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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 19, 1932)
PAGC FOUR" The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, ' Oregon, Friday Morning. February 19, 1932 Yesterdays HERE'S HOW By edson TUi7 I CX 717 TD A D" By ROBERT T - A A li-4 V Ji 1 1 SU A NINnw V' v . .. f . Of 014 8dm "No Favor Sways Ut; No Fear Shall Awf From First Statesman. March 28 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Charles A Spractje, SheuxwTf. Sachtt, Publisher Cbaslcs A. SrRACUE Editor-Uanagtr S helix N F. Sackett - Managing Editor Member of the .Associated Press Th Aaaoctated Prees 1 exclis'-vny entitled to th mam for rbltea tloa cl all newt dispatches credUed 10 U nr sot otherwise credited U . thle papfcf.J. , i i ' in - Pacific Coast Advertising Representatives: v ' Arthur W. Strt, Hw?., 4ortland. Hecwrttf Bids- ' Ba Fraaclac. Phareu Bid. Los Anseha. W rue. a , . . Eastern Advertistef Representatives: , -"" - IWd-Panwns-StecherInci Ktw Tors. Salman Tower Bldfc. II W. 2ad Sti Chicaso. 56 N. Aftchtaaa Ave. ------ ' Entered at ' iAe Petto ff ice at Salem, Oregon, as Second-Class Hatter. Pnbluhed every mornivg except Monday. Binte office. tlS S. Commercial Street. . . SUBSCRIPTION RATES; ' AJnll Sul Jcrlptloii Rat n Art vance. Within Oregon : Dally a.l Sunday, t Me. 19 cent: 2 -Ato. L2l; M. t.2i: 1 year 14.00. gUaewbere w cents per M-j or i 00 lor I year In advance. By CHy Currier; 45 cent nrml; $3.0 a yea li advance. Per Copy t ten's. On trains and News Stands S tents Town TaSts from The State-, man ef EarUsr Days' '. - February 19, 1D07 ' NEW YORK "Enrolled In tha city's army of lost and miss lns. that was tha fate ot 421 par. ions la New York, tha city ot mys teries, last year.- - - v I, . ';:.:'--:;. NEW YQRK SeTeral theatre have instituted a system ot free guaranteed escorts ot gentlemanly manners and Irreproachable hab its who will accompany lone wom en sarely to their doorsteps after the- show Is over. . v February 10, 1023 Tha Christian Endeavor State convention ends here tonight la which seven denominations are re presented by hundreds ot dele gates. '.;": ' ; ; Capitol Post No. t, American Lesion, yesterday was given a free option on a plot in the new platted Oity View cemetery. , Russia and America A week ago one Sender Garlin lauded in a public address here the virtues of soviet Russia and contrasted condi '. tions there with those prevailing in the United States of America. In Russia there is no unemployment; in this coun try millions are out t work. In Russia coal miners work a six- j Tiour day; in this country they may not work at all through , lack of jobs. tJarlin satirized tne "Hoover pian ana euiogizeu ; the "five-year plan". Byinference at least he endorsed thej communist plan of state and industrial organization. Russia has been for a decade the Great Fear of the west ern world. Capitalist states have shuddered at the thought of an eruption of bolshevism in other lands. Russian dumping of exports froze the blood of wheatgrowers, lumbermen and pulp makers. As time passes, however, the threat of communism is disappearing and the glamor of the five-year plan fades. Rus sia for the time; peing at least does! not loom as the Great Bear aboutto devour the markets of the world. While Stalin still reigns his program" has developed strictures and failures ; and numerous alterations have been announced to encourage the people to go on now with a second "Patiletka" to begin next January. . . ' What is the lot of the common people in Russia? For years they have had food shortages which in this country v would precipitate a revolution. Hickman Price, Jr., an Amer ican farmer writing in the March Country Gentleman, des cribes conditions as he found them on a collective farm: Food: evening meal, watery soup with an occasional cab bage leaf, two thick slices of black bread slightly moldy a por tion of salted stargeon, tea without sugar. Morning meal, three slices of same bliek bread, glass of tea. , Housing: Hundred people living on the farm ot 4000 acres. Two huts, meat set on Ions boards resting on empty paeking boxes. Bunkhouse: "On both sides ef the shack were four tiers of bunks, and In the middle, somewhat larger beds. In the far end was a stove used in winter. No windows or other means of ventilation except the door. Bunks made of traw, and on them v were Indescribably filthy blankets, as well as great. Piles of un washed clothing. There was no attempt at segregation of the sexes. Men, women and children all slept together in this and the other building". - . Water: Muddy well water used for drinking and cleansing. Light: candles. - Labor: All persons,' male and female required to work ex cept babies and ased. Laborers escorted to fields by number ot soldiers earning rifles. Laborers spent tour months hoeing by - hand some 3000 acres of corn and sunflowers, "working from five o'clock in the morning until eight at night In the devas tating hear. "I remember one little tow-headed blue-eyed girl of about eight, swinging her hoe, up and down, methodically from morning until night." There are many reports of the breakdowns of the soviet program. Here are some items noted by Prof. Edgar S. Fur- nissof Yale In the January Current History: . Iron and ateel: Output the llrst 10 monthf of 1931 lest than halt the prescribed annual -total and actually below the production ot 1930 and 1929. ' Coal: Fell 26 short of program tor 1931. Transportation: Failed to keep pace with demands: per formance below levels of 1930. . Industry as whole: Total accomplishment not much in ad vance ot 1930 and not more than T6 of the requirements of tha "plan". Foreign trade: Adverse trade balance rose from $40,000, tfOO In 1930 to $108,000,000 tn 1931. Under the emotional zeal of almost religious intensity supplemented by the terrorism engendered by the O. G. P. U. ' (the army and secret policed the Russian people have made the five-year plan a Veritable crusade. They sacrificed hie a necessities that the national program of industrialization and collectivization of agriculture might be advanced. The ' initial program called for development of heavy industries : iron and steel; coal, power plants, transportation. Realizing that the people might snap under such prolonged strain Stal . in's new objective is the development of the lighter indus tries ostensibly to provide more consumable goods for the people. But this will mean a slackening in exports so vital for foreign credits with which to purchase machinery and tech nical services. Perhaps the Russian people are better off than the were under the. czars. But there is no comparison between their liv- - - ing conditions and those of the American people even in this day of distress. Even our unemployed share more of food, - have better housing and more of the creature' comforts of . life than do the Russians. And most of them realize this fact - and continue loyal to domestic institutions. ; - ; The Russian revaluation was 11-inchisive. Not merely j were .the . political and economic organization overturned, but the? social customs, the "mores", which were the product r vof centuries of residence on the .ast steppes of Russia. There . was a wholesale erasure of relirfous practices and controls, ef moral standards, of Bocial conventions, of methods of In-1 - dustry and commerce. Undoubtedly, some of. the new ideas are wholesome, 'particularly where they substitute results ' of scientific determination for eccleaiasticism and snper- stition.. :.:; ; T ::;l;V.;,-.C!l.' - ' - '. J':- But to date the result in Russia does not commend it- . self to the remainder of the world, Maurice Hindus, as com petent and impartial an authority on Russia as we' know, writing in the March "American" after a recent trip through . Russia, leaves the Russian experiment still an experiment. The absence of political liberty, a blatant atheism, a levelling social order, have not yet developed a society we care to im- itate. Acute though our domestic maladjustments are, their solution .will come not through bolshevik revolution but through other tools, so far unfashioned, which will preserve a large measure of individual liberty and yet prevent tha ex ploitation of the masses either of workers or of consumers. " Minnl Mddern Flske tamed actress of yesteryear, la iieMMS? "4 wifd. and aha was popular In tha toStiSL a? fted ot reU ctora and actresses on tha legit- o i Kg man vourea wub er company ore- JhSff! TlT 1 SBrid' "Tfc Rivals-, visiting th2 Teosst at Sam?"?t2Tia! th 5p.aotD Riding tha present to tha Word was published today that J there were 37 prisoners, sentenced to terms varying from five, years to life and whose crimes were such that under an Oregon statute are not , eligible to parole, were received by the state penitentiary last year. New Views yesterday Statesman reporters asked: "la Lincoln or Washington your favorite? Why?" C. Price, student: "I don't know that I have any choice. But I guess Lincoln really had the most difficult situation to handle." Harlan Deterlng, salesman: You've got me. Guess the Wash ington hatchet story made a greater. Impression in my younger years, than the Gettysburg, ad dress." ' L Mrs. Ralph C Curtis, wife of Statesman sports editor: "Both ot them. Each was an outstanding man In his particular time and as the one chosen to lead fa tha par ticular crisis of that time. Neither, perhaps, could have done what the other did." Frank V. Brown, The Spa: Washington, because we sell more cherry pies than Log Cabin bars. Isn't that a good reason?" Martin F. Ferry, attorney: The men are hard to compare. They are very different in back ground and' accomplishments; their antecedents were most di verse." Teresa Kirsch, courthouse ele vator operator: "Lincoln. He was a sell-made man; Washington had so many things given him. I real lxe both were great but Lincoln Is my favorite. Carl Gregg Doney, president of Willamette university: "I cling to Lincoln. I think he was more hu man and had more understanding. Too, I know more about him." n. Earle Parker, pastor of First Methodist church: "It's a case where comparisons are not in or der. Each man was supreme In his own generation. I ihink that Lincoln deserves mora credit for rising to where he did " than Washington, tor ha started with a greater handicap. C. M. Lee, groceryman : "I like Washington and the celebrations about his name the best" Mrs. A. A. Lee, home maker: "Well, right now I am thinking more about Washington, but re ally don't think there Is a choice in my mind. k r "V r"i rs .cififS-r.-.:;, if i ' II f 1 -rf" vyoees tose- rUA '1 . a..,--t, I rHAVTES 1 " -'ilaat and puttsring with radios. Al- It was taint and dry like the rr-- begun to dim. Theybad .m .1 .t.. l.Tr fa I Ucucu m w kwtwt -- irisTOuZ UAn lVo5 PU body had atartedU, Uke a ETvil MmaTat tha re-1 racky looseness. By the purchase of !!siJrl.' idSenport (an a dignified aystem AAVeTCEOC ZV TO CM.' PoewiA etpfioip Miues THeMY fee max. pee malevolent stare dently tinged with contempt . to drive off the males who sauntered hopefully past her bench. Her mood was not romantic; besides, she had an maate' pride, that would never permit her to be "picked up." A more than middle-aged mas. who scarcely seemed to notice her, CQAt,,UMfe,SACT, AAxywaTteg f Tomorrow: "Paper Films', BITS for BREAKFAST By R. J. HENDRICKS Charlie, Modoe captive: S In the course of his articles under tha title, "Recollections of an Indian Agent." In tha' Septem ber, 1907, number ot the Oregon Historical society quarterly. T. W. Davenport wrote: w "If wa wish to atudy the in herent traits ot human... beings, we must eliminate, as far as pos sible, the additions which educa tion and. social aurrdundlngs have given, and this exclusion Is mora complete and effective by taking children for subjects. So early and unconsciously do we absorb the customs, animus and Ideas of those with whom our early years are passed that in fancy la the time to begin. Pos sibly we should begin as a hu morous educator . fixed for be ginning the education of chil dren, via., with the grandparents. Human beings are never too old to learn and should never lie in a superanuated list, but continue to press their, mental faculties into use to the close ot life here; still, that should not estrange us from the conviction that youth la the era of involuntary absorp tion, and that what we get then remains a part of us to the end. When 1 was seven years old. I committed to memory all the coarse print of Klrkham's Grata mar and Olney'i Geography, and they are within call at the ace ot 77, while memory often re fuses to yield up the burden com mltted to It In more mature years. S "A fine subject for study and experimentation was a little In dian boy six or eight years of age that lived in my family during the years 1858 and 1859. He was relic ot the Rogue River Indian war of 18S5 and 18S8, having been wounded by abuckshot In the leg in 'the cabin fight' and found in the cabin after the In diana had abandoned it. Til In dians, being hotly pursued by tha white settlers, took refuge in a log eabtn from which they could Daily Health Talks , By ROYAL S. COPELAND, M. D. ; Says the governor in his statement naent tha highway commis sion: "Because of the methods employed by Commissioner Spauld--ing, the result. I believe, ot unwise counsel . . . Qh, oh, now who mamnVSim f-nZSL0 rdn Jor'th.enata. Which probably 0?AM aMh,8 FV commU.lon,tia w v. vuv iuk muuM mug mm stunea one. . Tha bulls who hava been doing aome charging on tha stock ex- uu6 cuiuuiencuig 10 snow lame? ana snort wind. TUBERCULOSIS far all too of ten "the thief that omes In the night" It steals the vi tality of its victim and may rush to the serious stage before the af- uicxea person is aware of ita presence. What are really the early symptoms of the disease may be nnob erved,. , iWt' . muat make it known iiat anyone who ' has ex treme - exhaos : tion over v pe- riod of time snd n'mllrht :ough, should ' Pr.Cemelsad lensult a doctor. These symptoms nay be signs of tuberculosis, and it is In tha first chases that tha lisease may be checked If par nitted to run unheeded, it may become bepelesa. or at best It may erk soch bavee svewta takemoatbs r4 arrest and peeslMy years te re sair. - -There, is no reason for the person told be la tuberculac te despair. Re very win come tt he is willing te follow the routine prescribed. But the first thing te learn la that mock ot the cure rests la the aatteat'a-owa fcawda ' ' -"-'.""' - One of the most treaeherotti forma rhlcli tuberculoats takes ts called pbyslclane a "lew grade "mfectin." It sometlsaes touows lafluanTa, or a leagdrawa-eut cold la a person wfcelvktlet baa been epiecea in neaita aaa is continuously overtired. With this term there la seldom bemotrhace or ether prominent symptom. The disease Is likely te be unsuspected unless one baa been under the care ot a physi cian, or has learned, through the educational methods ef health of ficials end other agencies, the sla niflcaace of the symptoms. There ie a lew axternooa Umperatore, areas exhaustion with little effort and a superficial cough which the un trained person may think is an after math of the "tin." This is a stubborn Infection te beat - It increases gradually and steadily nattt tt Is weU. established, unless one is alert te the early symp toms.: we can help In the euiuva- Uen ef that alertness. - uaahm la en ec tne men im portant agents te nee In combating tuberculosis tn Its first stages, -ror-tuaately. the germa et the slams! are frail and 4e net thrive when ez- poeed t sunshine. Bun hatha raise the vltmBty ot tbe-body and help te km the germs which have been mak ing Inroads tn the rangs. - ' Doctor who have beea making a study of hug trouble agree that the hot dry climate of the desert Je most favorable te the quick arrest mt the acute stage. But for those stbaean net e to the desert long era sa the sunshine, with as s&nch ef the body aa possible exposed to the Bun's rays, are Imperative. These sun baths should be takes under the-advice of a physician, ba ther asoet be ladnlcad in tenv tely. Tee much sua in tha after sometime increase tne tem- nerature. The time most seneOcm to the patient is from eleven to one This is the period wbeavthe ultra rav of la powerful In thefr healing qnallH. command any' approach and hold their assailants out of rifle range. to remeay mis state of things a mountain howttxer was being for warded from the nearest tort and the besieged Indians, guessing the cause ot the apparent cessation ot hostilities, awaited until dark. then they broke out every fellow trusting to his heels, and escaped. u is said, without the loss- ot man. A man by the nam of Bo sart claimed the boy as his prise, extracted the bullet which had not dona serious damage, named mm cname, and signified bis In tentlon of taking him to Mis souri and selling him as a slave. Charlle was a beautiful Indian boy with an admirable form and physical development, a good face ana naturally shaped head, show lng that he was not ot the tribes addicted to the hideous custom of flattening their children's skulls while infants. My brother believed nim to be a Modoe and was desir ous ox knowing what could be made of such a perfect sDeclmen of the aborigine by education and rearing in a civilized community, and therefore got his release from Boiart. Being without a famil. brother John took the boy to the Willamette valley and left him with mine for a season. At that time be could speak a litUe Eng lish, and, young ss he was, show ed a very firm determination to hold fast to the customs and hab its or his tribe. His coal black nair was thick, matted with fir pitch and dirt and reached well uown UDOn his Shouldere Urn ii lousy beyond anything known of white children, and although ha knew by trial that com bin a fila helmet of hir was entirely out of the category of practicabilities, he was so passionately proud of his long hair that he resisted all aU tempts to shorten It . vvuen John turned the boy over to me he- said to' him ntiaw lie, you are to stay her with my brother for a while; ho will take care of you and send you to school ana you must do as ha wishes you to do. Mind whatever he says uu ua a gooa ooy. -Charlie gave his assent and school began. The first thing on the program was to clear the boy of lice, which could be done in no oiuer way than to cut his hair ciose to nis head. To this he said no' with a firmness of ton that naa oeterred his other teachers. 'i 'Charlie, you have -com to etay in my family, but while the lice are on you, you cannot have ciean ciotues. sleep in a clean bed, go anywhere, or bo anybody. In " yuu cannot siay in in Douse. uo you not see that rour hair must come off?' bill! tnat defiant neratiw wiuca au causea others to re spect nis so called rlahts. I took tne shears and advan cea . toward him. A forbidding frown took possession of his face, his black eyes were fixed upon me with a most, obstinate expression, and backing to tan wall hm bald up both arms la an attitude of de- tense. 'Charlie, von nnt tn In mttut oc tne sneep. ot a hot. day, when tney-would reel better with tha wool off. they try to get away, but wa have to catch them, bald them down and shear oft tha wool to the sky. See had long, unhurried ' hours filled with the subtle thriH ef facing the world unafraid. In the back part of her mind aha knew this could last only a few day. For tha first time la her life she was having a real vacation. ' "k i: V. Maw tm m . j i a davenport ion n oiriiaw wj9xmi vum wim qont ox tin. . i . . . ,t o..M a 1 Central Pa-k was U cultivate a cold. ."Mary do jrou remember wnaii. ..rvu t hliah llnrv In malevolent star that was uffl- X always told you ot " . U. rUiatxm room. , Yes, Mamma. Only you mustn't! o MBn. touII always be Wel ti re yourself oat worrying. The doe-1 come u hoaM, ,istr, atathleen tor's orders were f of yon Just to rest I keep your a!1 mm Mm 4avwt SAJVWat 1 . ' sr la. fW ssaU JVH -) va ww 1 anSAvaaai Ink MW fl lalsir I lllOW T WUi Marv Kennedy aat on the aid ox I v. Ukj . arltk the children the bed, her two warmly vital palms Mi aU, bat it would mean keeping clasping tne win, wom-worn ou Jth family together." ox her mother. "Yon always waa the dearest of th lot te me, child " The words were but faint whisperings and the young girl had te bend her head to catch them. "I couldnt bear to die if I thought yon would have to en dure the same life iv bad to live. Promise me you wont Slowly the eyes closed nd her head moved slightly to one side. For an instant Mary thought her mother had dropped asleep, aa in deed she had . . . forever. A riant hand, charged with some terrifie electricity clutched and saueezed Mary Kennedy's heart un til she was stiff and numb through out her whole young body.- It was the end of a bumble, inconspicuous tragedy. Just for a minute, before she called the others. Mary aat there remembering with scute In tensity, the bitter plaint or ber mother's last years. From constant repetition it had assumed the an thority of a creed. Just by closing her eye, even now, she could hear her mother repeating the passionate advice of a frustrated life the grim legacy of the vanquished. "Don't you ever marry yourself Into poverty and drudgery, child.'' Her mother's voice, usually so tired, had always become charged with fierce energy when she talked thus secretly to Mary. T.nm la haantifnl. tint If BO "Yon always was the dearest of the lot to me, child." There was a weary goodness about Kathleen that set up a tingle in Mary's heart Poor Kathleen! The biggest thrill she could look forward to waa a Saturday night visit to a crowded movi bouse. Jack Osborne was kind nough to her but this crowded Uttl house was his limit Mary remembered him in his court ing days, a slim youth with natty elothea and a Panama hat Ha had marry a shiftless man it will make taken Kathleen on Sunday trip up your lit a hen on earth. You'll be the Hudson and one they had gone his slave instead of his wife and with a crowd of younr peoole to It ain't worth It child. Your youth and beauty will be gone before yon knew it You'll be looking 'at life from behind a stack of dirty dishes. Dont tell me poverty is honorable poverty is a wild animal that will elaw the soul out of your body. Dont give your life to a shiftless man because hell use you for a door mat all your days. It's just as easy to love a rich man as a poor man. and only fools and liars say differ ent!" Why ever since she could remem ber Mary Kennedy had been hear- spend the week-end at Lake Gorg. But it waa all gone now, that ex pectant gayety on Kathleen' face and hla. Oh, perhaps they weren't less happy than any other poor young married couple, but "It's awfully sweet of you te want me to live here with you, Kathleen, but Fm not going to Impose on you," Mary told her sister definitely. "I'm going te get a room over on the Man hattan ld closer to my job. But of course, well see lots of each other." To truth was that Mary Ken- Ing the same thing from her mother I nedy had no Job at aU. During her but now she'd never hear it again! With her face dead white. Mary Kennedy walked into the stuffy par lor of the Brooklyn flat that was her- home and told the others that death had arrived. Only then did grief openly assail her and, with the rest she wept Even in anguish. I' she was beautiful, small, round- limbed, piquant of face. Deep blue eyes and gold hair . . smooth, fra grant skin absence from the oBlce throughout ber mothers last illness, another stenographer had taken permanent possession of her desk. What she did have was a few nice elothea, a hundred dollars la a savings bank and now that the shock was wearing away, a lifting sensation In her heart For the first time in her life she was on her own she was free! On West Eighty-sixth Street she found a tiny cubicle of a room for It was th end ef the horn. Her I eight dollars a week. Th future whole life, within two short weeks, I held no Immediate economic terror, had released Itself from, the old I She was a highly competent stenog- rroov. tier rather had welcomed I rapner ana tnerxor always sure the offer of a room In the apartment 1 of employment la a city where steno- of Mary's .sister, Kathleen. Jack! graphic competency Is a miracle. Osborne, Kathleen's husband, had I No, she was not worried about a Job. pointed nut that the three-year-old I but ah was a Uttl worried about twins, both girls, would occupy a lot I Wo of th old man's attention and keep I What aha liked best te do in these him from grieving. Mary's father I first fw days of her freedom waa was an outside man with a big tn-lto enjoy bar new sense of privacy. surane company, and sneh portion I Thar waa a feeling that some of his meagre salary that would go I strangely pleasant form of exist- for his board and room with Jack and Kathleen would coma la handy for the young eoppl. Kathleen; like her mother, had married poor. Jack was employed by aa electrical firm and devoted his evenings to tinker- dropped down on the bench. Mary did not deign te notic him, but a corner of her eye gathered that he wore a stylish gray felt hat and car ried a cane . t He lit a long cigar and again th tail of her eye discerned more about him. Obviously, b was not trying to flirt with her toot tn th usual manner, anyway. . His who! pre occupation was with th cigar; his face was stern and hard, with a stony mouth. .That was on attrac tive thing about hint It was plain that he was perfectly ear of hinv elf la everything he did. Mary knew immediately that he was a definite man, that he was not squeamish about things. His ego radiated faintly from his person and carried with it a coo! thrust of power. A man like this, she found herself speculating, would never be In doubt about anything. Before she realized it she was talking to him. A policeman had strolled by swinging his club; he touched his cap respectfully and spoke te the man sitting on the bench beside Mary. "Good afternoon, Mr. Landers." Landers nodded to him; he did not smile but his eyes were amiable. He said to Mary: "Well, I reckon that proves I'm respectable and It wont harm you any if we get to talking." His eyes were gray, Ilk flint; there was nothing of youth in his colorless fee. His long body had a bony strength. Mary decided he in terested her, but did not attract her. "Why do yon want to talk te me J" she asked him. unruffled. "Mainly because you're a pretty girl, I suppos. You wanted a straightforward answer." "How do you know I want te talk te yonf He smiled, for th first time, with a touch of condescension. "Wall, a lot of people think I'm worth talk ing to. A lot of Important poop!, too. Sometime my conversation is worth money. Did yon think I was just a common masher?" "No." no was about te dawn upon hr. It was nice, for Instance, to sit In uenwai ram aixernoona ana hut- They gased at ech other, warily uriate la the iiteu at youth. SU7t frankly. a usst ti si i i i II l 1 t i I ? V" TT" .ri"M""trl t a mrai noas rising uk cathedrals I Answers) to Heaitit Qocrtcw j A, C What causes my chin t break euta get very sor and than become Infested? I am not constipated and hv plenty of fruit and vegetable tn my diet , .' . Av Ton may be eatlnr to much sugar and starch. For further par ticulars send a self - addressed, stamped, envelop and repeat your uestlon. ' 'A' .V O ' e :: ft. bust? t What wis reduc he Av It 1 difficult te radne whisht hi any part of the body without re- oucing tne weight la genera U.D. Q-Z eonstantly keep wal lowing phlegm and my nose v to always clocfod what would yen ad vis for this condition T ; AMStv tn th uadartytng ca tarrhal eoadlUoa first of an. For full particulars send a setf-addressod. stamped envetepe and repeat yeur eueatloa. ;. - , W C What cans, chills? ' Q.-lchIU may be du te a num ber f cause colds, a run down condition, infection (la some tn. stances - etc - Without knowing mora about th case it would be fen eeathl to getato detail aleng the lines. " " - head pf "creation, and this was borne out by his head, which was high in the center of the crown, showing a phrenologist firmness and self esteem; and lower down the development Indicated large conibatlvenees, secretlreness and destruotlrenees. He had also good Intellectual faculties', was not wanting In affection, and, while a little slow of temperament was apt to learn. There was no use. therefore, of appealing to auch an organisation with the 'beauties ot holiness to influence his, con duct It the truth and a proper re gard for the welfare ef others could not be got into his mind as especially characteristic ot the warrior, the brave, his advance In civilization, must be hopeless. To make ot right doing a chivalrous function consonant with his rude deaa ef personal worth, was my : purpose. : so, an untruthful ' per son' was denounced aa a coward; a rude, unkind person, aa an in ferior being, who: did not belong to the true and the brave. A brave boy dared to do right to ana I see that yon have no morel"111 the weak and helpless, and sense tnat a sheep.' At this I took 1 10 P mem on their feet and help them to aa equal chance in life. This was the kind ot tuition. and while he remained in nry fam ily u core trait" (Continued tomorrow.) - "BBBsnnnwxanw Serving Daily Thought hold of him without any show of incugnation on my part laid aim npen the floor, sat astride of him. holding hla arms down with mv tegs, and began shearing Urn. " 'Hold your head still; yon are acting again like aheen that flounce arouad and get pieces cut out ot their hides. Whoa I' "His hair was cut craaa th tha akin, and his sealp found cover ed with a festering mass ot dan- aruir. Mood and matter, alive with uce, some of them of enor mous size. An application ef shar ing soap and warm water cleans ed It; my wife put a cap on him that she had constructed daring tno operation, and Charlie . waa helped from the floor, vary dif ferent tn hla mood. His antagon ism went with hla hair aeemlnrlv. ahowndnosignTof Will W&I """Seer up. Charlie, we nr. , Friend' WldOW going to make yon over Into a white boy. Yon can eat at the ta-l NEW YORE, Feb. 11. (AP) hie with us and be the same as my I Earl Sands, noted Jockey, and 'One who never turned his back. ' hat inarched forward. Never doubted clouds would - . break.. Never dreamed though right ware . , wonted, wrong; , would triumph. Held we tall to rise, are baffled to tight better. , Sleep te wake. Browning. boy, "I soon learned by observation that he had a great amount of pride ot personal consMusnces. According to his Infant Ideas, the brave, the warrior, stood at the Mrs. Clarence Rummer, widow ot a friend ot Bande alse wall-known on the turf, obtained a marriage license In Long Island City. Wed nesday. V; Saade is 81 and Mrs. Hammer It as individual needs suggest Tha United States National serve constructively along tha lines tt customary banking requlrementa of everyday business, . affording helpful cooperation adapted to in dividual needs of Its customers. And the high standard of service this bank has set for itself in tha conduct of Its business is a protee tlon to iti depositors under aU circumstances. Oft; United States National Bank Sftlexa.Oregon