bis skill, assuming to do it casually, by shooting birds In flight. Ha would also light his pipe with bit lens, Adsla ri seats bar and' suspicions. I inescapable pattern. With the aud-l Kens him in hd vm a ...jw 1 T . ... .1. - . .. . . . I . fWl r ww reenxms skmbw wita Too I uenpess-os a itgaiamg noit tne trstsi The old woman eroiwd k.rMtf loaraa the aom of bis cattle I burst forth. 1 Coyote I "Si.- war stolen. He doubts that SI Curiously, as if he were looking In two mlnniM h ... .i.m: Coyote" la rcspoaslbl. At Men-1 upon a stranger. Ted gazed down I no the stem in RnS'. r .A -1 . . I' . I .if ... .. 1 " . . w. . . '" uwmm m, m rowiw iwn, poo sonTSB i inia jnan wno ssi so quieuy Dc-irepucca the blanket thrown on th w goes oparavs to vuri Ana l feuc nun. ne ien nis own neaninoor. Keed, sa entertainer. Bob Is 13 1 pounding and a dull throbbing in his I With a wrinkled hand the gently Coyote" and Ana his spy. She Is I brain. 1 Coyote 1 The man all the! touched him. MMmh.r f r.A u aaa. - - - - - - B - wa. VM ilU SW deeply tn lov with him. Ag autumn I border was seeking, the killer with! hot be is! Get helo auiddv seloe vggw xnaass rcaay to i a price upon ais.ncao. mis mani tielp, tor the lov of Godl" ovannrow moral, wnca Td no-1 so loved and bated, praised and con-1 Bat Ted was already cone. tlce Bob stolen cattle among Jito's 1 demned, sat helpless beside him. and Uendoza's was at Us heirht Even uuu, om viiicr explains ns rasx i suaaeniy ea reauzea mat. oanaitttrom tar on the blaze at i;rh. t.A ' A Ia J , . . .t ..... I.. . . . vwu uwu wit uiixnucu rensnung i ano aiucr, mis man was me nearest i Diurred the horizon and as Ted them, Major Blount invito Bob I friend be had in the world. I drew up he heard a roar of applause and Ted to bis headquarters to learn I Very gently Ted started the car, I from within and the tinkle of man tb identity of El Coyote." Bob 1st then wrapped one huge arm about I glasses. Men's voices shouted s pasaled. Morale and Jtto ar also the limp figure. On that side the name he could not catch, but as he " "1 i wuuBrcppca witnin su noise lud stilled. lormer, ana one ot -tu coyote s I blood. Kapidly led sped throuzbl A sudden hush had felkn an . lieutenants, is expected momentarily. I Uie night Once he looked at his I pectant hush. The waiters about the joo goes ouTstae. i wo snots nngiwatcn utue alter ten. lucre I crowded tab!. nt m;nt... om. son rerorns ana, snoruy srter.iwouia oe no one at tne rancauouse. I the smoke-filled room. All faces vmega u carried in. urged to namsl The servants would be in their own were turned toward the center of "El Coyote," Ortega looks st Bob J quarters. Once the car struck a rut the patio where, in a ring of slowly and, without uttering a word, die. I in the road, and the man groaned changing lights a airl was sina-inr Ted drove more cautiously, slowmg Ted walked quietly to the nearest CHAPTER XXXVI down almost to a stop where tne I waiter. K-n. road was broken. "Where will I find Ann Reed?" I (W, on the tt kiih.x Tr-A 1 ... . . . nounced the ordrl. 1 . 7 J V J'. I "c mB nouaca 10 lne Ptio. it UM-hni'ri . r..U.A 1 - .... 1 ""J 'Si acaur. . u: 'u' 'a a" Z'Z u -ro- Mile W The Slowly Ted drew closer. the for the c?lai and ArxnA U "R " c OT c "suca ur- ' I aiowiy 1 eo arew closer. Justout- tor tne glass ana arained it Byli:.t,,. va; i,. ,-t.. rz-A , t , . 1 - ...... .vuuiw .j. v " iiuc itic iiKoi pc sioDnea aaa little For the moment all hope had died.1 "Gentlemen," he said dully. "I in vited you upon an empty errand. My apologies. He looked toward th dead Mexi-I r.,.f, u- 1 - "- "-"- "' ia in cirue 01 ignr. Knowing ner- TZTa h r.f? TJa down, and driving up to the house self to be th-ater of all their br a sauadron of cavalrr" Bitterlr he ,toppd nd witche off the moods, teeliag the power of her wiz 07 a squaaron ot cavairy. Bitterly i, s.. p.:,;,,.- .v. ....w, I ti. : . he lauirhed "Who will h tnni ... - "j- jrw'is. tu.cc ktuicu il .Un,oncTeeto lien but consu. ? T nw?" Then .!nwU ,. PBK1K once to listen, but conscious A low rejoicing voice, in strange J.:!!i?.ui VS"SWl!lih.e or of the beating of his owa contrast with the veiled sadness of "" !T WTt.T heart. The servants had already her eyes. She held those ouiet. at- gone. Itentive faces ia a spell. Inside, with hasty, unaccustomed! And when st last she stooped s fingers, he cut away the coat and! tempest of bravos and applause blood-stained shirt. The wound was j shook the long, low room. She a lAnivoo IvTatJkflifi rw TIVsk X as at fall 1 - l!t. f.A a J . . I hiih mimcnt 5 clerei B beat, but very feebly. Ia desperation door when Ted reached her side, high raerr.mcnt. sUckered now Ted 1oked abon h rootTV A Sefiorita - he 4 across those eternally silenced lips. ... .-, Z T. ' 7; . , . r dv 1 j ..t.,. aid Int. ne remembered, was in the The great black eyes looked up " ,r,,(T 7 T medicine chest, and in a short time Ut him. "Yea" J'.ulL fc h ,eruized the dark jagged "I am Ted Radcliffe. the friend r.v. I wound and fastened heavy bandages! of Don Bob. It is important I talk A minute more." be said half 11 .?! 1 wi'y0?L".Jr-t , j - ;i.l l"c lnc" T.;it, I ucneain mc rouge ner uce weni 5i-."2!?u-vW.mJh! Meeli" horribly alone, terribly in white, and with a little beckoning touched the major's shoulder. Ihen nttAd . . . . - . Je she hurried down the haU. he reached for hi. hat "Come," he A he tber a Ul fla,h u- 'h w T!? J0 said to Radcliffe, and abruptly left fra U.Boks d " hl? TeU m " " hortr ; ks teas iiuUiit he opened his eye, then He is wounded. He wantt you. inC ICIIC e .e at n as a we Under escort of a servant they zl sea aem- . T. M: galloped out over th desert A htoopttif torward, led caught the cf"'- . . . they reached the car Bob said, to woros. -x ou can trust tne cooa. Ana - Radcliffe's surprise. "You drive," Ann-Ann at Mendoza's. Bat door. I wontjrhange, IN take and climbed heavily in. doctor-remember, ao doctor. o ; Jbrngs slong. Mechanically Ted took the wheel Yon know why." Then again his face Withta s minute she had returned, while his mind raced back ta tb Consciousness bad left him. fd in eyen less time they were ia unexpected tragedy of that past Ted puHed a chair to the bedside. eV f "ea"? u,e .Dtt boor. Once more he seemed to hear There was nothing to do but wait u-uf j?- ? ,. Z . those two hurried, spiteful shots in and hope. Slowly the minutes of lu bUck .a4 cU.e.d the darkness, and saw the look of midnight ticked by. and the early V1 " U aiPahU eat fear and horror graven on the face hours of morning. Ever his eyes floc- of the Mexican. And for the first turned to the still form that breath- Anrougoout mat ride the girl sat time it came to him how desperate led so slowly beneath the covers. I .utte tlH her hands folded tightly . . . . - I . . . ... . I : l f i r ... j j a game was being played almost I More than once. like some physical I m kuk an wawa. under his eyes. J chill it came over him how utterly I At Bob's door Ted raised bis hand El Coyote must have surround-1 alone was this man whose hand had I for silence. He looked in, and, sec ed the camp" Ted said at last "The J been raised against the entrenched I ing 00 change ia the white, drawn bandits must have seen us pass. And I scheme of things. This man, he I face among the pillows, motioned they were waiting for him outside I found himself thinking, had doomed I the girl to enter. "Ill be out her the circle of cavalry." I himself to the lone fight He could I if you need me." he told her. Bob stirred uneasily. Ted felt the turn nowhere. He could rely on! She nodded trrattfutlv 'I m . weight of the man's body against! no one. This man who held the! he a little while with him alone." his own shoulder ana saw ub si border m terror; this last outpost, The door closed sHentlr . , I ... .. ... . 1 neaa aroop rorwara. intramsi inc nomination 01 tne strong. I of Lewis and Clark), and after eating, would prepare an effer vescing draught and swallow it. BOILING, as they believed and so they called him Olla Piska. which In the Chinook language ignifiea fire; or the "fire man." Wearing his spectacles on his nose created no less wonderment and Indians seeing It would lay their hands on their mouths, in token ot dread and astonishment. Thus, alone and surrounded by hundreds ot hostile savages, even the murderous Vmpquas, he led sort of charmed life in the wilds, showing no fesr though after many fearfully tickling sit uations were safely In th past, he would shudder and be thaakful to still have his scalp, aad his if. (Continued tomorrow.) (Ta Be Contleeee) ROBERTS, Jan. 20 A fin program Is being arranged for Community club Saturday night The new stage will be U3ed for the first time. At close ot meeting a basket social will be bald ta raise funds to pay for recent altera tions in church and hall. WOMEtlML GIVE TIB PUY INDEPENDENCE. Jaa. 20 Tha Independence Woman dab haa chosen the play "Tha Inti mate Strangers" by Booth Tark lngtoa to be given In tha training school auditorium February it. Members of th play cast ara Mrs. J. S. Robbie, Mrs. Maurice Butlr, Mrs. R. M. Walker, Mrs. W. D. WUy, A. X. Horton, J. H. Hart, J. Foster aad A. H. Dixon. Mrs. Homer Dixon, member ot tha high school English depart msat, will direct th play. . She win ba assisted by Mrs. A. H. Dixon. Mrs. A. L. Thomas, tha elub treasurer, will ba th ticket manager, and tha dob will take ear of tha advertising. 1 Practice will basin this weJc A study course In tha t art book, "Christ at tha Classroom" wa opened at T:S0 o'clock Monday night at tha manaa at tha Calvary Presbyterian church. Mortgages Investments Insurance Oregon Pulp & Paper Company Securities Report of the above concern indi cates a choice position occupied by their Bonds and Preferred Stock in respect to an investor's oppor tunity to profit. If you cannot call, the coupon telow will bring you full information. r MAIL COUPON I Please send me information per- tainine; to investment opportunity . ' in Bonds and Preferred Stock of I j Oregon Pulp & Paper Company. BIRTH REPORTED " ! GERYAIS. Jan. tt. A daagh-j Ur was bora Monday to Mr. and Mrs. John Schafer of tb Parkers vlll district. " . Nam Addr I I Hawkins & Roberts, Inc. Second Floor. Oregon Bide;, Salem from tha rays ot tha sua (a triek