The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 27, 1932, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
The OltEGOK STATESMAN, Salem-. 'Oregon. Tuesday Morning, Seplemlef 27. 1932
.i'. V Lit..
i yr-' if
By' EDWIN L.
MACDONALD
HEART STRINGS
Jairniiii ii ti lmj mil Li
"No Favor Sways Us; No Fear SkaU Awn
From First Statesman, March 28, 1851
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
r Charles A. Sfraguk, Sheldon F. Sackctt, PaoKsasrs
ChaIX8 A. S PRAGUE - - - Editor-Manager
Sheldon F. Sackett j -" f - - Managing Editor
k -f Member of the Associated Presa
The Associated Preaa la exclusive! entitled to th u -for pnbllca
1sn of all bw dispatches credited M It or not otherwise credited IP
thia paper. ; i j - -
' Facific Coast Adveriiring Representatives:
Arthur W. Stypes, Inc.,1 Portland. Security Bid.
: San Francisco, Sharon Bld; Los Ancetes, W. Pac.5 Bid.
' " Eastern Advertising Representatives :
. Ford-Parsona-Stecher. Inc.. iNew York. t1 Madison Arc;
f Chicago. ifiO Pjl. Michigan Ave.
Entered at the Potto ff ice at Salem, Oregon, a Second-Clats
Hatter. Published every mofning except Monday. Butinett
office, tli S. Commercial Street.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
Malt Subscription Rates. In Advance. Within Oregon: Dally and
Sonday. 1 Mo. cants; 3 Mo. Il.ti: Mo. $2.25; 1 year $4.00.
Elsewhere SO cents per M.O.. or.S5.j60 tor I year In advance.
By City Carrier: 4S cents a month; $5.00 a year In advance Per
Copy 3 cents. On trains and Newjs Stands 6 cents.
Notes From Over the County
A family has just located iji Stayton, coming to Oregon
from South Dakota, so The Statesman correspondent
in Stayton reports. The heads of the family is a landowner in
South Dakota but three years of grasshoppers caused him
vto turn his eyes westward.! He got literature on the Wil
lamette valley from the Portland and Salem chamber of com-
laerce, and "here they are"J Now he is looking for a farm,
intending to make this his permanent home.
He can't do any better stay where. No grasshoppers here,
no hessian fly. no cinch bugs! boll weevil or corn borer. About
the only pests we have are politicians and they don't hurt the
cropsi Here indeed the earth is generous and provides a di
versity of products such as few other regions in the temper
... ate zone produce. We hope the family get3 permanently lo
cated here. Transplanted South Dakotans make good citi
zens. Incidentally score another for Charlie Wilson's "Come
to Oregon".
A new weather prophet appears from Hayesville. This
is the season to expect reports on what the Indians say. Us
ually they predict a long, hard winter , and do so safely be
cause their prophecy is quickly forgotten. And nature ob-
of prolonged cold weather.j This time our Hayesville cor-
resondent says that "wooly worms" are making signs to in
dicate the winter will be mild. We do not know the "wooly
worm", nor what its means
j ........ ,,- .. : : : " '
; Waiting for the Flying Fools
4:- " " - . -law
-' . . f - n. (Fit
I - ISSm ya"- ," .2S5,l,7wIvr I - ' K 't? P I
I t?" a?r --: (X
. 5?s,:.r, .fOfer
of weather forecasting are. Per
haps it grows short wool fot mild winters and long wool for
cold winters. At any rate wei shall see how reliable the "wooly
worm" is as a long term barometer.
This is a big week for the rural communities of the val
ley. In hundreds of homes' the boys and girls ae off to Sa
lem to attend the state fair,
around the Four-H club bui
and calves and canned fruit
prizes. Liberty district sou
For them the state fair revolves
ding. They will find Harry Sey-
znour here ; and the youngsters have brought along their pigs
! and ears of corn to compete for
th of Salem, is one of the most
.progressive communities of jthe county; so it isn't surprising
to read Liberty is sending in a Four-H club team. They are
alternates to Silverton and Mt. Angel in stock judging. Being
from ; Liberty, we'd think ihey ought to be set to prune
judging instead. 1
Funny how things change. A few weeks ago the packers
insisted that $5 a ton was he best the market could afford
for green prunes. The farmers protested and asked for $10.
The price stiffened, finally i $12 quotation was reported. At
a.ny rate Sunnyside, famed prune district, reports that grow
ers there may leave off drying to take the "green" price.
y - These are busy days in jthe country. Summer work i3 ta
pering off , but fall work presses. Schools have started again,
community organizations, clubs, granges, churches, are pick
ing up activities after the svimmer recess. It's a fine country;
and the man from South Dakota will soon wonder why he
withstood three years of grasshoppers when this valley was
beckoning him all the time!
Yesterdays
... Of Old Salem
Town Talks from The States
man of Earlier Days
September 27, 1907
Tbat the Salem and Marion
county officers did splendid work
in keeping down the criminal ele
ment and maintaining good order,
both in the city and at the fair
grounds during the state fair
week, is a matter of general com
ment.
r
Although the Vaudette theatre
has a large and profitable patron
age on Sunday afternoons, the
management has decided to close
on that afternoon hereafter, gir
ing exhibitions on Sunday evening
as usual.
Canada's new pure food law
went into effect this week. Both
the Canadian law and the new
British law are direct results of
the packing-house exposures in
this country last year and con
gress meat inspection law.
The Mahtma Triumphs
Airail Dd-pound man, slowly starving on nis cot under a
mango tree in an Indian jailyard, has by sheer force
t of will brought to agreement high and low caste among the
Hindus and forced to his teirms the distant government of a
great empire. Mahatma Gandhi, whom we of the western
world have treated with mingled praise and contempt and
ridicule, proves himself one! of the greatest of a long line of
philosophers who have made India famous for long centur
ies. We Christians, so-called, who rely on force and bluff
and intrigue, may see in Gandhi a Hindu who "out-Chris
tians" us. Though we know little of the intricacies of the
problems of India, we cannot fail to recognize in this sin
gular character probably the greatest spiritual force in the
world today. Here is one who by pure pacifism, and" chiefly
by his moral leadership is jsteadily wresting from Britain's
grip self-government for India.
The present problem is one of representation in the pro
vincial and central legislatures. Since 1919, instead of ma
jority rule in general elections, representatives have been
chosen by groups, the Hindus getting a certain number and
Moslems a certain numberl The Round Table, conference in
London broke up without fcny agreement among the Indian
delegates as .to the basis of representation in the new gov
eminent, so the British worked out a system of "communal i
awards", and allocated representation by separate groups to
minorities including Moslertis, Sikhs, Indian Christians, An-
1 glo-Indians, Europeans, and women. " ,
- Gandhi's recent effort; has been toward increasing the
representation of the "untouchables", the lowest caste Hin-
; dus. His "strike" of refusing to partake of food brought the
high-caste and low-caste leaders into agreement, increasing
the representation of the jj "untouchables" from 71 to 148
seats. The imperial governinent headed by Ramsay MacDon
ald which fixed the; "conimunal awards in lieu of local
agreement has had nO wish to be responsible for the starva
tion of the mahatma, land so readily consented to the agree
ment of the Indian castes. lit is by no means clear whether
other divisive questions ori the new government have been
settled; but Gandhi has stopped his fast.
Practical westerners pave scoffed at this half -naked
little brown manwith hisi simple weaving, his goat's milk
and his day of silence. But! even the western world can mea
sure results And when we! see 60,000 political prisoners in
India suffering in silence, !rhen we see a seething empire in
quiet revolt .without resort to arms, and when we see high
, castes and low castes signing a common sheet of paper at the
bedside, of the mahatma, jand'all this the accomplishment
of one matt, Gandhi, we aire forced into respect for a' man
who can wield such vast influence over the divided millions
of India.. i ;j; ' :
"Sausage put under law" Is one thing we read. This Is the time
of year when if it's good coujntry sausage we like to put it under
the belt.
September 27, 1922
Jackson county, with pears and
peaches that look like the painted
splendors of Michael Angelo and
Rembrandt, and with other agri
cultural and floral marvels, romp
ed off with the first place in the
big eounty exhibit contest at the
state fair.
The supreme court today an
nounced the names of 68 men and
women who passed the state bar
examination in July and who will
be admitted to practice law in
BITS (or BREAKFAST
CBATTES FORTY -FOUR ; . 1 doubt If I could.- I final: but had merely retired be-
rv... u ' j : n..M EyarrboaT ears be s eraxy aioux i tuna it m ner ours sua bbbuw
t.- i. i... 11,1m v7 i Iron. Ha'a a Mack. I met hlxa theltion. waitlnr for Jimmi to come
""' m turn wu. wmtvi . - , , . .1. . . - . -
Brewnlty as Patricia aliee a7 Tom nmmK?rmZ,r"V ' VrT. TTJVJTVZZ
-i tmrv 1- 4Vi.vit "" iua a sit una wi xie mnini
k lore tot Thar karent Urad tlmea la New York. Really, I could this was all it bad meant. When m
toJSHStVr Wt Ua tf I weren't tola lore wit had turned to another woman in-
Nov ad thafa tbe reaaoa torMuaiaua. . . . m nT7? iXcTTi
tlu, Mtuii th. .1 fvV m.. 1 1A bad niTir told her about tbaa the mere Infataatioa of a man
for.," abe added. -They were meeting Mrs. Brownley. Of course ia the thirties for a fresh young
Urine together when I came on the her name had nerer coma up. . . . f aee. And ahe hadlocked the door.
Arv. imciUa about the Idea that the I told her all about this, Patricia had
t tatS m. am t!m nr anAUuiT I wtimiB had met bot Jits and i reauxea ui esornuiy 01 fw mam
resentful toward each other, proud. I Jlmmle la Palm Beach, and had had dona. She had said to herself,
- w I .... . . a. a I aev a V if aa. - V Xtek --
aTOidinff explanation that might I seen both in New York, uz course I isus i ooons mow. a uaa www.
bar brought tmderatandin;. and people talked at resoru; but unless ana uea 10 me. ne ui noooay w
renezeHv. discontented.' ItheT were friends they so rarely I blame but herself.1
"But he told me," gasped Mrs. I met again. I uowerer. ratncia iiasMtu
Brownley, "that there waa nothing! "I must run, the said. "TO be comfortable faculty of being able
between you and him." I late for my lesson. Be back about I to appease her conscience with self
There wasn't. And because! lour, zou can stlek around and I deception, ... ua, i can lie to my-
there wasnt he probably imagines I read or do whatever you like if you I self til) I'm black, but I know Pre
he still wants me. It's an awful 1 dont feel like getting out. I been an absolute little rotter. Pve
muddle.' I She ran out. her mind troubled I broken up Aunt Pam a home. She
Mrs. Brownley made pictures on I by the problems of the woman ahe I may have locked him out over Mrs.
the tablecloth with a fork. "You I ahould have hated: but somehow I Brownley; but it was I wbe pre-
really are rather bitter. Have you II I k e d. Something; In the softness, I pared the' way for Mrs. Brownley.
ceased to care for him!" I the very helplessness of Myra I And now 1 think I'm a heroine be-
"Na And I'm not bitter' toward I Brownley aonealed to the aturdi-1 cause l m ready to step out like a
him. I couldn't be. I can aee bis I nesa of Patricia. ... I can see why gallant lady and let Mrs. Brownley
side of It too clearly. I feel more I Jimnue cares for her. . . . And I can I have him. . . . What I've actually
aorry for him a great deal morel see too, why men loved women of I done is take Aunt Pam's husband
than X do for myseiz. Ana 1 ieeiitae oiaen tunes more easily an ai away xrom ner, men xurnea nun
sorry for you. And for Aunt Pam. I tenderly than they love us. . .
I dont know which ox you is tne she really U in an awful fix. .
more to be pitied." And so Is he. WeU, I'm the one to
"Well, of course, I'm in the worst get out.
fix. She has aa independent xor- Having settled this question, a
tune of her own, and hell settle a I sense of youthful heroism swept
her. She felt she waa doing
rather fine thing- in stepping out
for another woman when aha knew
large sum on her. I have nothing
but the dividends he makes xor me
on the stock market. And naturally
if we break up, that would it?p.
And I wont trust my nttle princi
pal in anybody else a hands."
In a flash, Patricia aaw the an
swer to several things that had
pricked at her mind. For all that
Mrs. Brownley talked of having so
over to another woman.
In reality, Pra trying to railroad
him into marrying Mrs. Brownley
that is, I'm helping her to do
it. I wonder if that woman doesnt
see how she's bound Jimmie upt
And if she didnt see Td see it
when she told me all thatT Maybe
she knew X am just the sort of
little, she had lived two months at I needed him more.
the winning cards were In her little fool who weuld make just the
hands. For the first time in a year, sort of heroic gesture I have made,
her conduct impressed her. She had Oh, poor Aunt Pam! She was
loved Jimmie so long: waited so crying over the phone. ... I could
patiently; yet ahe waa deliberately I teS by the way Dadums talked to
determined to give him up for an-1 her. And for Aunt Pam to break
other woman: because that other I down.
-J3y R. J. HENDRICKS-
the Edouard VII, at seven dollars
a day; and though she said she
didnt care for clothes and had only
one or two good things, Patricia
had discovered she had a great
many rood things.
That Jimmie must be furnishing
the money seemed certain; yet Mrs.
Brownley was not the type to take !
money from a man. Jimmie had got-
She sent off a wire to Jimmie, In
care of his London bankers, say
ing: "Mrs. B. needs you. I dont.
Goodbye.1
She jumped up suddenly, went to
the mirror and stared furiously
into it. "Patricia Braithwait," ahe
said, "you are a darned little rot
ter. But if there's a single trsthful
Maybe IH back out, she k e p 1 1 bone in your vile little body I want
thinking that night as she fell I you to answer one question. Are
asleep. I'm feeling great now, but I you so big and broad and kind and
when I cool off I'm going to suffer I sympathetic that you'd quietly step
ten around this difficulty simply byworid collapsed.
horribly.
The following day her h e r o 1 e
John Mix Stanley,
Indian painter:
(Continuing from Sunday):
The next year, 1854, be was ia
Washington, where he remained
till 1863. In 1864 he went to
Buffalo and began painting his
most important work, the Trial of
Red Jacket, now in the Buffalo
Historical society.
Before Joining the railroad sur
vey in 18 5 S Stanley had deposited
151 pictures in the Smithsonian
Institution. Efforts were made to
have the government purchase the
collection, but without success. On
January 24, 1865, the Smithson
ian. Institution was damaged by
fire and nearly all the Stanley pic
tures were burnt. Five of tha
more important ones had been re
moved from the art gallery to an
other part of the building,, and
thua escaped damage. Tbeae are
now In the United States national
museum, and are excellent exam
ples of the artist's work. (Tha
five pictures saved are the Council
at Talequah, Korakkookus, Osage
Scalp Dance. Buffalo Hunt, the
Apache Chief, Black Knife. They
are reproduced In Smlthsonlaa In
stitution, Annual Report, lvZf.)
Oregon. Seventeen appl 1 c a n t s
failed to pass , the examination.
President Harding has again
given evidence of his determina
tion to fulfill party pledges to tne
country by calling a special No
vember session of congress to
consider the ship subsidy bill.
Daily Health Talks
By ROYAL S. COPELAND, M. D.
The Oregonian refers to the "sheer poetry" of Ben Hur Lamp-
mans prose. Most other editors indulge ia 'shear poetry",. -
0
Dr. Copelaad
OSS of hair is one of the
most common of human ex
periences. A arrest deal has
been written about this trouble.
Much of it must be taken with a
grain of salt.
Some author!
. ties believe bald
' ness is due to an
impairment of
the cells of the
hair. O t h e r a
claim that it is
caused by a dis
ease pr abnor
mality of the
scalp.
Through out
life there is al
ways more or
less loss of hair,
but few have oc
casion to worry
about this because constant replace
ments are made in most cases.
There are cases in which the ex
act cause of loss of hair cannot be
determined, but eenerallv it can be
definitely attributed to some dis
turbance of health.
Causes of Hair Leas
''Congenital alonecia" ia a condi
tion In which a child Is bora with
out hair. The cause of this condi
tion is not known, but it is believed
to be hereditary, for it certainly
appears, to run in families. These
children grow to maturity without
hair and are bald-headed through
out sue. .
"Alopecia areata," or loss of hair
Ia patches, has been known for
many centuries, and was first de
scribed by Celsus, a Greek physi
cian, ia tne year os B. c Little has
been contributed since that time
toward the understanding or treat
ment of this disorder, in which there
are patches varrins? in size and
shape that contain no hair what
ever, uztea there is a re growth of
hair In these natches. bnt tha hair
that come in are usually white. No
doubt many of my readers have ob
served this condition. It Is net lim
ited to the scalp, but may occur ia
tne beard, or the eyebrows.
Infection is the most common
cause of loss of hair and usually
it is caused by a parasite. It may
be associated with ringworm. It is
almost exclusively a disease of
childhood.
"Tinea capitis" Is the technical
term used for infections of the hairs
of the scalp. The modern treatment
of tinea capitis is removal of all the
nair by carefully measured X-ray
treatment. When croner nrecau-
tlons are taken and there is no re
infection, the new hairs that grow
will be free from Infection.
Another disease caused by a
germ, which is seen la adult life
as well as in childhood, is called
"tinea favus." Ia this, yellow
crust forms on the scalp and there
is marked loss of hair. Thia disease
has favorably responded to modern
forms of treatment.
Of "seborrhoea" tha familiar
trouble universally called "dan
druff," the cause Is not definitely
known. It is most common In adults.
ana unless properly treated leads
to loss of hair. Unfortunately,
most persons neglect dandruff. Poor
manner of living, unhygienic care
of the scalp and carelessness ia the
use of hairbruahea and combe are
a few of the many factors responsi
ble for dandruff. Keep your brush
and comb dean, and do not permit
others to use them,
Ceeaalt Year Phyaidaa
There are various forma of alo
pecia, or loss of hair, which Is usu
ally a symptom of some local dis
ease of the scalp. It may occur
after diseases that are accompanied
by fever, such as influenza, typhoid
aad pneumonia.
Aa we grow older our hair natu
rally becomea thin. Baldness oc
curs ia both men and women, but
ia more pronounced ia men. Some
become bald at an early age ; ".then,
never. If you have any disorder of
the scalp, consult with your physi
cian. Proper and Immediate care Is
an important step ia preserving
your hair.
Cspvrlsfta, IMS.
When Edwin Bryant b&w Stan
ley in San Francisco in 1846 the
painter told him that he was pre
paring a work on the savage
tribes of North America and the
islands of the Pacific, which when
completed "will be the most com
prehensive and descriptive of the
subject of any that has been pul-
llsned." This project was never
carried out, though there has re
cently come to light evidence that
some chapters were put in type.
In 1929, the Museum of the
American Indian. Heye Founda
tion, received from GaTi Melchers,
the well known painter, a collec
tion of ethnological specimens
that had been gathered by Stan
ley, in the collection were found
eight press-proof sheet! of text.
There la internal evidence that
these were written In 1868 or
1869, aad by some one other than
Stanley, but they were evidently
meant to accompany a portfolio of
his drawings made from his field
sketches. Stanley believed that
the Indian race was doomed to ul
timate extinction, and it was his
desire to publish a work In which
its customs, habits and dress
would be preserved. The text men
tioned comprises three pages of a
Preface; two pages entitled Prai
rie Indian Encampment: two pag
es, Chinook Burial Grounds; and
one page, Buffalo Hunt. The Pre
face gives a good deal of bio
graphical information and an ac
count of the' painter's various
trips to the west and a list of
tribes visited. If this work had
been completed it would have
been a most valuable contribution
to ethnological history. Stanley
died at Detroit April 10, 1872.
The following list of paintings
made In the Oregon country is
taken from the Smithsonian catalogue:
Umpquas: Enah-te, or Wolf
(1848).
Klamaths: Te-to-ka-nlm and
Enish-nim, his wife (1848).
Calapoolas: Telsto (1848).
Chinooks: Stomaquea. principal
chief of the Chinooks (1848).
Tei-ai-iek, Chinook squaw
(1848).
Willamette Falls Indians: Wa-
shapmus, principal chief (1847).
Mary and Achate, squaws (1847).
Kllckitats: Casino (Casenove)
(1848).
Walla Wallas: Peo-peo-mux-
mux, or Yellow. Serpent (1847).-
Cayuses: . Te-lo-kikt. or Craw
fish Walking Forward, Shu-ma-
out of another woman's way if you
actually wanted a man yourself?
You know darn well you wouldn't
taking her small capital and pre- R beraB eleTen o'clock You know the reason you liked the
woman in ua nrst place was De-
cause you didnt want him any
more, and you didnt have the gall
to ssy to him, 'sorry, old dear, that
rve upset your affairs, but count
vattiimas v n eves tt riea wit sa i r in arw an i ...
vcuuua - I w h ft n Mr. Braithwait received a
Street, thus enabling him to ive pnon fnm Pamela. She had
her lavish "diyidends." .j-i tv. mvtnn.
Patricia wondered that the wo-,..j Mm v... in.K with w
man never thought of this herself. lev- JnrrmrH .hont Patrtria. bnt
Perhaps it had been she who had I j: j ..v v.. A -nrnm ,in. nn.me out of the mesa. I've chanred
thought of it first, and put the idea to tne pkone. Pamela wanted his ad- ray ind It hurt your vanity abomi
in Jimmie's mind, thua saving her I
a Kvrrf BAmet Vines fw Pr4ttV.
Inably that he hadn't spent the
from lowering herself in his esteem, wait didnt know what Patricia felt P1.1, mooning over you; but
and at the same time accepting aa i M j received a blow. ouuiae oz mat you were relieved,
he could give her Oh, no I must I ATn .t rt P..!,'. '- I and grabbed at the woman as a
have a nasty suspicious mind It I , ,Vat mm ... j;.ni-5 saver.
was us idea, oi course ana sne s Kored, Patricia had in the be- r,ow Ton l:now the truth! And it
exactly the type who would never rinninr 1,3 all thought of f1 7u Umn thl Tou've
give lv a inougns. v I Pamela's reaction or feelinr in the ""fc mMB 7oa " want
-in tne circumstances,- saw ra- m.tter between herself and JI ni
tric! a, "maybe Jimmie could wintru But Jimmie's talk ia the Re-
some money for you." res had revealed many things. . . .
'l donT want nira 10 win it 1 or 1 first that he loved his wife ... a
me, unless " she choked, went on, I thing tt had net once occurred
"unless he is mine. I thought he to Patricia. His fancy for her ahe
She walked over to the easel and
stared at the deserted scene. . . .
That's what I've done te myself.
Maybe done to Aunt Pam and Jim
mie. . . . WelL the least I can do
is try to get them out of the mess.
was. Now I see he isnt and I dont j had taken for love. She now uv, I Im folng to aee Aunt Pam this
know what to do about my life. las she had told Mrs. Brownley. I TtrT nl'Bt nd tell her just what
loure lucij ia every way. iw mat love includes something more m xinT m
have your work something to look than she had been greatly bAT" ulk with Myra Brownley
forward to If you dont want te shocked by his entanglement with gbt now. ...
marry. And if you do want to "another woman" while he sup- She went te the phone. Mrs.
marry, you have Jack, young;, good posedly leved her aad also she Brownley was just getting up. Was
looking, rich. For me a blank if saw that, loving; Aunt Pam, but almost dressed. Would be delight-
I lose Jimmie." She blinked back slightly estranged from her, it was to lunch with Patricia. It
the tears and smiled. "Dont bother quite within the possibilities that vould be her breakfast She'd be
about me. I dont often do this, she herself had represented but aa 0TeT I twenty minutes.
Sometimes it gets the best of me I entanglement with "another wo-l Patricia charged about the room.
though, when I think of the xa-lmaa". leaning herself every vile name she
tare." I What he had Uld her about tha I cold think of. And also doinx some
"I havent Jack," said Patricia. I dosed, but unlocked door, showed thinking.
"He's cone." that Aunt Pam had not looked!
"Why dont you get him back ?" upon the closing of that door as1 ftMwE..rL. t
T
New Views
Yesterday Statesman reporters
asked: "What ia your .favorite
amusement? Why?" The ans
wers:
Alex Jones, merchant: "Taking
care of our three and one-half
months old daughter. She's tak
ing most of our time now."
L. N. Doty, Jefferson: "Hunt
ing and fishing. I can forget ray
troubles best there."
iim tmraette, law student t
Hunting aad fishing I believe. I
like to be outdoors, and they're a
complete diversion,, from the us
ual routine."
Master Baddy Byaoa, 2nd A I
student: "Going out to my dad
dy's farm. I like the horses, out
there."
Daily Thought
"No North, no South'no East, no
West,
But one great nation Heaven
blest" Charles B." Thompson.
hic-cle. or Painted Shirt (1847).
Tam-auc-kee.
Nes Perces: Tia-tln-metie. a
chief (1847).
Pelouses: K e o k-soes-tee
(1847).
Spokaaes: Se-llm-coom-clu-
lock. or Raven Chief (1847).
Kwit-teal-co-koo a u m (1847),
Kal-mlsh-kon, or Marked Head.,
Kai-me-te-kin, or- Marked Back,
Pa-se-llx, squaw; Tin-tin-ma-11-kin,
or Strong Breast
Stony Island Indians: Hl-up-1
ekan, Las-kles-tum, squaw, So-
ha-pe.
Okanagans: Wah-puxe, Ko-mal-
kan, or Long Hair, Sln-pah,sox-
Un, squaw.
Is S
Besides these portraits of In
diana the catalogue includee
paintings of Dr. John McLough-
iia, Peter Skene Ogden, Oregon
City, Willamette Falls, all painted
la 1848; Massacre of Dr. Whit
man's Family; Abduction of Miss
Bewley from Dr. Whitman's Mis
sion; Cascades of the Columbia
River; Salmon Fishery on the
Head-waters of the Columbia;
Mount Hood; View on the Pelouse
River; Pelouse Falls; View in the
Cascade Mountains; View on the
Columbia (two pictures); The
Artist Travelling in Northern Ore
gon in the Month ot November;
View of Mount Hood; Cascades ot
the Columbia; The Great Dalles
Basin, and View of Mount Hood;
View on the Spokane River.
Two other pictures, painted in
1851, illustrate an encounter of
Joseph L. Meek with the Black
feet in 1827. The first one. en
titled Flight ot a Mountain Trap
per shows the puree it by Indians.
In the Trapper's Escape Meek ia
seea ia the middle ground of the
picture waving his gun in exulta
tion at his lucky escape. Stanley
happened to be traveling in the
company of Meek and his trappers
at this time and witnessed the at
tack. (Frances Fuller Victor's
River of the West)
Thus ends the story ot Miss
Pipes. The work et Stanley has
high historic value. The Te-lo-
kikt or : Crawfish Walking For
ward of Stanley was Chief TUou-
kalkt of the Car sec, who waa
the arch murderer ia the Whit
man massacre, hanged with four
others . at Oregon City for the
crime. It was THoakalkt who
gave the site for the Whitman mis
sion at'Waiilatpu, and who.' an
cient Indian fashion, constontly
wanted to go back oa his agreement
The Peo-peo-mux-mux or Yel
low Serpent of Stanley was Chief
Peopeomoxmox, wily chief ot the
Walla Wallas, whose name was
written large across the pages of
early Oregon history. He was
killed near Walla Walla, at the
time whea Capt. Chas. Bennett of
Salem lost his life the discoverer
ot gold in California, along with
Jim Marshall and Stephen -Staats,
also of the Salem district; though
Marshall got the main part of the
credit; in fact, all ot it among
most California us, who erected a
monument to his memory.
S S
The Salem company headed by
Capt Bennett had the chief part
In the skirmish that resulted la
the killing of Peopeomoxmox to
say nothlr 1 ot the inglorious rep
utation thVv was attached to the
skinning ot the old chief after his
death. Bnt those men had suf
fered much, along with their fam
ilies, at the hands ot Indians; and
they regarded Peopeomoxmox aa
pecullarly.yellow, treacherous and
unsportsmanlike, even judged by
(Continued oa Page t)
36 Years Ago
KLONDIKE STAMPEDE STARTS
From the Nation's News FiW, rort Towneend, Wash.,
Sept. 26, 1806 .
The arrival of a ship from the Klondike has started a stam
pede to the Alaskan Goldflelds.
The considerate attention to even the smallest detail la a
characteristic at Bigdoa Service. From start to finish It
la a satisfactory service, regardless of cost
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