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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 29, 1932)
u PAGO fCUR The OREGON STATESMAN. Sales: - Orejron. Ttestfay Marring. SepfewWf 2. t! Keep, Your Eye on the Ball! UC ADT CTD Win C By EDWIN A L. 1 D l I11vjJ MACDONALD "No Favor Sways Us; N Fear SliaU Awe" From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Ch axles A. Spkagce, Sheuxm F. Sackett, Publisher Charles A. S Prague - i - - - Editor-Manager SHELDON F. SACKETT - -j - - - Managing Editor Member C the Associated Press Th Associate Press Is exclasJly entitled to th uae for publica tion f U netv dispatches credited to It or not otherwlwi credited It thin paper. . Pacific Coast Advertising Representatives: Arthur W. Btyv, Inc., t Portland, Security Bldj;. ' San "Francisco. Sbaroa BK1g.j: Los Angeles. W. Pae. Bids. Eastern Advertising Representatives: rord-Parsous-Stecher, In., iSfsw fork. 271 Madison Ave.; . Chicago. S0 Nj, Michigan Ave. Entered at the Postoffice at Saletn, Oregon, a Second-Class Matter. . Published every marking except Monday. Business ffice, S15 S. Commercial Street. - i. , i ... SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Wail Subscription Rates. In Advance. Within Oregon: Daily and Sunday. 1 Mo. cents: 3 Mo. SI.2S; Mo. !.!; 1 year $4.09. Elsewhere 6 cents per Mo., or SS.OjO for 1 year in advance, Br CKy Carrier: 45 cents a mrtth ; SS.eo a year la advance, Per Copy X cents. On trains and JCewsjStaads 5 cents. No Depression with Editors DEPRESSION may be layinjg a heavy hand on moat lines of industry, but not on the editor. In fact October prom ises an "all-time high' for activities at the editor's desk. Business concerns have been! paring down inventories till shelves af e bare, but "ye ed" finds his desk piled high with SWKis and wares, all seasonable and most all of them calling for marketing before one certain Tuesday in November. Yea, there will be no vacation for editors. No deer hunt ing for him, and he must tui'n a deaf ear to tales of the fall run of salmon. Take a look at what Mr. Editor must plow through in the next five weeks. There is the little matter of prohibition, whether state repeal or riot, and the question of republican and democratic platforms on national prohibition. No soon er may we get this out of the way than we face the deep problems of higher education.! To move, or not to move, to consolidate or not to consolidate. "Whether to endure the ills we have, or fly to others that we know not of," alas, Hamlet left so many things up in the air, didn't he? Those are just the top layers. Here we have a six-thousand word measure submitted to the dear people by that famous friend pf the people Os West. It deals with motor trucks; and some who have read it say it makes the high ways safe for the railroads. That may be strongly in its favor. So far we have lacked Courage to tackle the reading of West's bill, let alone the arguments pro and con. Little matters like taxing leo out of existence and put ting the poor fishermen at the mouth of the Rogue out of jobs are minor matters in the inventories of the editor in his peak month. He is also supposed to study the effect of the ketchum and skinnem income tax, whether the legisla ture should be provileged to keep the non-taxpayers from voting taxes and bonds, and something about trials by jury being done away with by consent of accused. Not content with all this imass of matter, up bobs the Salem water works issue ag&n, that hardy perennial as flourishing as the prohibition iquestion. The overflow desk has an I overload of qualifications of candidates to demand perusal.! There's a president to elect, ! judges, a sheriff, city recorder ,j town councilmen. The parade is starting ; and we have to study each entry. Old man depression still hangs around the editorial sanc tum and insists on a hand-out every few days. So the editor may not lay aside his now sadly thumbed textbook on econ omics; and he must be ready to find the holes in new . schemes that bob up every day or two, which are usually calculated to take goods from1 those that have to give to those who have not in the vaiji hope that when everything is gone everybody will be rich. The world may wonder what an editor dreams about: price of wheat, Hoover, soldiers' bonus, Manchukuo, Gandhi, Tom Mooney, filter plant, banks, railroads, Al Smith. The chances are he dreams about hone of these things, because in addition to all of them he has his domestic problems, paying the month's rent, painting the porch steps, keeping Johnny on the quest for knowledge, and trying to sidestep next week's dance. j Yes, business is good with editors. The depression has passed them over; or rather it has generously swept every- thing on their desks which now are littered with debris of local and world politics, fool theories on universal prosperity, notes on a fall sunset, paving 36th street, Central Public HService, state board of higher education, Pudding river, und so weiter. in lact, business is so time for the editor to ask for " 1 ' Say, It Ain't riOV. ROOSEVELT has certainly made every effort to V tickle the ears of groundlings. At Williams, Arizona, he said: "I waa asked in Phoenix whether, if elected, I would be in favor of lowering the protective tariff on beef imported from the Argentine, Mexico and Australia. Right now, I want to go on record as saying that I am for the protection of our own cattle industry, our own American cattle". Gov. Roosevelt campaigns across the U. S. A. denouncing the protective tariff, the Hawley-Smoot tariff. He charges it as the fount of our ills. Yet he tells Arizonans he favors protection for "our American eattle'VIn California the same assurance was given for Drotection of lemons. rriPmVs trr- In Seattle the lumber tariff, which Senator Dill and Henry! Van Duzer, both high brothers in the democratic lodge, w&eu xor, was nxewise approved. Roosevelt in wet New Jersey drips wet. In industrial Ohio he declares his support of protection to labor. In Salt Lake City he tells the railway worker in that trsncmArf.. tion center he would work out a railroad program (which he borrows from Hoover). In Topeka he tells- the farmers he wm invent a six-point suspension farm machine which will work without friction. j o??ev4UJeis "w busy ZWg everybody everything they r the wets, tariff for Arizona cattle growers, w? 1 ,ralIroads lw rates; to power users. Andy Gump W,J;tl t0,.run S.ow; Kooselt haa grabbed off his gift bag and is making a Santa Claris tour of the U. S. A. i i - TpUnrv. J$ver an Labor " first Of the venr W jisw OI tne jear, hoping that cal VSSSr an :l tim PerhP the move is politf &SfiZ&&' dlsturbixiprction been marked bT amL recora 01 rres Hoover has bor. It WMdue S lwS over th U president that ilS 7 ? Phonal efforts of the the pank bk? 169 '"T tohed untfl long aft- or 3T 28- brings agreement from them not to reduce wa xw?rM 931 . .panies adhered to this pleta Tta ?2i2E; JS 1 tcomr ULecanecessary even for the government to waft vTr wecuuiy those on steiAr inhm finrl friar .ptoyed,have-fare44)eUer good, it might be a propitious aj little step-up in the paycheck. T 1 Christmas Yet WagB Unt" th the Mnnnmin ..,. has work- en xnose out of enmbment. fir-,v v JMl?JJi cat. Irt.lhMtrre Mr ieHigii vuair ilSrfclii.PnlmS.vi!i.jic. lor. . BrRaiittilirrr4. Ssg Yesterdays ... Of Old Salem To fro Talks from The States man of Earlier Days September 29, 1007 The eity charter board, com posed of-citizens and committees of the city council, business and commercial bodies of the city, last night voted to institute ward rep resentation on the council and re duce the number of aldermen from 14 to seven. SANTA BARBARA. Calif. Fremont Older, j managing editor of the San Francisco Bulletin, -who has been active la the prose cution of bribery graft cases In San Francisco, was virtually kid napped by 20 Los Angeles depu ties bearing a warrant charging him with libel. Later he was res cued from a train here by San Francisco officers bearing a writ of habeas corpus. , PORTLAND The Oregonlaa tomorrow will say there is reasoa to believe the Mount Hood Rail way and Power company, which la building an electric road between Portland and Mount Hood, Is la reality a link in another trans continental railway, to past through the Klamath Indian res ervation and connect with a line between Los Angeles and .Salt Lake. September 29, 122 After passing; through three days of convention routine with out a hitch, delegates to the 20 th annual Oregon State Federation of Labor gathering here yesterday ran np against a stamp In the form of a resolution calling for amendment of the Volstead act, and stalled. The proposal was voted down. Attendance at the state fair yesterday was estimated at 15.009 paid admissions, 3000 short of the day previous partly on account of bad weather. Seven thonsand per sons witnessed the race track pro gram. BAY CITY. Mich. A move ment to endorse Henry Ford as a presidential candidate: in 1924 failed at the Democratic state con- in any other. It was the old custom for employers to take ad- vuuage oi siow times ana surplus of labor to start slashing wages. Such has not been the case this time except in rare instances. Employers for one thing are more enlightened; and have learned that consumption of goods depends largely on the size of pay envelopes. Pres. Hoover has consistently championed the cause of labor, whereas! his political foes are trying their best to make it appear he has spent his efforts solely for "big bus iness". Labor has the president to thank that its wage scales were maintained at post-war levels as long as they were. The president has sought also by encouragement of shorter work week to spread employment and get more men on the payrolL Finally his constructive efforts have been pointed toward sustaining the very essential factors in the economic structure: banks large and smalL agriculture, railroads. To blame Hoover for, all our ills is unfair to him and reflects our own Ignorance. Being president these four years has been a thankless, heart-breaking task. No one whose hu man sympathies are as keen as Hoover's could fail to be bowed down by the burden of a nation in distress. He has given bis best; and it is a serious question whether anyone else could have' done any more. The skies now seem to be slowly clearing. Regardless of the outcome of the election his torians of the future will write that Hoover met square-on a depression of unusual severity, and that In spite of panic he kept the frame of government, intact and preserved the gen eral economic structure of a great country. Few others could have held it together. ' i The Oregonlaa, whica moralized etrongly on the 'buU-fight If It has viewed the spectacle, mow eagat to get out its old favorite word "hoax" ana dost It tt tot use agaia. -1 ram abeut - troagiy ez Curtis ; and his contact BITS for BREAKFAST By R. J. HEN DR ICRS- Lockley in Who's Who: Where old Quinaby died: s s s Addressed to the Bits for Breakfast man, this card was re ceived a few days ago: "You will be interested to learn that a NA TIVE OF SALEM has made the grade to get In Who's Who In America. See 1932-31 issue, page 1437, top of middle column. S Copies of the new book had not then been received at the libraries in Salem, though they have stand ing orders. They have since ar rived, and one may find the mat tar referred to in the card as indi cated, which reads: w LOCKLEY, FRED, author; b. Leavenworth, Kans., Mar. 10. 117 1; . Frederic and Elizabeth Metcalf (Campbell) L.; student Ore. Agrl. Coll.; B.8.D., Willam ette U., 1895; m. Hope Cans, of Salem. Ore., June 18, 1197 (now dee.); children Frederic Llewel yn (dec), Lawrence Campbell. Hope (dec.); m. 2d Laura Simp son, Feb. 18, 1930. Newspaper carrier boy on Inter Mountain, Butte, Mont., later printer's devil, pressman, compositor on Traveler, at Arkansas City, Kan., 1385-88; reporter, circulation mgr., later mgr. Dally Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., 1888-91; Held editor Pacific Homestead, Salem, for next few yrs.; part owner East Oregonlaa, Pendleton, 1901-05; gen. mgr. Pa cific Monthly Mag., Portland, 1995-10; editorial writer and col umnist on Oregon Journal since 1911. Served two enlistments Ore. Nat. Guard. 1st sergt. Co. K 3 yrs.. regtl. sergt. maj. 3 yrs.; with A. E. FXor. 1917 till Armistice; served in 3 2d Div., also on British front; was war corr. Ore. Jour., also wrote for Paris edit. New York Herald, and Stars and Stripes; Y. M. C. A. sec. in charge front line work, at Abbeville, Am iens, etc., on Brit, front. Dir. Port land Y. M. C. A. Mem. Alaska Sourdough Assn., Sigma Delta Chi. Republican. Presbyn. Masoa. vention here yesterday when the resolutions committee d e e i d d such action "premature and too far in advance of the election. th. Meonty .uitcaae ralldi u with the Lindbergh kidnapers. Clubs: Writers' League. Commer cial. Author: Vigilante Days in Virginia City; Across the Plains by Prairie Schooner; To Oregon by Ox Team in '47: History of the Columbia River Valley; Oregon Folks; Oregon's Yesterdays; Ore gon Trail Blazers; Portland Then and Now. Home: 1248 E. Stark St Office: Oregon Journal, Portland, Ore." The person sending the card overlooked the statement concern ing Fred Lockley's birthplace, and assumed that he was a native of Salem, no doubt because the years of part of his boyhood and of his early manhood were spent in the capital city, and his parents lived here. Fred Lockley's column la the Portland Journal is a popular and valuable feature. A test waa made not long since, and it ahowed that more people who read that news paper turn first te the Lockley column than to aay other. But aot many readers have realised the extent of Lockley's writings col lected In book form. There wUl he surprises expressed over the fact that eight books bear his same on their title pages The Bits man, several weeks ago, made the statement la this column that old Quinaby. last of the Molallae to make his home in Salem, died at his eamp on the (Continued oa Page 9) The Safety Valve - - Letters from Statesman Readers THE SAFETY VALVE The legislature haa handed as a neat little package in ballot No's. 300 and 301 the label of which carries no hint of the contents. No wonder the legislators want to shunt the responslbUlty of such a nefarious law upoa the voters. They reasoa that the people will vote with their eyes shut and pass it and will then have only them selves to blame when the package is opened. It is correct reasoning for many are not registered and do aot receive the voters pamph let and so will go to the polls un prepared and will hastily Judge a bUl by its ballot title. Voters, un less yoa understand a bill do not vote on it at aU. This bill Is per nicious la what appears In the ballot title and also, In the part which does not so appear. At first glance the taxpayer may think he should have the exclusive right of voting oa fuestlens per taining to taxes aad bonds bat looking deeper what property owner does not expect to rent for more than the taxes. Many would lose their property for taxes If they had no renter. If this bill should become a law Salem will not get municipal water although the users pay for the water Bad their money retires the bonds. It wUl cost the property owner no more than the non-property own er but the value of property will be enhanced. Consumers pay Daily Thought , Who among us caa tell or meas ure the power of good master Who shall say how many hearts It has soothed, how many tired brains it haa rested, how many sorrows It lias taken away? It Is like the power et conscience mighty, Immeasurable, Theo dore Thomas. CHAPTKJC FORTY -SIX "Patricia! Toe sent a telegram la Warren and signed your kwIi'i name to it? "I did. I told yoa I'm a terribl cereesu Bat she took a pretty high handed part la my affairs at Palra Beach tryiag to marry me off to an old thiajr with a horse's face. So I decided te take a high handed part ia her affairs and marry her back te her ewa htwband that she'd let get away from her and didn't have runiptioa enomrh to ret back. I seat him another telegram too la ay own name aad told him I'd found lira. Brewnley out aa a cheap gold digger hugging every rich man she cooM ret her arms around." "My dear, weren't yon gelag rather far ia making se twee pt eg a statement t" "No. I waaat. Ifs true. Hadnt I just caught her with her arms around Jack Laurence's neck right in this room! I told Jlmmie about that too. in the telegram. "Ah ... aay child, pu3 up that feoUteol and ait dewa here at my knee and tell me all ahont this pooskdiag business." "You 111 sit m the coach," "I'd prefer te have yea at my knee." She drew up a footstool, and told him the whole story. Mr. Braithwait smiled. "Bat maynt her story be true la every particular, and not a cleverly eon eocted scheme to get a rich husband, as yoo.se evidently think T" "I thought that at first," said Patricia, "ia spit of the fact that I had caught her in several little lies. But when I broke my brain open trying to find a way to help her and offered her that job An toine offered me nothing to do but dress beautifully and live luxuri ously with big money in it and when she turned that down, I knew she was a liar and a cheat who did- nt want to do anything but live on 'dividends' from gullible rich men. I saw the whole fabric of lies. And I knew she'd made a friend of me tither to spy on me and lie to Jim mie, or to work me up aa she did, te giving him back his premise to ne. Is it any wonder I pounded her making fools of Jimrnie and me, both!" "But what waa this about her arms around Jack Laurence? "Well, you see, after she'd turn ed down a swanky job and given the lie te her whole pitiful story and. I knew exactly what she waa and what Jimmie was in for, I went rat to get some tea, I'd asked her te lunch. So I left her in the studio while I went to get the tea," "Ton were still going to give her lunch after yon knew 'exactly what ihe was and what she had let Jim mie in for?" he asked, repeating her own words. She flashed. "WelL I'd asked her. I wouldn't have done it again. Bat as she was already here at my in- riUtwni " "Yea; and It wouldn't have been hospitable to have given her pounding before lunch. You did give her lunch first, I take Hf " "No, I didn't. When I got back, the door was a little open. I walked in and there they were in each oth er's arms Jack Laurence and her. I ordered him out. He didt want to go hot I poshed him. Then I slam med the door and locked It, and pounded her. "X waaat even interested in him. I didnt care hew he hugged her er anybody else. I pounded her because of what ahe'd done to Jumnue. "Qnite so. Bat if yoa hadnt eaoght her and Jack embracing yoo would have given her Utach, sent her home with oat the hospi tality of a pounding. That s curt- ena. My dear, Fm afraid yoo are aU woman." She looked up at him. "If Td like e ask a favor of yoo, their share of government expense and we all have the economic problems to solve. Bewsre, tax paying voter, of disfranchising the propertyless. The wheel of for tune may tura and cast you into the pit you have digged for an other. Now let us look lU3ide the package. Here is the surprise. Here we are voting an educational test npon ourselves and we do aot even know what the test may be. voters, be on your guard! Let us not lose one lota of the rights and power we now possess. The fran chise is a sacred right of free men. Once lost it Is hard to regain. Let none be disfranchised in any de gree however poor or ignorant he may be. If any deserve disfran chisement It is those wicked minds who conceived such aa abominable law and who are al ways scheming to curtail the rights of the people. Let us re member them and leave them at home next election. This bill Is a disgrace to our aoble (?) solons who need to be watched like crim inals on parole Instead et being trusted as guardians of. our rights. The pamphlet preseats so argu ment. Three legislators labored for the affirmative and brought forth no argument since none ex- New Views "What ball team do yea wish would win the world aeries? Why? These Questions were ask ed yesterday by Statesman report ers. Tne answers: Porter McLnnghlln, newsboy t Oh. the Cubs. It looks like ther are the best team, that's ail." Stanley Jensen, form maker: The Cabs. X was bora la the cen tral states, Mlaaeeota than whr" Lyle Van Darwnrka, I amber miU employee: "I think the Cabs nave the beat chance. Thar are the steadiest playing team. E. Im Stewart, trucTrmaa and wood dealeri "The Yankees ara 1 the winners. Why? Because they have, the best.?,-" my si ? ran aee it." ah obeyed wonderiagty. "Do reo mind temag me who the woman is that picture Is?" She hesitated, "Of eevrse. aot nolens yea want to," ha pot ta, "It's tit ... L "Aad the bormt cactaa reo are, and clearly have been, toiling toward a long time 4 think I heard yoa aay the woman Is toiling co ward tt ia the belief that tt Is a tree te abetter her from aO that aridity what does the cactaa rep resent?" Agaia she hesitated, Then deS- antly: "That's Jimmie," And ever te the left there la a shadow east by a tree which yoo said waaat ia the pictare and that the woman was rotar away from Her ryes feO. Swift color rushed into her face. She made no answer. He chuckled. "Of course yoo redoas little Idiot. IVe known tt for a long time. Hew long hare yoa known?" Eyes still downcast, a he an swered ia a low voice: "I didnt know it for sure till US he caught la the Regeneo with Jimmie, and X knew he woaldnt phone me er come te see me any more.' "Yoa knew quite positively then?" "No, net exactly positively. You see, I was se hurt over what Jim mie had told me I suppose It was my vanity and se shocked too, be- ae men some men, are like that; and worried because of what Jimmie had told me that made me know Auat Pam loved him; I felt horrible about that, aad what I'd dene; then Jack came In and saw me in the Regenee, and it was all so jumbled up that I didnt know anything exactly then. But after Fd painted that picture of how I felt I sort of wondered myself at first you see I knew the hot sand and sky and barrenness represented what I felt Inside of me. Then I put myself in the picture and the cactus. And aU at once I knew that i what I really felt about Jim mie. I put the shadow of the tree over there to represent how I'd lost Jack, running after Jimmie. But X dent care now. I never want to see him again. I hate him." Mr. Braithwait rose. His eyes were shining, "Lefs go have some dinner, child," Y o u forgive me, Daduma, for what I did in this room 7 "My little girl, Socrates advaeeed the idea that all the sin and suffer ing and chaos of the world waa daa to the defective sight of men; that clear sight would not only make men wise, but make. them virtuous and happy. Jesus, knowing this truth, merely strove to opea men's eyes. There is not a eaae on record where he condemned any man. I am not more righteous than He. If your eyes had beea opea too weald have known better than te pound that unfortunate Mrs. Brewnley, for yoo would have known there waa ne reason for tt. Arrange face and let's have some food." While they were waiting for their dinner, Mr. Braithwait went to use the telephone. Tm going over te aee year An at Pam for a Uttls while after dinner," he said vpe his return, "Oh, Daduma, dont leave me alone again," "Tm not going to." She looked at him in alarm. "X dont want to go. I'm ashamed te see her. She most hate me." Not a hate," grinned Mr. Braith wait. "She has a much clearer vt don than she had a year ago. She says the fault was entirely her own, She had set her husband adrift be fore yoa came along. If yoo hadnt coma, some other woman would harm . . As for year part ha it, she realises that a man makes for lanv do rt tm a a term, im were I fighting for your life and grabbed lsts. Since there is much to be said on the negative it la evident no negative argument was sought Another straw which shows the direction of the wind. The second bill in the pamphlet Daily Health Talks By ROYAL S. COPELAND, M. D. THERE is a enronte conaiuoa of the blood vessels which causes a good deal of trouble, Their walla become thicker than normal and consequently less das- tic Although most common in advanced life, especially after the sixtieth year, such ehangesare by ne means un known in those of middle age. The coalition is referred to as "hardeniag a f t h e arteries," bat doctors, s e e k I a g big names for every thing, call it "n terieeeleroaia." It Is sometimes aa laherited defect It occurs, too, where great mental strain is undergone. The chief excttinaT canes is chronic aetsossiag af the body tissues. It is found in front diabetes and inflam mation of the kidneys. Abeoraaal substances In the bleed may injure the blood vessels directly, or. by eoa- tractiar the smaller resells, raise the blood pressure. Acuta infections also mar nroduce chanres la the body that later develop late arterts- scJeresis. In advanced eases the vessels become hardened tubes aad as a resuft there Is aa interference .with the free circnUtisa of the The srmatema of arteriosclerosis aU depend opou which partkalar blood veasali are involved, In some eases general failare of health, pal 1st af the ekia aad less af am re are the first symptoms noted. Dr. Cne.l.ed i i mi wars U Health Queries , I H. If. OWhat do two asVlaaralops far fnfl vVie for Itching piles? A Send self -addressed stamped warren te escape , her wards, aot mine." Patricia felt a sense tf relief rm the ad Hrtmeot af P a m 1 a and Jiaunie's affaira, hot she ate BtUa, Mr. Braithwait did the talking. As they waited far a baa, be said: "When your eocsia bears of the very satisfactory part yea hava had la bringing her kaahaad hack te her, ska will " "If rosrre taking me there as prodigal retained, Tm net going." . biased Patricia. Tm not. fm-going U send yoo an aa errand. Here's sa Al. bos." They rode for some time in al ienee. "Whafs the errand?" aha asked finally. "I want reo te get oat alter we cross the bridge and walk te rear right abevt fifty yards along the embankment aad my messenger wUl meet yea there and tell yea what te do." "Why, Dad urns, whafs the mys tery?" She looked at him sharply. "Did yoa telephone anybody besids Aunt Pam? If joa did, and If tt was Jack Laurence " "By the way, I said, if your eyes had been opesy that is, if too had known the truth, yoa would havt known there was ne rsasea te pound sirs. Brownley. First, yes didat pound her because she em braced Jack, bat beaautt yes thought he was party te It. Second, it may Interest yoo te know that eae day when yoo were not she threw her arms around me and told me her aad story. It appears te be a little way of hers te arouse syss. pstlry in the hearts of men I was very sorry tor her; tut 1 assort yeu I wasnt in love with her; nor even eomlertaMe onder her em braces. I didnt, however, redely fling her off.- "Oh! Oh. Daduma. . . ." They were passing over the bridge. He pressed the be.IL "This is year stop. About fifty yards." She got out at the Pyramids Sta tion and walked back te the em bankment in a state of sickening excitement. Jack came swiftly to meet her. "Your father said yoo wanted to see me. Pat, I want te explain " "Yoo aeeda'L Dadums h a s al- ready explained." They leaned over the embank- meat. And were ailent. "Fm leaving tomorrow. Pat," he said. "I had come to aay goodbye today, and foond yoa gone. I see how things are with yoo She lifted her face to the big round mooa hovering over the Seine. "Palm Beach or Paris," she said softly "same old noon. Fm sorry yoaVe going. Jack. Ill miss yoo." She faced him. "Whea the moon is ahintng, wherever tt is shining, and when it Isn't, VU be thinking of you," For. a bright young man, he was very stupid, He stood staring. "Mast I pot tt ia writing. Jack?"' she said, shyly laughing. For n nice young man, he was quite roogh, Also the kiss was very long. Ne doubt his patience had been overtaxed. After a satisfactory space, aa aatisfactory memory prodded him. He pushed her from him. . . . Oh, roughly. . "I forgot. Tm sorry, Pat." Why?" Her arms stole gently upward "Because "Oh, what I said centarles age snoot eomparlaona. If I ever waa really kissed by a man before. Tret forgotten it. Yours are se Ineom par " The moon obUgiagly drew a vefl ever the eight The lights along the embankment wlaked at one an other. And the waters gargled in sly laoghter at this se old situation by the aide of the Seine. FINIS O !. W Sjc r is a dangerous one, too. It per mits a criminal to choose trial by judge Instead of jury, thus sim pllfjiag the rich criminals job of bribery. A TAXPAYER. r here tn bleed pressure la high. nervous symptoms are usual. There are disxinees, sleepkasaess, mental taritnoility, mental depression er hapairment of memory. Advanced cases may be accompa nied by disturbance of visioa. Some times the vessels of the abdomen may be affected, causing severe pain aot aependeat upon ta food taken. These abdominal rrmstoms mar be misleading and often are not reo ernixed as due to the arterial condi tion. Usually they are rerarded an indicating some form of indirection. hot the fact that treatment for tndi- gestioa Is useless and that remedies to reduce high blood pressors ara effective brings recognition of the real cause. Avoid OverxarttM The outcome la aay case is de- tendent upon the location af the load vsseeis diseased aad the wifl- tngnesa af the patient t follow the advice of his pfcysicsnsw i Wears the sen pressure is vary airh and the kidneys show signs of failure, the utmost cars mast he exercised, The treaimsat mast be suited te the general health, the habits and the financial circumstances af the E attest Ths moat inrportant thing i moderation ia every particular. A life free from excitement and worry will do mnch toward onsnxiaaT a comfortable and nsefsJ existence. There should be oa svnr-exartioa, ne alcoholic bererages and vary lit tle tobacco, if any. The diet should be nastimnlatlag, largely vegetable and cereal. Tea and coffee ia mad eration are net prohibited, hot most patients aria do better if they oaa mfflc or fermented milk as a nbati tata, parti cola ra aad 1 ewrWM. tits.