i I.. n'No favor Sicay$ V$; No Fear Shall Awf l- 'J "Jfrom First Statesman, fdarcp zs, lssi X.-THii STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. ";,; V ChABIXS A, SPUACUE, ShEL&OII F. Sackctt, PttWisheTS - .' Charles A. Speacut, :r -:" Editor-Aacer -v . Sheldon F, Sackett - - - ifcaaginr Editor . .. Member of tb AssocUted Press , t - TIM Associated Press la exelnslrety entitled to the use tor publics-; tkn f sil mwi dispatches credited to- tt r nof OtherwUe credited la ; this paper."'--'.." ,- - v.:-.. .i.vrv..-j1.- -"-. -.. r- "--- r, ? Pacific Coast Advertisfog Representatives: r ' ' '' Arthur W. Strpea, tne Porthtts. BeeurttyBldg. - San Francisco, Sharon Bids. ) Lea Angeles, W. Pac Bids. - .." ' ' J" ' Eastern Advertising Representatives: - " Ford-Parsons-Stecher, Inc. New Torn, J7I Madison At.: . ;- Chicago, 86 N. Mlchlan Ave. , - 1 E&erea et tts Postoffice at Salem, Oregon. Second-Clase 'Matter. Publish every morning . except Monday. Bineet office tlS S. Commercial Street, p i " v V . SUBSCRIPTION RATES:.. ' . ," Mail ubcrtpihm Rates, tn Advance. WKhto Oregon t Daily and Sunday. 1 Mo. C cents; S Mo. ILI5; I Ma 3. 1 year $4.00. Elsewhere cents per Mo., or $5.0 for i rear In advance. . By City Carrier t 48 cents a months ! A year In advance." Per : Copy t cents. On trains and News Stands S cents. Lcty Sernioii I HERE'S HOVi 25?S "EMBERS of LOVE By HAZEL LIVINGSTON I f :-The Slogan Barrage ;c: ; ' OREGON which gave to the world the gas tax; the initia tive and referendum and free power without cost to the taxpayers, is also the great contributor of political slo gans. Here by legislative invitation the candidates may lay jT down a barrage of slogans bravely reminiscent of the day 'tehen western villages and cities belched their future hopes in grandiloquent slogans : Keep your eye on Pasco ; Boston j Harbor, fwhere rail meets sail'. - ; From now until May 20th the humble voter will be as saulted with slogans. ITiey will peer at him from placards. .They will be projected in the advertisements. They will be ( v slipped to him on campaign cards. The Oregon Voter does a service in gathering together all the platforms and slogans of candidates for state offices. It is a diverting task to wend n'-one's way among the intriguing slogans many of which are iZ juicy with promise; others are worms to clothe the barb.' -w"-:' .There ha t been a great change in slogans in ten years. A .'decade ago, even four years ago the', ballot would bristle with brave assurances ff or the bone-dry law and "rigid en forcement". There would also be the ringing challenge to . "Americanism", a pseudonym for KKE f Now the old grey mare of tar reduction gets beaten over the taiL Here is Charles Ghilds of Albany who proclaims "More economy; lower taxes". That is typical of 75 of the , 1932 brand of slogan. There is only one man brave enough to defend a tax. That is V. U. Temple of Pendleton who says A patriotic and civic duty! to maintain our state, schools and , municipalities." Bravo, Temple, you will get the votes of the . school teachers and deputy sheriffs at any rate. George Den man, of Corvallis, who wants to be state senator makes a - brave start, but adds a clause so as not to miss a vote: "Re lieve the taxpayer by reducing taxes to the minimum, con sistent with efficiency." People are never able to agree on " just what the minimum ought to be; but it "is always a safe word for a slogan. - . . ' fj Free power has" fewer sloganeers than might be ex pected Kenneth G. Harlan, keeper of the faith, makes "Jo sephs platform his slogan as candidate for U. S. senator. A few others speak for public, ownership of utilities. Repeal of the 18th amendment gets sprinkling support or a little better. Bob Stanfield-who made his exit from the U. S. sen . ate via a drunken brawl at Baker only to campaign as a mil- : TOtTH AND CRIMB ' ?'TiSt dost let OM Utt sae. Ok mister, please dom't let taem kaac ate. I eea-t want te die. aen'l want te aaaf. Fleaae 1 oK eeve se." ? ;. 1 ; Tbos wera that wordA at : a yoath as natppad 'to tha gal- Iowa. : Ha" claimed to ba onlj IT; tha authorities aaU aa was si. Ra cardlesa : of - tha numerala the words Bonnd like the cr of a lost souL A4reaclier i portraylnf tlia terrors of the damned would zlad ! this a most appropriate Quota Uon. Foes of capital punishment will writhe Jn pain as they read this dying plea of a youth who cringed as the black cap; droped orer his head. Srea the most calloused Is touched by tho spectaelo of . tha execution of a nrereviad. Baffling indeed Is the study of the germ of crime. How . does crime breed? Why does It breed? For centuries the world has been taught the lesson that the wires of sin Is death; but each new gen eration Ignores the lesson. 80 1 there Is the repetition' of arrest and trial and punishments The processes of control of crime seem to make no headway.; Each. 'year rur penai population grows, our statistics of jcrlme show increases. Commissions', make invest Iga-I tlon and produce ponderous TOl- umes. Still the criminal class re bels against restraint and defies the laws which society has derlsed for Its own security, TttiS PEHCACY MAY 1 1 & 1 . - ... ' ' . . I i. a ,sw w nasK ea.iea I .s t f rOtn jt v. I fv I'- . -..... " mf terecitvejf ft IH VfiSSxS tn Ar . .11- 1 , 1 .. J r IN THEfw. -THB OCBAH RtCCST MINQ -CONfAlHtKO 1 O T There are those who put the TnMoilaYt Thr FrthnnxkM s Dar In Hawailnn slandV' nth e-AA 1 - .. . f . . 1 blame on "society" If a youth goes wrong. They would relieve the in dividual of . moral responsibility. 8nt that hardly seems allowable l these days of general education, when moral lessons are generally taught and when Individual oppor tunities nave long been abundant With all oar Instruction In the acl tnraa an! arte w& m r.n build up tha essenUal lngredlenU J HP of character. Moral stamina is as X vital lor living now as it was In tne days when - there , .were no SChOOlS. f " There Is no substitute for disci pllne In the home in early years. Moral precepts taught at the mother's knee and Impressed with paternal sternness must always be the safeguard for the growing emia, mat ne may develop. Into self-reliant manhood. School agencies, are so busy teaching facts they fail to give adequate moral training. Sunday schools are often so busy teaching facts about biblical history that ther too fail to clinch In conduct the fine ethical, teachings of relielon. Character building, character Duiiding.- Who You Going to Sue if Bird Breaks Plate Glass Windows? By D. H. Talmadget Sage of Salem HB robins, are singing la Front street and In High street and In tha atreets and alleys between, and the pigeons on the walks and In the guttera are cooing; and only man, the in telligently eelf-euiricient bird, is aware that times are hard. V SYNOPSIS vTssai and eavtifal ' LBy Law Lsasiag aspires to am operatic ea-1 veer, but her ntederato circmsa- staaeea neeessitato that aha go to bmaiaeaa and stady smasie oreaiatga. Wealthy Ken Sargent, whesa Lily Lm Uvea, becomes angry when she Insists noa nractldnx. lasteai of aedag Urn and eUaeomtiaaea calliax. Lily Levi grows listless im over works trying to forget hiss. She goes te her paremta aoeae la Weed- laje fern rest. - V ' CIIAPTE2 SEVEN .' Her mother tried to make her happy. Told her which of the new mdIo were nicew which weren't. The possibility of Lily Lea over beinx part of the Sargent crowd never occurred to her. ; They were different. Outsiders. Sometimes' aha .brought heme Utile toasipy stories about them. How someone had aeon them, all drinking cock tails, oat of cocktail glasses, right on too front porch. The girls, too! And somebody saw two of the girls playing tennis with shorts on, and it certainly looked terrible! Dad told about the crowd com ing Into the atoro for cigarettes. TJ1 XM fetfc wAA Kb thoogkt of them, all these friends of Ken, hurling ordera at Dad, and Dad, with bis horny, alow bonds, reaching for the packagao they asked tor. deliberately ringing on the sale on the antiquated cask register, his Hps moving aa hoi counted oat the change. . . . WeQ. let them laaghl What did she care? They lay on the raft. In the snn, LOy Loo ladelent, net even breathiag nara aner ih swisb. . LOy Lon clutched at her throat. Swallowed hard. "Ken? L heard yoa were op here! Awfully nice to see yea. ... mother, Dad, JLentneid Blossom day. Another year has faded away like a flower. I can not, for some reason, quite real ize it, ao brief has the time seem ed since last ' Blossom "day. A year Isn't even a flag station on the Eternal Limited and this sounds like Bill Sunday, If I do say it myself. "Time's glory Is to calm con- th.af 18 -th challenge of I made aome reference to. almost the day; as it is of eTery day. New Views r Statesman reporters resterdav masked this Question: r "Do OH think all drunken driven ahonld oe sent to the state penitentiary everything, didn't he?) ; to un mask falsehood, and bring truth to light" But one of the fleeting intervals termed yeara affords. alone, opportunity tor little of accomplishment Nor. indeed, does the span of mortal Ufa. 1 - j ,f '. - P... if I ' i And, as Eb Stldgers asked of Crusty Breen when a bird flew itant dry, now makes his slogan: "Restore employment;, re-land ..ot released untu they have 1 sainst and ahattered Qno of tha peal 18th amendment ; four per cent beer ; old-age pensions." wrTea mimmum sentence?" p mm And GusMoser thitetoWunce W .vTi hmt. lt it? hyolIotog t. perance,-not unenforceable prohibition; let the people rule, ness: "I am inclined to believe a tor damagoa thu time? x government supervision." Joseph E. 'Harvey of Portland," is knows well enough what may don't' reckon that bird's folks has the onlv one to sav "Personallv and DOliticallv dry". - happen when he drives and drinks, sot any prop'ty, even If you was . w m w ' - -" w I lj)t hfm e&wa tV. t a. I tHln lAAata, 'nkm An even race with rMpre economy" in tne spoonf uiis of a iZr.'J JZlZf?? - 3 - v- aaeKf no VVU1' lng.to. him.': K. JL Tlnfley. Hollrwood: iney snouia, absolutely." Boy S. Keew. athletic coach i "Tes, sir. I think men who drlra wane drunk are a menace and should be sent to the state peni tentiary. The dead town never has too many business enterprises of the samo kind. The lire town usually has. Somewhat like a free-for-all at a good" track meeting the purse is ample and the best horse wins. molasses to catch flies is "Restore prosperity." Fred Roblin - of Clackamas county sums it all up in "More work, more wages, and more money for the pockets of everybody". For ' . mulas as usual are lacking. Wm. F. Sigurdson of Portland 1 sings but "Prosperity without Wall street" which will awake an echoing cheer on Main' street Bob "Wildcat" Duncan chews 'em up with "Free speech, free silver, anti-chain store . anti-prohibition." Russell Hawkins, Portland, joins the an vil chorus "If the farmer is broke, so is everybody." Since Russell is running for the expensive job of delegate to the na- tional convention our guess is that he isn t all farmer. w-a. ao n AM9 1 Wa. A. 9 , j -rresenr lncumoenx is a gooa oia scana-Dy. n is miena- mean the, oinHnn of t, i tn4 m reminded of this by what hap- Ned to save the voter any mental strain; and usually works, problem; frequently men tell me pened t0 TuUr Crump, with About once in ten years however the infection spreads to they are going to quit drinking whom L.entyt0 t Ld "slIlm' "turn the rascals out", then a candidate wants to keep it because they fear they may drive L11,1111"! (.6!r. .h vTKl! dark that he ia Dresent incumbent" sometime whUe drunkand receive r.V o. v v V .i , aarKinai ne is , preseni incumoeni . ; , , ,,ntA.,. . AL St John when they did their , ! 'mese slogans assurea y are mreresung Drain emmren thl-Qk MT;n treatment .hmTd be ox me -canaiaaies. oen. rjaay oi xioseuurg is sweet ana sim-i given drunken drivers." - tile with "I will do mv best" which lon&r years of faithftti - - service have tested. Ike Staples is brief but nointed: "To .Fnt. track driv. Every family has its favorite remedy for small ailments. There - wm ajKwif mm . vaanwjijBaamaTsr . i . . . m . . .-In my opinion strict enforcement 3!"" iHlJLr Ar tt. itranv.. . i I pose la our favorite remedies. I " umavu 111 A V CI AW W AA. T all J 1 . a ucyoiiua uu uu w ui uu& cut-up stuff In the sllents IS or 20 years ago?) and Zasu Pitts (she of the wistful countenance) do a real h fciesKto-goodness com edy at a Salem playhouse one day last week. -. Tuller waa much pleased with the comedy, but ho k..w.AA miroolf". ,A ic linniut fuif if oil Tow TTwn mna I 11 " QePeE u "? vu"w; v-.rr" I they are. If they are really drunk, as ''Spanish-American war veteran" but his-activities em-yes. it's rettin aa it niri,t wl brace everything from 70-car trains to roads and Highways, curbed. Lock them up if no other compenea to leave arter tne J. O. Johnson of Tigard repeats the bromide in slightly dif- rr.t. itl ferent,words,-"Essential laws only and more common sense tm.-,i. : ani -veh-in hi. hr. ani hi ..m in those while C. A. Ambrose of Portland joins the boost- no, i don't I think antono who b would have to go home and ers: "Brin? more tourists to Oreeon". Herbert R. Dewart will get drunk and drive n ear Ut a few lumps of sugar with wants."Action let's do things" jwrhile his fellow-Portlander h01ll to the insane asy- turpenUno on 'em or ho would if.i-ii. tt r : .i--.mtj . i. lum." - vltako down sick. No doubt most of iuciuic u vTcii, ia muic ocuaw. wu vuuavicuwu us c i - I these favorite enrealla hireiams reseniauon wim an open, unDiasea mma. Aias, wnai ruaei e. a. Van Osdol, track driver: virtuo, and a firm belief in a rem shocks Mr. Geil will have if he reaches the legislature. I "That depends on how drunk they I dy goes a long way. I am not ttjilnVn: IWrvr -eta In a pwIotia eiAhir flnrl nulla trie! are. I belieTO they should, be-1 disposed to say much. I never hole in after him with "Promises none"- He must be the or- ' 2LZz ft? lX2&Jft& iginator otthe "safety first" league. R. E. Cherrick of Canby driV" - r fi v r;ii or says "The people's interests are my Interests because I am r . eight drops of essence of. pepper- one of them . Does he imply; his opponents are not people; I - g btOBe banic: "i firmly "w. .. : - .' .. '. i . . - - - .."''.. -: ' l jtMv m-i it. m Carl of Provolt, Jackson county. Perhaps he is a political 1 elves 4 t . . ' . t t brother of "Alfalfa Bill". r.i'IVIv'Wo exaggerate misfortune and Two .of the finest slocrans irr the book are bv women. I . B..m1? driver: "Give happiness alike. We are never lau muicuvo, uu iuusi viuigr,i .iigwami ur it long.-, so happy as ;we say , wo are," Baizae. Mrs. Dorothy McCullough Lee says simply : "Continued ef fort for sensible legislation". Mrs Lee's record bears out ev ery word of her slocan. Last Oh thfe list la Rosa West John-lLj- "Sl '.1 . ; " ' V; ' U J :! : . 1 Now higher education In Orecon la in a deDlomble state, Hi'rvli FJ.oi: A P1 institutions are being sawn asnrider, under the jerry- HvrvfT W tttVt,, p . . uuuuing oi ur. iii. js. unosey, executive secretary, who is LCTTOR MacPHERSON, author of the single-board law I fashioning art administrative and educational monstfbslty passed in 1929, has issued a statement denouncing the in Oregon. . J . " program oi the state board of higher education. He calls on - ' There are only three ways out : Make Dr. W. J. Kerr the governor to make investigation which being translated chancellor of the system which the state board Is trying to :2H2lJ$aii hewnta I1 pernor to fire the board. Mac- set up. Or else make a physical merger of the university rIS f?1 tte.lxaV( muddle and says that it has and state college. Or else return to the multiple board sys- caused chaos and confusion in the institutions, that it "ad- tern.- i : - . ' -i, - - C rfESSyS211 'w:yit laughing - Kit would be folly just to f ire this board and appoint siocK or tne educators of the wnrid " A, ia ,it I ir..Ti,.MMu - ut i5 . j ' oaU?ia&n?e cation as Lindsey; Both the university and the state college tice; th proved pilsion sys are being wrecked as a. result of the survey which lacPher- wie suppressioB tor undings of the survey-commission aid the do- l80" w ordered, we Deueve that If Dr. Kerr were given morallzatlon of both faculties ani S.Vrr MacPherson cannot e5tcnr, rpnATiciV.nt trl-Tj-JL' A - the opportunity 4hat he wald reorganize the Institutions on a practical basis, that under his direction the university would receive as fair treatment as the' collegeor the normal schools, lie Knows the state &nd its needs. He i3 one of the cretlcal. HiJ oW bill establl fittiuZZ a we tne- greatest.educational execuUvcs In the United States. He can ttKtfisffiS! p SffiStSf S"1. fecutiveec- make.money a long ways. He does not want the Job of wTSh!; "Z7rr "tVI. rvln" ?enslve and chanceUor, wants to retire after 25 years of able service worthies sr. rvpv TH n wn a I cnanceuor, wants to retire alter Z5 years or able sex daTralem Qregon.cannot letbimgo at a time'like this. - , wmiiuawtf -va ui ca- i oiuuifcjr i . iwrpinixins.cur mgner insxicuuons. - respon D. H; TALMADGB mint handy for use In case of a declaration of war fn my interior. Reply to a query: The average man in the United States lives to the age of 55, the average wom an to the ago of IT. Only six tenths of one percent of our total population attains the ago of It years. Take us as a whole, we still look for the crossword pussies tn tne newspapers. But not so fever ishly as in days gone by. Memories exert a potent influ ence in our Uvea. Suppose, or try to suppose, what our lives would be, were wo unable to remember. We should be pretty well lost without our parallels and prece dents, don't you think? Happy memories endure longer than un happy ones or should. Yes. I know; unhappy memories com. Wo all have them. X for one giro them no welcome. I firmly push them out and close the door (and they remain outside and make disagreeable noises and throw things at the windows, more or less, but just the same they know what I think of 'em). And. too. tnero are sad memories, which make- us neither happy nor un nappy. And there are others, all sorts. But the happy ones endure longer than any of the others. At any rate, it Is so with me, and I nope it is so with an of you. Swimming In the warm waters ef tha bellaw leJcn was n dalfrnt. Lv- Inm ah tSm najid. ar nnnin lterej.lf I Sargent. . . She managed te mm Uia MnH mvhie raft mnArvwl I SPOak naturally. ! out in the lake, waa health rivinz.1 But aha felt light beaded. Sick mm Tjhi'i t1a km ,!.-1 with the shock of it pear, aha rained weight began tel Ho bowed to her mother, shook m MlB.-nvnatiAlie.alhanda with Dad. took mi iUmw. rifhmr bo. Ohm LOy Lou looked at the faint gray mora singing was a Joy. Studying! War that waa Ken's face. The nmi mbinil aw. Rh AMAtA ftnldosty fragrance of the roses in the stay a whUe longer, te ask for a Vp froat rden swept ever her abort leave of absence. lin almost overpowering sweetness. Sang in the chorea. Sane for tha tfow that Ken waa here, it4 was LadW ruild. Nothing was too old perfect. The days were dreamyrfch fashioned, too sentimentally popo- th warm summer fragraneei the lar. She gave them what they ask- Qjrhta were enchanted. -. oL. sang -Tho Sosarjr with the LOy Loa was a burning brand of fervor of a great theme from a great energy. She was up mixing cakes, opera. Remembered the old hymns, foing the cooking in the kitchen. Sang whatever they wanted. "My, .ntn fofor her mother was oat of but lily Lon has improved a lot," bed. She no longer minded the alow they said. starting wood range, the kettlea of Dad waa so happy to have her water that had to be heated on top home in the evenings. She had al-ef the stove. What are a few in- ways been his tavortte. She sat with conveniences, when you're home ? , him on the little front porch in the she never wanted to sleep. Shq warm darkness. . Iwas never tired. She hardly cared Just behind them mother rocked,! to eat. She waa ao gay, ao wildly, eueuuy, in ner oia wiacer roenng i thrillingly alive. , chair, her long slim feet in their I Her mother liked Kin. She neat black shoes keeping time as thought he was different from the the rockers rocked back and forth,lrest of tho summer crowd. Dad back and forth. liked him, too. Tho others had gone tt was ao peaceiui, ao quiet LOy home. Ken had lingered o for bp - a a. 9 tti sr . t.o e sm S txa xew usa n iivuo girx again, oon I fiahing. "1 with lore for them. Strong with I .or fishing," he eaid. -rhaPs as nope, a uiot aemuioos vnu won-1 rood excuse aa any, iant it?" der ... Dlanninar stare entraaeea.1 "TV4 m. v mb Tf Vwuuht wmu w inBj ppes jen iaugnoa aeiigbteaiy. -ow ances ... This was tha way to soak j why do you suppose I came up here up strengia, vo renew xaita in ono-iat aul self ... To coma back home, and! I dont believe you." be able to look back and see howl -But ifs true it really la.' much you'd progressed. , . . I She wouldn't believe him. . She They sat on tho little porch. Dad (wouldn't let herself believe him. with tha old dog's head on his knee,! When ho came to take her riding motner almost invisible behind the she kept him waiting. Postponed honeysuckle. LOy Loa just a pale I meetings with him. Sat at the lit Ilght, her white dress luminous. I tie golden oak upright piano prac- -fleuo . . . is that you, LDy I ticing, practicing . . . eves- her Lout" I mother thought aha overdid it i. . . Ken bargent He must have I "Lily Lon. too came un for a rest. walked. No sound of tha car. He I dear. I think yon ought to go out waa ngnt were, standing on tne liar a little ride with young Mr. Sar. btue pain at tne xoot ox tne steps. gent, like he wants.1 But she wouldn't go very often. She was intoxicated with this new feeling of power. She was strong. She could work. She wouldn't lose her head the way aha did in April. She'd show Kan Sargent. . . . Their relationship had changed. Now it waa ho who looked wp to her. Ho told her how lovely aha i . , . quoted vagrant bita of poetry. ... rv; The clustered softness of your .. waving hair. That curious paleness which ' enchants mo so. And alt your delicate strength and wonderful air. . . ." ' --essr Sometimes she didnt understand all ho said, hut it flattered her ... she remembered aome of tha words. She knew that Peggy Sage, with all her father'a money, hadnt been able to exdta his admiration aa she, who didnt even try. ... They lay on the raft. In the sun. LOy Loa indolent, creamy skinned, not even breathing hard after tho swim. Ken waa fair enough to burn an unbecoming angry pink, and he wasnt a strong swimmer. . . . Lily Loa had the best of him again. Tm not much good, am I?" ha asked. "Ifs a funny thing, the sec ond generation never amounts to much. Now take my dad.' Ho fought for what he's got. He's wonderful. But he wants me to go on where he left, off, and L . . Fm no good" "Ken, you MUSTN'T say that" Oh, it's true. Now if they'd just let me do what 1 want ... Get out with tha ships, instead of fussing around that darned old office . . ." "I know, Ken." LOy Loa patted his hand gently. She didnt know how it had happened, but things had certainly changed. It waa ho who needed her, even more than aha needed him. . At least she kept it hidden., He couldn't. - ; Still, sitting on the porch, wait ing for him at night, aha could hardly bear it. (Te Be Ceatlaeed) Ce7rkt br Suae Feature Sra&ate, lea. BITS for BREAKFAST -By R. J. HENDRICKS- Oregon Indian religion: . . (Continuing from yesterday:) Said Mr. Gill: "This (the coyote fishing myth of tho Chinook and Clatsop Indians) Is one of tho beet stories, and Is really a sal mon tabu. It is told at much greater length in Dr. Frans Boaa's Chinookan Texts. Coyote lived at Gout (where tho old Sea- Alonr fcnnr. thlm llm. f I Side HOUSO Was) lbttg gO. He had and Ifs been so for a long iottglaetra,,lDout tB S11 8imon ot tune i think or a fish I oncel"1 vwumoia, n reowT w i caught.. You .know, when ':fa. catch, ttom. low has never accomplished any v.v . . .v wing or any great moment he has I ' ".Tr Tv ' to make tho most ot what ho has I eep, bills,, tho breakers driving accomplished. And this fish a two-pound black bass caught from a midland river and landed with out assistance I have . always considered to bo more than ordin arily worthy of remembrance. I waa but a stripling of It at tha time (a boy of 14 is a stripling, isn't he? Or Is he a sapling? Well, it doesn't matter) and It waa no easy thing for mo to land that two-pound black bass. When- it was finally accomplished I . was pretty Well tired out. yar njore wearied., for instance, than I had been on a number of . occasions when, I had tried to explain to mother why my shirt waa wrong side out, and I had always looked on this as a' trying piece of bus iness. ; (Mother didnt favor oar hlmnp among tho spruce trees whoso needles pricked his nose. He grew very hungry;-stopped and. took sand In his paws and threw it Into tho wares, saying: The sea shall go away from hero; grass shall grow and peopio dwell here.' Thua Clatsop plains was made. Arrived at tho Columbia, Tilby said when a horse stepped on hla watch. -.' r I went forth Into blossomland a day or two' ago.' Not far. Out past Mr. Dibble's tulip field and Paul Wallace's orchard and 'over and through the hills to the south. I cannot Quito tell why It It, but inch's little Journey seems to give strength to a faith la better swimming hole, because - a num. I things now and to come, aside ber of nogs had 'a swimming hole I from being In Itself a pleasant ex In tho next pasture upstream, and aha . forbade me to swim there. and well, 1fs easy enough to put on wrong aide-out a shirt such as boys wore for everyday in those times. Tho shirt had but one but ton at tho neck-and tho button waa never used.) But aa; to that nsh rro eaught several fish hero and there since that day and of .several kinds, but that black bass, whoso habitat was a lexy tit tle midland '.river, waa pound' for pound tar aniLaway tho scrappln-est.-' perlence, even though one thinks not a thought, hut only, looks and breathes. .5 Mr. Hoover, ao I read in the newspapers, proposes to refund his salary to tho government. Gr r-rt ,; stealing - political thunder from our Governor Meier, eh? . '"Hugh Mars was down from Jef ferson Monday, He has- sold his Jefferson : Review - and alma to take a' good rest, which he Is en titled to. Hugh and I drifted Into this Tallev On tho same, tide, he, Sometimes, when the teleohona I from" the aonth. I from the. . bell rings yon explode a word in I somewhat more than SI years key of "dM, and aomatlmoa I ago. And we. smoked tho piso Ot wnen tne telephone bell does not I peace la tho old Statesman Job ring yoa explode tho eame word I room, and tho spell of tho pipe m uo samo sey. euro, i snow, baa pever been broken. Happy Circumstances alter cays, as Kiidajf te hlmt - . - v.- . , Coyote went into partnership with tho lizard and tho bat, and they made a net by splitting the roots j of the spruce and. tying! the stranda together; tied pieces of driftwood to the top of. tho net ; and stones to fit its lower edge. and Coyote paddled out with one end ot tho net -and set it in a curve and came ashore with his endV Then they hauled tho net in, aad caught only one salmon. Coy ote was angry because of their ill luck and asked the Great Spirit for a reason. 'Any tool ought to know ho must fish for salmon on tho ebb tide,' was tho answer! It Is' enough I I .havo heard, said Coyote. Next day they caught two. Again Coyote, protested. Ho iwas told that tha day before they had tramped upon tho salmon; that salmon'mnst always bo kept clean else they would bo ashamed, and not coma to the river. Three tho next day, and again Coyote asks: 'What' a tho ' matter now? Tee- terday yoa cat tho salmon in blocks. Never do that," Cut down the -backbone and open tho fish that way. JL little better luck tour next day. Then they learn ed that -cooking three salmon. when unable to eat half ot one. wo aid make tho salmon ashamed, and they would refuse to enter the river. ' ' - - Thus, day after day, they were given an the precepts of tho aal- mon tabu which to this jlay is ob served by tho Indians . on many rivers north of tho Columbia. It is. most remarkable that Indians knew tho ocean shore had been along tho foot of tho hills that ex tend from Coxcomb hill in Astoria to . Tillamook Head, and that hundred miles . ot sandy ; plains had-been built against these hills by the Columbia and the sea." ' - U -;- Cm quoted . front "Oreron Set tlers, by Alexander Koss, a des cription of Indian medicine men, briefly: I now refer to a'einan of: functionaries called medicine men ... They art called tho tin uiuaugns. w whlCb slrnlfJea. la their language, men ot supernat ural run, . wno pretend - to know all things and that ther can kin and cure by magic whom they please. Among tho whites they would f by the -name ot doctors or Jugglers. There are no acquire ments, so far as I know, deemed essential to quality a person for the office of a tlaqulllaugh. In all Indian tribes there are three or four characters of this descrip tion .... Like most Indians, they possess a good knowledge ot herbs and roots, and their virtues , . They are consulted in all (Continued on Page 7) - Yesterdays ... Of Old Salem Town Talks from Tho States rouua ot Earlier Days April IT, 1P0T The Sport ot pitching quoits has broken out like a spring fever, at Willamette university and as a re sult the campus lawn Is being torn up. Girls as well as boys are spending their leisure hours at the pastime.'. , Carl Gabrielson was by a largo majority elected as assistant base ball maaager, at a meeting ot tho student body of the high school yesterday. . Obserranco of tho- first anni versary of ' the earthanako - and tiro which laid Saa Francisco in ruins on April II of last year was begun in tho bay city last night. April IT, 1023 Indicative of tho healthy condi tion of tho northwestern fruit business for the coming year is the announcement that of tho 4S0O can of apples produced in tho Hood River and White Salmon districts la 1121. there are left only about SO cars. All Salem canneries are anticipating pros perous runs. V, . ;,l Mrs. Carrie B. Adams will di rect tho community sing to ho held next Wednesday evening at tho armory as part of . 'Musis Week. She is composer' ot hun dreds ot songs, operettas and can tatas, and the first woman in tho United States to direct Handel's oratorio, rThe Messiah. Company F of Salem scored a slight lead over the llznd infan try, O. N. In their dual ata leUe meet yesterday. Tho moot consisted ot basketball, baseball, shooting, boxing, drill, equipment I race, sad wrestling., v. t r