PAGE FOUR The OREGON STATESMAN; Salem, - Oregon Wednesday Morning. Jnlr 2T; 1932 - 4 1, a vi i riniiuiii Wo roror Sway 17; No Fear Shall Awn From First Statesman. March 28. 1851 , THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Charles A. Smcvt; Sheldon F. SAckjctt, Pn6iiArs Charixs A. Spkacus - ... Editor .Manager Sheldon F Sackett - - - - Managing Editor Member of the Associated Press ' The Associated Praia la exclusively entitled to the use tor tloYC allnaw dispatch, credited to It Ot not otherwise credited is. this paper Pacific Coast Advertising Representatives: Arthur W. Sty pes. Iftc Portland. Security Blda. -San rranrlsce. Sharon Bide-: Loa Angela W Pao. Bid. Eastern Advertising Representatives: rord-Paraons-Stecbar. New Tore, 171 UadlaoD Ave.; Chtcaxo. 0 N Michigan Ave - - Entered at the Toetoffice t Soam. Oregon, cs Seeond-Claee Matter. Published every morning except Monday. Bueinest of fire, tl 5 S. Commnrrial Street. ' . '. , - SUBSCRIPTION RATES; Mail Subscrtptlon Rate.! m Advance Within jOresoni Daily and Sunday. 1 Mo 80 cents; S .'Mo. Sl.; Mo. t . year 14.0 . saaevhere SO cent par Mo- or S5.00 tor 1 year la advance. By City Carrier: 45 cents a mcrith: $5.00 a year la advance. Par Copy i centa On tralna and New Stande eanta Catalogue of Errors TT ia rather divertinz to see the rush to the mourners' bench 1 among papers in the state which previously were hos- .T7 . . . m i- ,rr 1 11 A1 V:ViAi tile to tne selection 01 xjt. rverr as cuauteuor wi me ws"" educational institutions of the state. Papers as far apart graphically as the Portland Oregonian "and the Klamath Falls Herald dramatically hit the sawdust trail in an "ex post facto" burst of speed. The Eugene papers are practical-K- the onlv ones resisting the rleas to "flee from the wrath to come". Whether this evident panic will reach the board also remains to be seen; but it would not be at all surprising. The issue has changed now from the simple one-of the election of a chancellor to the retention of the board as now constituted. The Oregonian says, with reference to the "un ifipd nlan" that the board "has pressed on and wrought well". With due deference both to that newspaper and to the board we challenge the truth. of that assertion. In our opin ion the board has not wrought well but ill in the develop ment of what plan it has. Virtually every major decision the board has made has been m error. The first mistake the board made was in the employ ment of an educator with a Ph. D. degree as "executive sec retary" at the munificent salary of $7500 per year. The Statesman criticized this at the time : and subsequent events have proved the correctness of our criticism. A high-powered educator as executive secretary - introduces a complication which will grow more rfserious after electing another high powered educator as chancellor. This is said in no disrespect for Dr. Lindsay; although we cannot say that his selection was a happy one. The second mistake of the board is to build up a large central bureau in Salem,, increasing the overhead, adding to the duplication of clerical expenses; and detaching adminis tration from local campuses wnere it Deiongs. What -Next?- r dltZ .r " iw ii'iiniinnn iiimifX nil rmiMiifc?mi' 'M - " ' aaM ii'SMilfffnBIBSlR The Murder of the Night Club Lady Br ANTHONY 'AB BO r - New Views Tha question aske4 yesterday by Statesman reporters was: "Do you find life enjoyable from day to day? Doea the depression hart much effect on your attitude?" Addle Lynch saleswoman, "I tinr tA Voan itanrnaalnt. fitn tiav- While there is reference in the law to fixing the board's tag much effect on my attitude. but when one bears all tha talk lt'a a Job. I believe I find life just as enjoyable as I did before the depression was talked." office in Salem we do not believe it- was contemplated by the legislature. to build up an elaborate and expensive bu reau at the state capital. Henry Dillon, stndent. "Sure things are as enjoyable except when one is out of a Job. Bat 1're been pretty lucky In that re spect." Mrs. Ronald Craren, home mak er, "I can still smile." Mr. Mason Bishop, home mak- But the great error of the board in our judgment is in the reorganization of the university and the state college. In the past these were , separate institutions, distinct in pur pose, in atmosphere and in scope, of worlc The one, the university, was primarily cultural and professional; the oth er, the state college, was primarily practical and vocational. Each had a field of work and of service meriting support of the people of the state. True there was some overlapping and sottia dunlication. Some of this was inevitable : some on "Well, no. 1 don't think it is each campus could be dispensed with, and this was what the ilat,m7n 7n uh: i, . , , 1 I only I reel so very sorry for those itgismiuie was siiimuk hu who are 'down and out " The program of the state board introduced a fundamen- tal change however. It definitely creates two universities: , . one a university of arts and letters at Eugene and the other 1 urner rSoy Scouts a university of sciences at Corvallis.Jnstead of a university Will Make Trip to designed as a Held lor wide intellectual exploration we nave i pOT lurl,-. an fnatifnt.fmi rramneA atiA narrnwpri and confined to SO-1 vmP ncar menama called humanities. Instead of a state college saturated withf the spirit of adapting knowledge to very practical ends we I inary meeUnr for tha boy who . have an institution converted into a university of the j will form a Boy Scout troop, was ,.-... I neia ai ma scnooi Dunaing Mon sciences. . - ... I day night, with D. B. Parks chair - in our juagmeni. me enect oi us uecisiou is xuiui w mau or Seont COmmittea and the development of the university at Eugene, ine appeal ox other Interested helpers present. Pres.: Hall for retention of pure sciences at his institution Waldo Riches has been chosen was not only eloquent but it was logical But the board blind- VViJS ly following the survey report wrenched pure sciences from boy, be taken Thursday for thejthiversity and transferred them to Corvallis. It is as a few days outing.at tha scout . - m m m m m m m a va though the board had cut tne neart out ox tne university ana v said it could continue to function because it still had a brain. The board is now reaping the results of its own errors. So long as the university was a university in curriculum and . atmosphere it had a justification for independent existence; So long as the state college was a typical land grant college with predominant emphasis on the vocational motive, it too had an excuse for independent existence. But when the board converted the the two institutions into segments of one university it -threw open the door for consolidation of the two fractions into one institution on one campus. . r The action of the board in making scrambled eggs of ,- - courses, in moving professors deftly from one campus to an ; other, and finally in putting rollers under one school of some . : 800 or a thousand students and moving it to another campus whose facilities for taking care of it were notoriously lack- ing created the unsettlement which encouraged consouda tionists to carry forward their campaign. BITS for BREAKFAST By R. J. HENDRICKS- Whera Qulnaby, last of tha Mo-1 lallas, llTed: a (ContinulnR- from yesterday:) Tha Gear family, for safety, went that night to the house of their neighbor, John S. Hunt, about three miles away not knowing when Crooked Finger might come back. a S -a Tha companies of settlers met tha next morning at Coosta's camp, on tha Ablqua, near tha present Mt. Angel. All they could i earn or tha Moiaiia cnier waa that tha Klamathi had gone; which they already knew. They divided as tha day before and proceeded up tha Molalla, tha horsemen along tha open prairie on the north aide, and tha foot men through tha timber on tha south side. a After a considerable march, the whites wera greeted with a war whoop from a canyon filled with Tina maple and other brush. Tha Klamath had chosen what they thought was a strong position. They had been told that "Boston men would not fight In tha brush, so thought themselres se cure. a "a But they wera mistaken, and surprised, for there was a quick eharga by tha whites and la less than flT minutes nine Indians wera killed, and the squaws tak en prisoners. Only one white man waa wounded; James Stanley, who caught an arrow In his breast and held it until ha had Jellied tne Indian, and then ex tracted tha weapon, "for fear it might be poisoned," ha said. Like tha day before, the cavalry could not help bat the footmen need ed no help. a S "a Briefly, that is the story of the famous pioneer Battle of tha Ablqua. After the second day's fight, tha men returned to tha camp of Coosta and gave that chief his orders. One order waa that Crooked Finger was never to enter the house of a white man or woman unless there waa a white man in tha house. If ha did. ha waa to ba shot on sight. Old Red Blanket's wife asked Ja cob CapIInger why tha whites wera so hard on tha Klamaths, wnen tne Molalla were Just as insulting and mean as they wera and tha whites did not kill them. CapIInger told her the Molalla owned this llllhee, or claimed It, whUa tha Klamaths did not be long In this ralley. and tva aet- tlera could not take so much of their abuse and threats. She said that was "close wawa", and that she "cumtuxed" what ha meant, And would go home and never come back. Then she was told the Klam- camp near Mehama. The next lo- th Am mnA v" . cal meeting will be Monday night. August 1. Daily Health Talks By ROYAL S. COPELAND, M. D. - , Again the board is grievously at fault in the type of ad ministrative organization which it has created. In it re sponsibility is not centered but diffused. Deans, chancellor. presidents, board secretary are left in a merry scramble to JKbSedoeat una tne range or their authority. Under such a scheme the I reach the intes- energies of the chancellor will be fully absorbed in acting as co-ordmator rather than as Intellectual leader and execu IF you hare ever seen a parson with "yellow jaundice," yoa will riin4M wot uuwuia u this condition. Jaundice is not a dia- easa, but a symptom of a disease. ana results xrotn bile enterinc the blood. Bile, fanned by the Hvr and stored in tha railbUdder. la is important product. It stim ulates intestinal action. and is oaeeuary for tha absorption 91 fatty foods. Whan tha now ia obstructed and Dr.CeyelaW tines as it should, it entars the blood and discolors the akin, whicfc ha tiye. In fact the scheme will have to be radically altered or it ndmakeTitch will break down of its own complexity. " j is the condition commonly called Hlnollv tha .tot. Vmi.) . I I jaaaoKe. its selection of Pres. Churchill tn hMd tm thp tmrmal fralnJ ;Jft?J?U7l2.f2!?lf?.a? ing work of the state. Here was a glowing opportunity to j tinal traet of the bile passages or r normai 80110013 lrora the level of mediocrity f.VLr iulu 21 DiisiTirm mnn in vun;.n ?4.i. tL. I Li ij i : Mk .ZT! T . . 1 icv ci vi cuuuxvi way, er it may indicate disease of IL 7 vv"3 111 -ne state, witnout disparaging In the least! pancraaa or blood. nLrfi65 2 ?r tbe OUtlook Which o7HctleoU,riu i s H. " iur me tasK wmcn remains to be donel terribly DUr wortUI It occurs en the for Oregon's normal schools. - ? , " I second ortkird day after birth and I? fre, the major decisions which the state board hTC u uiaue. Ana we cnaiieno-e thn cnnwfnoo. M. i - tk. tam JPf to tbj, catalogue of errors Is added ths vacilla- f?t ? " tf! SSiftMff ttehoda exhibited by the beard our con- UiJSL ? 7? is inat it is no longer deserving of public confidence ; The cause 1 not known poaitivaly, u ,.T vu memDersnip snouid be changed or else the board auuusnea. but ft is belieTed to be due te a catarrhal inflammation of the lining of the upper intestinal traet and of the bile passages. In this disease the afflicted per son complains of mild headache, di siaess, nausea and vomiting, and these symptoms increase ia severity if tha patient refuses to g te bed. There is no fever, but tha yellow discoloration of the skin increases and tha patient is noticeably irrita ble. Za soma cases the sUa syma- tna Molallaa evidently attended to that for Geer afterward wrote: The whole band of Klam aths passed my house that aama Bight on the way to Mt. Jeffer son pass, and the next day about a dosen of us followed their trad to tha house of John Morlav. where we stayed all nlrht. and the next day followed the trail to tne crossing of the Santlam river, and saw by track In the anov and mud that the Indians had all crossed the river; so we return ed to our homes." Allan J. Da yeya company of cavalary watch- u me iraii. But tha last of the tuamatns had gone. Tha Klamaths never earn hatk to the Willamette. The MolaUas were thereafter as "rood Indian" aa waa expected of them. Crook torn may exist for a long time with- H rtnultZi - . .v ut any other diaepmf orl Aa a rula, l! the attack lasts from three to sU weeks. Treatment of this disease consists essentially of rest and eareful dieL and it is advisable that tha patient remain ia bed while the nausea, vomiting and jaundice continue. A light, soft diet should be given. It may include toast, rruela, junket; eustards. rice pudding, cereals, fruits and vegetables, but only skimmed milk, for no fat of any kind should be included. Daily elimination is essential, but severe purging is not advised. Hot appli cations, such as a hot water bag or stupes, should be applied ever tha lirer region. , In severe cases the gallbladder Is,' sometimes drained by the use of the so-called "duodenal tube" a small rubber tube which is swaSewed by the patient. Through this tube a warm solution is used te wash the gallbladder and Ks passages, and this aida ia overcoming tha inflam mation. .;,.--'- - - Acuta catarrhal Jaundice la not aa important disease, but all eases of jaundice which persist are seri ous, for, if neglected, serious conse quences may result. Jaundice de mand tha personal attention and treatment of a physician. ' CHAPTER . T1I1KT I -NINE HE went on through the memo randa that disclosed what was happening throughout the fire boroagh of the Greater City. A trigger woman had killed her gang ster lever not far from the Doyers Street bend in Chinatown. She had rot away, but aa hour later, her body, chopped ia seven pieces, had been found ia a baker's wagon on 'Third Avenue. From this macabre note, Colt turned to smile at the ac count of what happened to a young New Tork university student while oa a walk through Central Park. A -car stopped by, in which three good looking' girls were riding'. They en- tieed hua Into their car and drove off with him. Hours later he was discovered stusnbling along through a deserted path that wound at last into the lights of Long Island's Merrick Road. Ha had been crim inally assaulted by these amorous Amazons. Up te a late hour no trace of his captors had been found. A case of penny-weighting of ex-' pensive jewels waa reported from one of the important Fifth Avenue jewelers. Johnny Silvers, the felon who had escaped from Sing Sing several months before, had at last been located. He had allowed him self to be arrested as a vagrant in a small Georgia town, and had thus Iain perfectly hidden in a small town jaO. He would have remained entirely safe in he had not written a letter to his sweetheart in Brook lyn. The police had never stopped watching her; they got the letter first and SOrers had been in the line-up that morning. Apparently there was a fresh epidemic of ho tel thieves operating in Brooklyn and Colt made a special notation to get Flynn busy on that aa soon aa the scorpion murder case were disposed of. "You must have hopes of clean ing the murder up pretty aoon," I remarked, as I read that penciled memorandum. Colt's hand toyed with the little ivory bust of Homer that is always close to his ink-stand. "I do," he informed me. There ia only one thing needed to set as on the right track and I believe we shall have that ia our hands In a few hours at the latest. I know now that this is not an original crime, Tony." "I have heard yoa say that you do not believe there ia such a thing as an original crime." "Did I ever aay that? Well, doubtleaa I was right. Anyway, I have just remembered the F a 1 k ease in Vienna. There was a scor pion shoved op the sleeve of a nu mismatist in that case. In many of its features the two seta of crimes resemble each other. It Is possible that the killer of two of our vic tim had known of that case. On the other hand it may be a ease of spontaneous similaritylike the patent applications that duplicate each other, constantly received in Washington. Or like the Even case la Newark. Remember that one where we found the body of the tailor, with a naked woman tat tooed on his arm? And I said he arasnt a sailor because the United States Navy will not enlist a man who haa pornographlo tattooing Aa prudes 1 Well, there ia just a ibvious a clue as that nude lady, (taring us in the face. I hare seen it very early In the game, but there I waa grabbing hat aad coat, ready te daah, whea Captain Israel Heary laid a thick envelope oa the Ceaimisriener'a desk. - future barer of bonds should tear a leaf out of the book of buyers of aitomobii; buy a bond oa the Installment plan .iuia wow jt ivisv onr :iB issuing house "repossess it". -v Z m . . ih muj m lie soiaior in ui A. P. (L What kind of axexeisa is good for reducing tha abdomen? Aw Bending exercise should prove helpful. B F. J. Q. Waal would tm ad vise for arthritis? Ay For full particulars restate Answers to Ucalth Qnerica your cmestioa aad send a stamped. seii-addressed envelope. I have kidney trouble, what you advise for that T Yea should remain tinder the care of the doctor. oaiHiau mt TmImm Man. 1m. ....... . w. k. Immediate district attar that, and later Fred McCormick killed him in viackamas county. -k A . neverung to Qulnabv. That uo-cBier naa oeen frlendlv ttr me wnues. Dan Waldo, acting colonel -of the' companies of set- uara, anew nis perfectly. So. whea aU the Indians of the valley naa oeen rainerad onfn th Grand Rondo and Sllets reserva tions, in tha fifties,' Qulnaby was among them; he and his wife, or wives, but his heart was here. oa waiao nerrlended him t. many wt. ia the summer time, " wa aeiaom in or around Sa em. out no secured long fur loughs la the winter seasons, aad cam oaca to nis old haunts. At first, his winter earn a on what ia now known aa Arbor crw. running to tha west of tha Mrs.. Clifford Browa homo oa Mission street and bordering tha "Bush pasture- on tha east. Mrs. Bala; mother of Cat lived aear. She often told of Quln- y coming noma orunk one day, to that camp, and being met by Ma wife, who upbraided hint, la tha aolsy fracas that followed. viwaaoy graooed a elub aad knocked his squaw flat. She aeam. ed dona for and Qulnaby made traces, urough tha brush. . Mrs. Bala aaw nothlnr mora of him for a few days, after which aha observed hint coming back steal thily, making an investigation pt are some missing factors which are holding me up. When I have those factors. Tony, I expect to eloae up this ease and we will put the aeor- pion legs that old Professor Lock ner found for us ia the glass ease of the Headquarters Crime Mu seum. Meanwhile, Tony, let me re mind yoa that you have not been home aU night or all day. Ton have been without aleep for nearly forty-eight hour. What wilt the charming Betty Canfield Abbot think of me, if I keen yoa on the go like this? I stole yoa from her New Tear's party last night and I have kept you here ever since. Call her np now and tell her that you are coming home. The chief looked at hi watch. "But yoa will have to be back here by sight this evening," he stipulated. I waa grabbing hat and coat. ready to dash, when Captain Israel Henry, the faithful, the silver, haired, stole silently into the room and laid a thick envelope on the Commissioners desk. "A long despatch from Paris," he announced. I couldn't leave then. I knew hew important the Paris information about Lola Care we aeemed to Colt. True, I could not aee why. This was a New Tork crime and I could not understand how he could figure that lta roots lay overseas. But I did know that he waa governed always by sheer reason though at time it did aeem a trifle adventurous and that there was solid, practical sense behind his great expectancy. He was my chief, and he had slept no more man L True, again, there waa no wife at home to worry and fret for Thatcher Colt. Which, so it seemed to me, was aU the more reason I should atick with him. With this, my wife agrees, la principle. Hastily Celt spread out the tele- typed sheet. The report waa mad entirely in English, and consisted of a personal message from M. Dupont, the Prefect of the Pari sian Pelice, to Thatcher Colt. "I have made a complete survey of the history ef Basil Boucher," cabled M. Dupont. "It la certain, that the woman he loved was Lola Care we, the woman whose murder yoa are Investigating. I have made exhaustive Inquiries te establish this fact. It ia also certain that up te the time he met Lola Car we, who lived alone In the Rue Bona parte, this young man's was an ex emplary Ufa. He lived with his par ent in the Rue du Temple, not far from the Square. Basil was a bank clerk who was evea able te save money oat ef hie meagre salary, in addition te providing for his father and mother. They were su perior people, aad well educated, but they had come down In the world. Then the father died. It waa soon after this possibly because now he had more money to spend that Basil began te play in his life. In fact, the young gentleman found himself for the first time tn funds. He waa not a wastrel, a gambler, or anything like that. But he just went around having a good time, modestly, and with gusto. There were several nympbes de la pave with whom he became rather well acquainted. He felt that ae one ef his friend or business as sociate waa aware of these minia ture adventures. And he felt him self something of a devil of a fel low. (TtBtCntMd) Car7rfcttim.krCOTki-rriaae.lAa. Dutnaoted ay King rcatvas Sya4icat affairs at his camp. He finally came to where his squaw was. and terrific verbal squabble follow ed. Bat the lord of the camp ev idently patched ap a peace, for la a little while things settled down and ran along as formerly. Mrs. Bain, when widowed, was mar ried to S. Strong, pioneer tanner, father of Amoa Strong, most prominent among early day Sa lem restaurant men. Their home in tha seventies waa at Bellevue and Commercial street: the property stUl In the family. "a During his last years, Qulnaby had his camp on the east side of Winter street, oa tha south bank of tha North Mill creek, as stated yesterday. Thla was with tha tuU consent of Dan Waldo, who was friend of the man who had been friendly to the early settlers and a valuable one, aa he knew the Molalla tongue aa well a that of the Klamaths and other east ern Oregon Indlaas, their ancient tribal relative and allies. "a But Qulnaby and his Indian friends who made his camp their lounging place, always noisy, be came particularly ao one winter. They were especially loud with tneir gambling games, one of which was played with two sticks. a long- and abort one. The gang would gather around a log or board, squatting on the ground, and a the game went on utter an ear piercing chant, "hoiwo, hot wa. ate that no cold print can describe. Tha bet was oa tha longer and shorter stick which a player held ia each hand in front of him, after holding his hands behind his back. All tha whUa the unearthly chanting went on, ac companied by loud hammering with dubs on the log or board. Dan Waldo told his son. Wll 11am. that next fall, whea Quln aby and his gang came back, ha must ho refused the use ef his accustomed camp, because tha neighbors complained of their outlandish aoUea. aad aoma of tha women were afraid of them. So It waa agreed. "a "a .One day, old Qulnaby cam rid ing op oa hi pony, followed by his squaw aad his companions, with his campinx outfit. - dor. ete, etc.. and asked William Wal do for the key to tha gate, after narinx passed tha usual aalata tlon . of "claiham : six.- (how da yea do, sir), etc ' But William Waldo, aa waa tha understanding wua Dan, told tha old fallow that ho could not use tha camping place aay mora that his crowd made too much noise and kept tha neighborhood awaka at night. (Continued aad concluded to morrow.) The Safety Valve - - Letters from Statesman Readers BEFORE AND 'AFTER Before prohibition Salem bad a brewery, and every morning men with drays were at the brewery and piled these drays with , bar rels of boots. These barrels .of li quor ware distributed to tha sa- oona vi cuy ana county. Wo also had II saloons in our city that kept open aevea daya in a week although the law forbade open saloons Sunday. It a policeman was Informed that a certain saloon was opened (on Sunday) the policeman walk ed In the opposite direction. Ferry street was so notorious that decent womea were warned not to rentura there. Tha Jail never lacked tor "boarders' . aad most cases in volved were caused by too .much liquor. ; The working man might find the bank closed after hlsiday'a work was done, but the salooa was always open and ready to cash any check provided there was a'prospectlre customer. It the bar tender tailed to get tha custom ers money there were gamblers who assisted and fleeced tha man of au his earnings. I The city had men and womea who were branded with names the mention of the same gave ona an Index ot their true characters. Ona of these womea became ao gloriously full that she tell from the sidewalk into a shallow itch. Land there aha remained: ia a drunken stupor all alght long. Today that aama woman who atui bears some of the sear of years at debauchery now Urea a sober Ufa, dresses well aad for once Urea ia a respectable dwell ing.. 1 Tha worst part ot this liquor program Is. that the childrea of parents who imbibed too itreoty came into tha world teeblemlcded. and tha best medical skill ia tha land cannot change each a condi tion. - ; J Tha great cry was "Boose Makes Basin ess." - . ? .Attar Oregoa weat dry thla ia what aoma business man aaid: A grocer: "Sine tha state weat dry all say eld billa that r never expected te gat are being paid and ran dolag a good buslneea. A jeweler: "My buslnesa I trebled. Folks who hesitated to bay la aalooa daya now i hare money te spend aad I'm forever for prohibition," A school principal: "This Is the first time ia my life that I hare failed to go before the school board for books for children, and what la more, the children are well fed and clothed. I never dreamed that the absence at the saloon could make such a difference," Statistics inform us that for ev ery ll.OBO.OOt spent in the brew ing lndastry, 71 person are em ployed. For every $1,000,000 spent In any other lndastry SOS persons are employed. It haa been stated that booze la now easy te get. Two Oregoa womea motored, across thla con tinent and were In two of our largest cities besides being in a score of smaller cities and they only saw oae person under the in fluence of Uquor and heard an other who was in a hotel keep ing others awake. This shows that boose is not so easy to procure nor so freely used as quoted. It is claimed 'that our den res- si on is duo to prohibition. Eng land has plenty of booze and the depression ia England is so much worse than ours that one ot Eag land's leading men said, "Wo wish wo could have jast two years ot America's depression. . & JESSIE MARTIN. Daily Thought "Nor will the greatest wealth preserve as from, suffering Sur prise, Anxiety and Terror , . ." Marcus Aurellaa Chemawa Grangers Enjoy Lawn Party At Claggett Home CHEMAWA. July II Tha members ot the Chemawa rraara drill team with their famlliae gathered at the home of Mr. aad Mrs. Arch Claggett Satarday alght and enjoyed a lawa party. - Those present wera ' Mr. aad Mrs. Albert Glrod. Mr. aad Mrs. W. XL Savage. Mr. and Mrs. I. a Aekman, Mr. aad Mrs. H. W Bow den. Mr and Mrs. S. H. Francisco. Mr aad Mrs. Arch Claggett, Mrs. Galaard. Misses Dorothy Aekman. Phyllis Gansley, Mary Steven oa. Helen Galaard, Margaret Zl llnski. Gleam Saragsv Robert DU em, WUlard Savage, Ola Harold, Harry Keeter, Eleanor Francisco, Linda Lea Glrod. Shirley Glrod. Raymond Zleltaski, Warrea Clag- tt Vtltna S a a a Imnlnr Francisco. p Tha: regular meeting: at tha Irranra will he Thursday alrhL