PAGE FOUR f;7: The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem. Oregon, Sunday Morning. February 7, 1932 "No Favor Sways V; No Fear ShaU Awe" From First Statesman, March 28. 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Chirles A. Spracue, Sheldon F. Sackett, Publisher Charles A. Spragu - - Editor-Mnnager Sheldon F. Sackett Managing Editor Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press ts exclusively entitled to the use for Publlca tton oX all new dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in thls Pacific Coast Advertising Representatives: Arthur W. Slypes, Inc.. Portland, Security Bldg. Ban Francisco, Sharon Bldg.: Los Angeles. W. Pac BIJ. Eastern Advertising Representatives: Ford-Parsons-Stecher, Inc. New ork. Salmon Tower Bldg.. 11 W. 42nd St.: Chicago, 360 N. Michigan Ave. Entered at the Postoffice at Salem, Oregon, as Second-Clate Matter. Published" every morning except Monday. Bustnee office. S15 S. Commercial Street. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Un ffcit-nrrtnlton Rate. In Advance. Within Oregon: Daily a.. Sunday. 1 Mo. 60 cents; S Mo. $1.25; Mo tl.t: 1 year Elaewhers 60 cents per Mo., or l 00 for 1 year In advance. By City Carrier: 45 cenU month; $5.00 a year li advance. Copy 1 ean'jL On train and New Stands 6 cents A World Police System FRANCE startled the Geneva conference with a proposal for an international army to be used to enforce peace. It would create a police system under control of the league of nations whose job would be to crush a nation engaging In war. With thi3 world constabulary Erance feels she could safely disarm, and the world could disarm also. There is much that is plausible in the proposal. Compar ing with the individual's restraint from use of force the same system prevails. An individual may not go out and set tle his disputes by force because the law and a police force to back it up restrain him. There by the way was the fallacy of the argument of Rabbi Berkowitz last Sunday when he said that it was as plausible to say that armies keep the peace as to say that individuals armed with automatics were necessary to preserve the peace. The individual has the se ' curity of definite law, of courts, and of police system to en force the law. Nations however thus far do not have such effective protection, witness China. So France's suggestion has the strength of analogy to support it at any rate. But this gets the problem back to the one of sanctions. Must force be used to restrain force? There was once, it is remembered a League to Enforce Peace. But the world has gotten away from that notion. It no longer is disposed to rely on sanctions of force to put an obstreperous nation back in line. The best opinion of the workers for international peace Is to build up a body of law with a court to interpret and apply the law, and with world opinion as the enforcing agent. France constantly clamors for security. It was what she nearly got Pres. Wilson to promise her. She demands se curity for herself, though she seems not so much concerned about security for other powers, notably Germany. But his tory shows the danger of international guarantees of security which become in effect alliances. At the outbreak of a strug gle issues are obsCure; it is impossible to determine who is the aggressor. In Manchuria for example, were Chinese or Japanese the aggressors on the night ot bept. is.' ine worm does not know, wherefore how can a nation decide which side to punish for breaking the peace? It is natural for France now at the height of power on the continent with other nations prostrate, to want to pre serve her position; and if she can get the other nations to underwrite her security, (especially the United States), it would be quite clever for her. But this country sidestepped the invitation in 1920 and is even less disposed now to take a hand in the European card game of politics. As Senator Borah points out, security such as France asks would be to put Europe in a straight-jacket and freeze boundary lines just as the treaty of Versailles left them. The injustices of that peace would be preserved under the guise of security. The pathway to peace will have to be through interna tional agreements and through courts of adjudication of dis putes ; and most of all through the cultivation of peace-mind-edness among the peoples. A good many local people haYe been picked up lately on traffic counts; and no doubt feel badly at having to pungle up a few dollars so they may go their way. The purpose of the enforcement is not to collect money for the treasury but to enforce the laws in order to prevent traffic accidents. Driving past stop 6igns, not signalling for turns, speeding in school zones are all fraught with danger. Port land's campaign for safety seems to be getting results. There only four persons were killed by auto accidents in January as against 13 the year preceding. This county had many fatal accidents In Janu ary. The public should cooperate with the authorities for their own protection. , The poorest paying crime we can think of is kidnaping. It has been flourishing considerably lately. Every few days one sees where some city bigwig has been abducted, then a day or two later comes his letter to his wife saying his captors demand fifty grand for his re lease. A few days more and the police and reporters get busy; things get hot for the kidnapers so they turn him loose close to some ser vice station. The abductors get no money, are lucky if they don't get caught. The captive needs a shave, and his wife has had ft bad scare. Kidnaping seems so foolish there onght to be a law against It. Just what happens when a city does not pay its bonds? A wom an is suing Astoria for $3027.50 being principal of three bonds plus interest. If she gets Judgment, what happens? Will the city be put oa the auction block under execution? Could the sheriff seize person al property in the city to cover the judgment? We do not know what the law is, but in practice nothing like that takes place. Usually the debt is refunded, written down or spread over a long term. Tusko 'gets more publicity. This time it came not from the moonshine he imbibed but what his keeper imbibed. Now he has been told up the river. The report is the elephant "will "pack his trunk and lumber into other climes". When he goes he will leave many re- porters deeply in his debt. The Southern Pacific Is about to place orders for 20,000 tons of steel and for ties. Just as soon as the roads see a little growth in their profit margin which the wage cut ought to Insure they will be back ia the markets as buyers of materials. Tie orders will be help ful to mills In Oregon. Congress Is debating the dole, also a request from the depart ment ot agriculture for a million and a half to use fighting grass ' hoppers with. Why not combine the ideas and give the unemployed work catching grasshoppers at so much per bushel? The board of control is Just a society tea compared with the meetings ot the highway commission. In fact reports of its sessions make livelier reading than the Shanghai troubles. Daily Thought "When a man ain't got a cent, and he's feeling kind o' blue. An' the clouds hang dark an heavy, an won't let the sun shine through. It's a great thing, O', my breth ren, for a teller Just to lay His hand upon your shoulder la friendly sort o' way- "It makes a man feel curious. It makes the teardrops start. An' you sort o' feel a flatter In the region ot your heart: Tou can look up and meet his yes; yoa don't know what to When his hand Is on your shonl der In a friendly sort way. . Oh, the world's a carious com " pound, with lt Honey ana Its $4.00. Per gll. With its cares and bitter crosses, bat a good world, after all. An' a good God must have made It leastways, that" Is what I say. When a hand is on my shoulder In a friendly sort o way. -James Whitcomb Riley. MRS. FRINK HOSTESS - FALLS CITY, Feb. B Mrs. Kl doa Frtnk entertained the Art club at the home ot her mother. Mrs. It L. Thompson, Tuesday afternoon with a 1 o'clock lunch eon. The members present were Mrs. Reve Helm, Mrs. D. J. Ickes, Mrs. F. E. Drlggs, Mrs. EL p. Brown, lira. Harry Smith, Mrs. Ned 8mlth, Mrs. Anna Tedder, Mrs. O. P. Horn, Mrs, Dlok Pawl. Mrs- Ed White, Mrs. Ira Mehr- llng, Mrs. Ira Davla, Mrs. It. L. Thompson and the ffaest Mrs. Jesse Hate- ot Corrallls. Lay Sermon "MIND TOUH OWN BUSINESS" , "Moses and Aaron," said the king1 of Egypt to them, 'why would ytw draw the people from their work? Ml ad your own business." Genesis V:4. Moses and Aaron were the first walking delegates. They called the first strike. When they went to Pharaoh and asked for a new deal, which at that time meant re lease of the slaving Jews, the king, just like the modern indus trialist, told them: "Mind your own business. Sounds familiar, doesn't it? The pair tried to quote divine authority to Pharaoh, but he re plied: "Who Is the Lord tt.at I should heed his plea t let I&rael go? I know nothing about the Lord, and besides, I will not let Israel go." "And besides." that is signif icant. Pharaoh had a good labor contract, and he wasn't going to let it go on the command of a pair who tried threatening him with a deity he had never heard about. Off with you! "Mind your own business'" Pharaoh Just couldn't see the labor point of view. He told Moses and Aaron: "The people of the land are lazy as it is, and yet you would relieve them of their bur dens". He got sore and gave or ders to make the work heavier and to force them to gather their own straw for making bricks. There is no doubt of it; Moses and Aaron were the bolphevlks and reds of their day. Had they lived at the present time and Btarted fomenting strikes down in Kentucky they would have been thrown into Jail or run out of the county. They got off easy with Pharaoh, who - just used sharp words with them. They went ahead and pulled off stuff that surely today would draw an Injunction against them. The pla gues they let loose were worse than boycotts and picketing. They Just wouldn't mind their own bus iness. Being the first strike, Pharaoh was not prepared with deputy sheriffs and court injunctions. It succeeded and Pharaoh had to give In. After the Hebrews had won it however they soon got in to irounie in the wilderness, ran out of water and ran out of food and wished they were back in Egypt where they had steady ioba and got good garlic, and didn't have to listen to long sermons. Human nature hasn't changed a great deal though now "the Lord" isn't pulled into the strug gle. We still have the agitators like Moses, and Pharaohs whose arguments resolve themselves in to "Mind your own business" . . . And besides . . ." We still have strikes and their attendant pla gues, and still have strikers who wish they had their Jobs back. Yet, while there are sections and Industries where feudalism prevails, the lot of the laborer is far better than centuries ago. The revolts led by Moses and Aaron and their successors have brought gains to labor. The arrogant Phar aohs, with their "public be damn ed attitude", grow fewer In num ber. The Kentuckys will eventual ly have to go the way of the Egypts under the Pharaohs. New Views Yesterday Statesman reporters asked this question about town: "What do you think of Senator Spaulding's latest outburst on the state highway commission?" Robert M. Gatke, Professor of Willamette University "I am la sympathy with having the ma jority of the commission settle the affair without public appeal." L. W. Potter, route five, farm er: "I am no politician. I think there's a lot of them whose sal aries onght to be reduced. Mine has, hasn't It?" W. J. Engelhorn, West Salem: "I don't know. I hadn't paid any attention to it" HAS LA GRII'PH MEHAMA, Teb. 8 Genevieve Wagner was out of high school this week with a bad case of la grippe. Daily Health Talks By ROYAL S. COPELAND, M. D. N' OT so many years ago we were taught that babies could lire by rnflk alona. Any suggestion of a more liberal diet beiore the age of one year was AAVi m swl fM At BMJB- unorthodox. Bat recent research es Into the needs of the growing child hare revolution ized our termer ideas. A form of anemia has been discover-, ed In certain in fants between the ages of three months and three years. Dr. Ceyeland These are children who have been fed almost exclusively oa goats' milk, or cows milk, sad occasion ally on breast mUk. This is called muk anemia. Prematore ehlUU-sa. twtns thorn weak from birth, are the moat frequent sufferers. Underfeeding alone, even over a considerable pe riod ef time, has not produced the blood changes charactoriatie ef milk anemia. In this ailment the red btoed cells, those carrier of exygea from the air, lose their power, la part at feast, te a their normal work. OoaseqneatJy the entire body surrera rrom tne lack ot ex gen. There are two classes of csj One shows stana ef malnutrittocL The skin Is ot waxy color aad the arewth la stunted. The victims are nervous and Irritable. Often they avrxer tresa respiratory diseases aa4 ether waoemlortahle ailments. The other type Is more difficult to recognise, la this gremy are chtt- 1 mm Answers to A.F. 8. Q. -What causes the Upa to tan Mue ta swimming. A. This Is probably due te poor elroulatlea. f . ill HERE'S HOW BYTHeOvTuN AenmciAu styj SHINE A er 24-HOUBSA-PAr ON VMEAf TOE BCrfCE-WQStPSON A? OCOtUM MEAT FQDM SEEP TO HAevesr IN . 55 FAY. PS EKPINA TMfe ia3NoesaTEEAtJ? . VVATfc? lOOQMOTlVTjr ENCnNKCS HAVE LMi ?MTSUK Yes- AS OUSTS THBr EUxeNlb SAT TUE: paki3 may ceceee SOMMS?9YlS SHAPE? UKT A CAgpumeg Y LA PCs -a t - IT' V.I- A'l T-II'Jt Tuesday: "America's First Factory Sold Soap'1 Humming Sometimes Sign of Joy Other Times oi Leak in Bellows By D. H. Talmadge. Sage of Salem Life is pretty much as we make it. Also, life Is pretty mnch as we take It. Life Is not so mueh what it really Is to most of nt as what It appears to be. Man is a reasoning animal. Also man Is a sociable animal. I reckon a heap of him foregoes reason and joins with the majority be cause he doesn't like to feel lone some. El Gigg says he's a poor wick ed sinner. But so tar as the neigh bors know, he has never broken any of the Ten Commandments. Too lazy, probably. Do some folks talk too much? Perhaps. It depends as Biff Widdle said during the progress of the argument as to whether or not the tail of the family horse should be docked. There are those who cannot talk too much to suit us, and there are those who can and do. Generally speaking, there is more danger of talking too much" than not enough. It it not unnsnal for any one of us a circumstance easily ac counted for to be mistaken on the street for someone else. And sometimes we mention the mat ter later and sometimes we do not. Right at this moment I cannot recall a time when a two-bit piece tossed to a counter made so great a noise as It makes now. Almost deafening. An expression caught from a passing Georgian: "From cansee to cantsee." A long day's work. Ep Brill says most folks are more or less different from one another, but bill collectors are less like one another than any others, seems to him. Ep says he makes it a rule to keep the smart alecky har.d-bolled ones waiting longer than he keep the other kind. I suppose there are hard boiled smart-alecky collectors, but it Is possible the reception committee is somewhat to blame for It. Facial expressions are mighty deceptive- A person may look as if he smells something unpleas ant and at the same time be suf fering from a nose aliment which dren whe may be plump. Thsy have good appetites and seem well except for a tendency te become fatigued easily. But a blood examination will how a picture similar to that of the first, the more fragile type. ia tne usual varieties ex aaemia there Is quick response te the ad ministration of iron and the applica uon or nyrienic measures. But i milk anemia Uttle Improvement caq be secured without using certain dietetic measures. The first steo toward a cure Is te diminish the amount of milk and te uMUtnte cereals, vegetable puree and fruit and vegetable Juices. Xa most eases, even th yery young b hies caa digest cereals, especially wnem tney are cookea la vegetable water. The favorite method Is t eeok carrots, spinach or green veaa and when the vegetable Is cooked ti use the pet liquor far ceokmg the cereal. For children ec tour months ot more, a little ec the sieved vegeta Me may be aalxod with the cereal, For the elder children, liver er bona Barrow may be srvea. as weU ed small amounts of eUve oM or cod over olL But all these measures may be useless anises the amount of milk is gradually redaoea. Or rather, the ailk la rep cod by '.hose more sub-. ataaiial foods. Sunlight, froah air and the ultra Violet ray te the chest are measure calculated to encourage the upbuild, tag of the thta and depleted Mesa. Ia severe cases traasfnseoa ef Mood from another isrsoa stay be . re quired. DoubUesa the discovery that mHk properly called -the Ideal food." Inadequate to supply needful oa meats to every child wm rreve a hock to many persons. But whtH It Is not comssoa. tnJEUc anamia ta a disorder discovered by tuo4JBclea una mvoouaaagsb -r w. I I' - - n'- Health faeries X.X.X. Q What do rev advise far Vmoaafs Angina? , t, ; A Have year doctor eutliae the proper treatment. By EPSON j APTlWrf All SYW Tm WV w sj So, Jwtf rxJ D. H, TALMAGB prevents him from smelling any thing at all. "Hoover times" the term Is frequently heard. That's the dick ens of being president a man Is liable to have a business depres sion or an epldemlo of one sort or other named after him at any minute. It Is said of the man who some what continuously makes a hum ming noise with his "mouth, pre sumably a tune, that he is of a happy and carefree disposition. But that doesn't conclusively ae count for the humming noise. He may have a leak In his bellows. A sparkling weekly, now In Its tenth issue, Is the Scribe, edited and published at Newberg by John Burt and Don Woodman, former ly of the Carlton Sentinel and the Yamhill Spokesman, respectively. We all have our favorite reme dies. A favorite remedy is one of which we boast when It works, and regarding which, when It aoesn t work, we enter Into planations. ex- I neglected to lock the door of my apartment when I stepped out for a few minutes the other day, and every drawer In the place was open when I returned and the contents gave evidence ot having been thoroughly pawed over. However, nothing had been stol en. The chap who perpetrated the outrage had apparently wanted nothing but money. Perhaps he was hungry. Possibly had he not been hungry he would not have yielded to a dishonest impulse. Sorry I was out when he wss in. I'd have been delighted to help him search. As to the war on the other side of the Pacific I have had a revel ation. Salem or downtown Sa lem, at any rate Is evincing a warlike spirit, and I had not ex pected It. The same Individuals, or many of them, who have re peatedly assured me they would never favor our entry into another war are now frankly demanding that we go over and "clean 'em up", whatever that means. Con sidering the sort of folks we are by nature, even the most bellig erent of us, it is somewhat of a wonder that the disarmament ot nations-world peace business Is as flourishing as it Is. Two men on the TJ. 3. Bank cor ner recently when a wind was sweeping through Commercial street from the south. Asked one: "What's yonr opinion of the world?" Replied the other: "The ventilation is great." Then his hat blew off and away, and what promised to bo a learned discus sion was nipped in the bud. I . was passing through the grounds at the state hospital not a great while ago when a woman, whom I could not see, called from one ot the windows: "I got a pair ot silk stockings for Christmas. she said. There was something happily childlike la her tone, and I was glad to gat the news, oven though she and I were utter strangers, hut there, was nothing ia the Incident to warrant a laugh or even a smile. Tot when I haw "The Gay CHAPTER LI Gently Aunt Clara led her to the stairs. "Up there for you. little girt Lie down oa my bed. I'm going to entertain your precious uncle my self. Thank God for nervous head aches. You've got a beastly one. Run along." She waved the hesitat ing girl upstairs. "Spanish grandees are just duck soup for me, dear," (he assured the girl, "especially when my plans for the day have been all shot to hen." So it came about that Paco Mo rales, a moment later, was bowing over the hand of Aunt Clara and listening with polite interest to the: fable of Adela's headache. Auntj Clara lost no time in making that part clear. "Adela's in my room now. The girl is on the verge of going to pieces. I know, oi course, what's passed, and if you don't mind a candid woman's opinion, I've been wondering how an intelligent man like you can at times make such a deplorable ass of himself." Morales' thin lips parted. "She ran away," he said, "like some com mon peon girL" "Of course she did, and for the same fundamental reason love." Aunt Clara offered her guest a cigarette, then lighted one herself. "I wonder if you know how aston ishing it seems to me to find you of all men, baffled by this tiling called Love. Paco Morales, I have known yoi how many years is it? Ever since the major was first sta tioned here, and that's over thirty years. And I remember the tales of those years, the wild romances of one Paco Morales when we were all much younger than we are now, and. I wonder how one can so com pletely forget that love, when it comes, takes us and makes as do its wilL But instead of remembering that high wisdom, you have acted toward Adela as if you didn't know what youth or love or desire meant And yet," she smiled, "and yet I've reason to believe that you did." "Sefiora," interrupted the Span iard, "it was not to talk of my youth I came here, but to bring back Adela." The woman's voice was still pa tient. "You're not being wise about this, Paco Morales, and yet men call you wise, as the world goes." "I am sorry." "Listen. There is something of the cruelty of the beast in you. I can see it in your eyes. I tell you it is dangerous to do what you are doing. The girl is distraught, desperate. If I know Ted Radcliffe I know he would break you in two if Adela suffers at your hands. But your un speakable pride won't let you see this. You have threatened her with exile, threatened to tear her away from the man she loves and from this land she loves, and now you're sur prised that she rebels at all this." "Si. I am surprised. Surprised and disappointed." Impatiently she shook her head at the trite phrase. "What would parents do without that bromide? I tell you again, Paco Morales, you're not wise. You expect her to BITS for BREAKFAST ByR. J. HENDRICKS 1100 for a flash: S It was ths forenoon of Tuesday, October Z, 1810. The Oregon leg islature was In session in the "Holman block," still standing, across the street from the pres ent Statesman building, diagonal ly opposite the Marlon hotel. S That had been a stormy session, full of excitement. There had been a hold-up, when six state senators hid out and could not be found, though warrants were out for them. The air was tense with the slavery question. Secession was threatened. The outbreak of the Civil war wss in the offing. S The legislature was in the throes of ths election of two United States senators. Ballot aft er ballot had been taken without result. The combined Btrength of the Douglas democrats and the republicans was enough to defeat the forces of the Lane faction, sympathetic with the slave states, but a fusion ot them, which was being attempted, was a difficult undertaking. ' Fourteen unsuccessful ballots had been taken by the SO men composing the legislature. There was to be more balloting that day, beginning at 10 o'clock, when the joint session was to convene in the hall of the house on the third floor.. The man desired by the re publicans and the other people everywhere who were opposed to slavery, or of Us extension, was Col. E. D. Baker. mentioned the Incident laughter has resulted. Why? 'Tls a bit of a puzzle to me. Certain things at which people laugh are positively not laugh able. (My own opinion, and prob ably no better than yours.) Wit Is still wit, ot course, whether It comes from the lips of an Insane person, or from the Hps of a drunken person, or is of the machine-made staff of which news paper "colyums" are sometimes made, and is entitled to its giggle. But the mental incongruities and distortions and ungoverned bab blings of those who are no long er quite normally themselves are not laughable. Anyhow. I am un able to see them la that light. Perhaps I am cursed with a des perately dark and gloomy nature. I wonder if you have over no ticed It? One person says ho is glad to see you, and you know, positively know, that ho Is glad to see you. Another person says ho Is glad to see you, and you un derstand Immediately and clearly that ho la aot glad ta see you. And odd. Isn't It? the two per sons may bo one and the same oa different days. Bandit Border" ffo HI "In that case, isn't it just too bad we're submit as a Spanish girl of your generation would have submitted. But Adela is of this generation, and America's ways lie near to her heart" Coldly Morales raised his hand. "Sefiora. again you are mistaken. I do not come to theorize. I come for Adela. Please to tell her I am here." Aunt Clara's cigarette flared dan gerously. Not often had men ad dressed her in just that cold, in sistent tone. She fought, not too successfully, for patience. Ignoring his command, she asked bluntly, "Just why do you object to Ted Radcliffe r "Object? In what sense, senora?" "You know perfectly well what I mean. Is there any good reason why he couldn't make Adela happy?" "Is there any good reason, senora, why every American adventurer hould be welcomed by me as Adela's suitor?" Aunt Clara smiled. "I shouldn't be so sure about the adventurer part, Paco Morales. It's no secret that Ted Radcliffe will be a partner of Bob within the year." "We waste time, senora. May I again remind you I come for Adela? And may I add that Mexican cus tom gives the guardian unreserved custody of the ward l" The woman's color had height ened. "In that case, isn't it just too bad we're not in Mexico?" Morales' eyebrows rose in polite curiosity. "I do not understand." Aunt Clara' patience had reached an end. "I mean you are now oa In the winter of 185-60. Col. Baker had come with his family from California and they were liv ing at Capitol and Court streets, Salem, in the building then stand ing where the Shell service sta tion Is now. erected by Dr. W. H. Wlllson, original town site pro prietor, for his family home, then called "the beehive." for It shel tered several families, and after wards used as the "woman's col lege," or boarding hall of Willam ette university. The state house grounds were then vacant, the territorial capitol having been burned five years before,' and the construction ot the present state house not authorized until 12 years later. Col. Baker's wife was Mary A. Lee, a widow with two children at the time he married her when he was 20. April 27, 1831. There were four Baker children, two boys and two girls, the oldest one Edward D.. Jr.. then about 20 years old. Young Ed. Baker was a robust youth, full of life, and a good singer. Joseph A. Baker, who will be 93 July 23 next, still hale and hearty, and the oldest person In point of continuous res idence in Salem, was about the same age then. S S Young Joe Baker was also a singer, and the two Baker boys often sang songs together, for the enlivening of social gatherings, and they came to be known as the "Baker twins." Joe Baker afterwards learned to play sever al musical Instruments. He was started and trained In this line by Frederick Glesy of the Aurora colony, with whom he worked in a Salem harness and saddle shop learning the trade; and Fred Gle sy was a wonderful musician. Joe Baker will not admit that he gained great efficiency but there Is no record that he received any stale eggs or vegetables from our pioneer fathers and mothers, and Mrs. Baker would probably ad mit that his youthful efforts In that line were pleasing, at least to her. Any way. she took htm, for better or worse. Of course, young EL D. Baker was anxious for the success of his father, and his mother was also intensely Interested In the outcome ot the fierce battle ot ballots and extra fireworks were expected that October forenoon. She told her son that It he would bring the news to her ot his fa ther's election, and get there first with the information, she would giro him $lt. . The 17th ballot, the third one taken that day, had left Baker Ore rotes short of the necessary 21 that would spell his election, la the legislature of It members. The llth ballot was called for. Before the tatty was announced not in Mexico?" said Aunt Clara, American sofl. What is more, yoa are on a military reservation of the United States, I mean further that Adela came to me for protection. If I gave this girl over to you. I would be lending a hand to God knows what mischance. 1 hoped to help heal up this silly quarrel, but now 111 keep Adela here as long as she want to stay. Yes, and now, if I weren't the well-bred wife of s high ranking officer, I'd say, "What in hell are you going to do about it. Paco Morales?' " Silently Morales reached for his hat and gloves. Very ceremoniously he bowed. Hand on the doorknob he turned. "I wonder, in my owa turn, what Major Blount will say to all this." Aunt Clara exhaled a cloud of cigarette smoke. "I hadn't thought about it." he answered casually. HeU probably recommend me for the Congressional Medal." Among the Mexican foothills, Blount had struck a hot trail. Many times before the chase had been dose, but never to promising as that night in early April It was high time. All through the bluster ing Mexican winter Blonnt had combed the border foothills in search of El Coyote, and now. with the com ing of another spring, the old sol dier's temper had not sweetened by repeated failures. No one knew how much those months of disappoint ment had meant to the disappointed soldier. For long months the smiles of the men ia Verdi had rankled. (Te B Continae4 Tomorrow) by the chief clerk of the senate, young Baker had observed fire changes to his distinguished sire, giving him the necessary major ity S U For he had been ian Intensely interested onlooker' from the start of the historic contest and he did not wait for the final an nouncement. He bolfed down the stairways the same two stair ways that stin lead to the upper floors and was off up Commer cial street towards State. He was wearing an overcoat. As he passed the harness shop where his "twin" Joe Baker, was working, he threw him his outer garment, and rush ed oa, turning east In his mara thon up State street. He was home at Capitol and Court, to earn his $100, la record time. Why did he not phone? There was no sueh thing in the world then as a telephone. There was (Continued on page 7) Yesterdays ... Of Old Salem Town Talks fro The States man of Barller Days February 7, 1PC7 After reaching the 114 foot stage, the- Willamette river waters last night began to recede slow ly. All day yesterday available launches and steamers cruised up and down river rescuing stranded farmers and livestock. State representatives yesterday fought hotly over Mr. Holt s bill which would abolish the state nor mal schools at Monmouth and Drain and provide for mainten ance ot the two at Ashland and Weston. They finally deferred no tion to next week. Considerable complaint is be ing made by pedestrians concern ing the reckless roller skating in dulged fn by boys on the side walks of some of the business streets. To ladies such practices are particularly objectionable. February 7, 1S3 Twe regiments of Infantry are being organised In Oregon, the 381st infantry, with headquarters In Portland, to which CoL Carls A b rams of Salem has been assign ed as commanding officer and the 382nd Infantry comprising troops In western Oregon south ot Portland. WASHINGTON Carrying out the edicts of the disarmament conference. President Harding has ordered diseoaUnnaneo of work on fortifications In the Islands of the Pacific and suspension of work on all ships which under the treaties would be scrapped. Robert B- Duncan, ffll South Commercial street, was elected ac tive manager of the South Com mercial club last night I i 4 it i f-