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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1932)
r -a- -..- .w B .., r, , J , ,;lt ;.-.: if i! I'1" - " -til1 1 1 11 " v 1 1 1 1 avor xicava u: as nom First Statesman, March 28, 1851 : -'. THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. , SrfELBQM P Sackjctt . " . Managing Editor ; Member of Ute Associated Press . 2?Late4J.FaB1 ""Iusiwly nUUed to tha use Cor pVibltc tw2 -W" d"!tmtebr,,t te or not otherwise credited 1 - - ADVERTISING Portland Gordon & .Ben. Security pfUdlni; Portland. Ore. . ... EMternAdrertlstng;, Representatives ' ? V "Bryant Griffith ft Branson. !&. CbteafO, New Tort Detroit. f?!- fV- jnwmug fxeept Monday. Business first 91& f iMuaMaiM Cu.a , " V: SUBSCEIPTTQM BATK5 J.f"-r'irtl50" Rate. In Advaace. Wltbta Orecoai Daily and -f?JJ 1 ta: Mo. $L$: Mo, fits? 1 raur f 4 00 SUeewtaero (0 cents per Mo, or SS.lt Or 1 year In adva.ce. Copy t centa vr.yKT carrier: 4 cent a month: 15.00 a rear In advani- Par t)a tr&tas and Newa Beer. Btirlorr o. ho and a botfciA nf Yo. hf- hoand a balancprt That s the campaign song of Franklin Roosevelt as he I seeks to smile his way into the presidency. Leave it to Roose velt to do the tight wire act of balancing the" budget with a bottle of beer in "hand, Alas, we fear the beer would prove decidedly "unbalancing." i .: Roosevelt devoted his Pittsburgh speech to berating the Hoover administration in the matter of the budget, blaming t with failure to "balance the budget". Look back over Re publican custody of finances since 1921 and you will find a continuous record of reduction of taxes of reduction of the public debt through surpluses, and sharp reduction over the expenses the last year of the Wilson administration in which war costs were still being met. This prevailed until the fiscal year of 1931 when a budget deficitrwas encountered because of the falling off of revenue. It became urgent then to re duce expenses and to increase revenues. Pres. Hoover, submit ted a DrofiTam in both directions vrhon December, 1931. What happened to his economy program in the democratic controlled house? What happened to his rer enue program in the same body? Hooyer told the story hi his Des Moines speech : "At a-time when tb most Tital need waa for reduction la , expenditure and balancing tae budget to Dreserra th stabllltr , of tha federal gavernment, they (th democrats In congress) ; vvuui.-i3u a prosram oi pora Darrei igisiauoa iq tn sum ot 11.1 AA. AAA AAA tfUa. r.iniw fctttt rA. aI.I.. . I ' - w i tha easb bonus bill. They passed wouiucij y meir ieaaersaip. opposea u. it raiiea to pass tna senate. Under that bill it was proposed to expend 12,300,000,000. : Worse still, they provided the bonus should b paid through a" ; creation of sheer fiat money .... Further tha administration .proposed one economy measure.. to brine about reduction In , specialiied .government expenditure by $300,000,000. "When thosa recommendations had passed through the filter of tha democrat ic majority In the honse only $50,09,00d of tha savings wera "'left.-- -v .... . Then Who must assume th -mnin-r r?nnTh!lif v f at failure to balance the national budget? Remember when the house riddled the revenue measure. Representative Crisp da e . - . oi ueorgia, democrat m cnarge of the bill, arose and said: "This-is a sad day for ma.. I lore my country and I hara endeavored to serve her ... I also lova my party, and today I am So great was the revolt over the country to this action of the democratic house, that when the bill was altered and resubmitted Speaker Gamer had to get down in the pit of the house and plead with his partisans not to wreck it and nuequabe, was passeu. . ; . After all, the beat test of nf tha riiKH rrprlif Prsnrnnro today and in 1921 when Harding went into of f ice. Then lib- erfv Krta nrara coll ? amnnil QK fnrl-a An Vi r XTtt, erumeui is sua me lugnest tnnnav if nranfd fnr 9 ri i x;ii xl i. the Republican administration " T- nrarir c 4 TY r rcc rn 4- nrVi, i c ?4 i Gov. Roosevelt also declared if he were elected he would cut the federal budget 25. The answer to that was well . written by his supporter, Walter Lippman, who noted a let- i. - M Tt - 1t A Al ...l. TTTa.?l.. T 1 . : vcr ui Auuaeveib a lu ne same en ecu iTniea xjiypnian ; , a "In a letter published on Tuesday Governor Roosevelt said: 1 be lieve that we can cut down Federal expenditures from 21 to SI per cent .'ay the elimination of unnecessary offices and overlapping functions of nrovernment.' -, ,( "The Federal expenditures la round numbers coma to 4,t09 mUlloa dollara Governor Roosevelt proposes to save S00 to l,Ml millions by elimination of unnecessary offices and overlappln faactlona,' Let us see. "He cannot eliminate the debt service. This moans (rore than one ; - biilioA be cannot touch, leaving him with the task of making his savins; out of the remaining three button. - v- v "The army and cavy are costing about 600 millions. The ex-soldiers . are costing about one billion. About 65 millions goes to public works and subsidies. This leaves about SOI millions to run the government In whlofc ' ' are located the 'unnecessary offices and overlapping functions.' There la ! : only one way of saving 808 to 1.000 millions by elhalnatloa f unnecessary ' offices and overlapping functions' and that is to abolish the civil govern ment entirety. "Clearly there is no way to make tb saving he contemplates except .by cuttlug.a-UtUe out of the government, something out of the army and . KaTy after an international agreement, something out of th pork barrel, -and a good deal out of the veterans' bUU "Governor Roosevelk ought to read before. he signs letters on lmpor- ts at matters written by subordinates.'' v r ; One more word about Roosevelt and the budget-balanc leg. uook. at nis record in new &ur& state, xieie is uw wajr expenses have risen in that state iinder democratic, rule : " ISIS GQT,.Wbltman repnbllcao, state bttdget .?t,000,09 , 1920 Got. Smltb democrat, stata budget w .;...:..11.0D0.0Q . : , 122 Got. MUler, republican, atato budget .....,..,'..,11199,999 ; 12S Got. Smith, democrat, stata budget,. . , ' ..229,000,0 99 , ' 15S1 Got. Roosavelt, democrat, atate budget 525,009,009 , Yo, ho, ho and a bottle of beer! The stateof New: York under its democratic "governors lias been wildly "extrava gant, the total for the last year of Roosevelt's administrai . tion being FOUR times -as large as the last year of Whit man administration In 1 1918, a war year. Yet Roosevelt is . the man who now poses as the 'watch-dog of the treasury", - the man to cut the budget 25- offhand, just like that. Yo, ho, ho, and two bottles of beer! How Students Vote .; HERE are some straw ballot reports which indicate the Pacific coast has not wholly lost its intelligence. Re ports from three leading colleges of the coast show Hoover leading by big majorities. Here they are : OREGON STATB Hoover ; .... ,ttt -, - ' 1 Rooaarelt , ' . tf '- ;- U. S. HooTer L. Roosevelt . Thomas - CALirosma. . HooTer J. Itoosevelt , lliomas ... " ' Carey and Harlan got 110,999 tor work which state ea i;laeers could hare done for $299. They drew OTer s hundred theu and dollars from the Portland city treasury, and what does Port ltnd hare to show for It? For one thing, a streetcar franchise whloh the people will kill in Norember. About time for them to moTe to a l ew suckeMown. - ' It iUl remains true that cnAJttTT coTers a maltltude ot slnst . ... . , , ....... , -. ' tail na Vm Rh,n iw s w vw www oaa ww at- f ReDraaeatatU Stands S cents. anA Rrl nnair hppr? rnr?ooff v imiivii yiuuucw . that through tha bousa ot .rep- - ; . : - , : - good stewardship is the state ha onntofirtna nn MKarv Knndi 01 any country, it gets au vne interact dr o Virt4- Mm. lATta T m i i x. had been as culpable as Got. 4-Vi 4- Anv nA4iAti1 avai) i4 t 0. -521 -1ST, .104 -410 .180 -1C2 I ' r ItMMtioId : . v 1 A Football O T j H F) T F ! - xv - n . "r'J:K V- - . i - , ........ ..- " Yesterdays ... Of Old Saleia Towa Xalka from The'8tatc tnaai of Eartlor Dnyg Octokor 23, 1007 1!!W TORK Credit, tha ua-dartba-aurfac foaadatloa f aU business, trembled (or time yes terday and before confidence had been restored. New York's second largest financial Institution, Knickerbocker Trust company, had emptied its raults or 21.900, 009 and closed Its doors alter the biggest run exnertanrMl hsr i generation. The Salem Buafnia Xfon'a t gue has endorsed the proposition to raise the $30,000 In Salem to make up the $100,000 endowment fund ..of Willamette unlTerslty. The league committee for the un dertaking includes J. W. Law rence, D. H. James and Gideon Stoli. CHICAGO The trust confer ence Of the National Cltle Federa tion onened hara plas Murray Butler, president, de- u'a an o.aaress upon the Sher man Anti-Trust law. . ; . . i October 23. forvx Although election day la only weeaa-oix, mere ft as not yet been a poliUcal meeting of any luna held in Salem. Walter nerce. candidate tor gorernor. ts expected te speak here this week. 1$9 hlg rtte unlflsrslty uuuwuuur endowment cam- Daism waa formally munui ...... - - : v v w j to day all OTer Oregon. Almost fralf oi cne lotai tan desired is already guaranteed in three big subacrlp- Marlon county taxpayers hare already paid in. $1,159,094 on the vs iry oi fl,5.SIf . TnU leares a delinquency of lesa than s Safety alve - - Letters from Statesman Readers To Tliev Cditor: z v we are here again with aome- laiag more aoout prohibition. 4 What we want to know is this: w aac . is . wrong with Kf ; a pioneer state In the cause ot pro hibition? w : s There has been a rrM t&i mmi about Kansas, but here are some factat ' We note first 54 connties with out any insane or feeble minded People; ft counties without any inebriates; 28 counties without any poorhouse; 63 counties with ont a single person in Jail, and 69 eoantlea without a ainri m. resentatlre la the state penlten- uary. nUn i nat record it an afford to ba th nMu .. Jibes ef the wets. . . . - . . J. O. JACKSON. "Do you favor marked reductions la the foreign war debts or nth n United StatesrVTkls Question was asked br Statesman nnnw.M yesterday.: O lb drosrr. kuV .t..v. aD nd should be paid. We'll hare to 4r th .J71 a long Umi te pay oft, Aonga." : , - mi n . ' ... :4 ' 8. XL Paries'. frm. Hnn.. . them ettf Does the banker cancel m carmer s neots 7 lira. Waldo u troor Uobbardt "I certainly do not think the dabt ah An l a KV .... celled. But I would not go so tar As to say f oreiga countries should mane to pay all tha debts. HoweTOr. ft saema tal m if . eaantry wants 7 te - - elart a.nT more moratoriams on aortbinr.lt Th New Views ?'Cs, " H-I-Vi -I o U- C ?oSrr- ' BITS for BREAKFAST By R. J. One Arm Brown again i Start of the Modoe wan , . (Continuing from yesterday:) "Some time later. X cannot now Just recall the date, the Oregon super in tendency was discontln aed and James Browa was still later appointed general Indian gent for Oregon, and I think he pent a conalderabl narHm r his time la Washington. I cannot recan now ion a he serred. bar T was la Baiem when nni rma taat he had been discontinued as agent. .... -Then. Ex-Senator Nesmlth. Drotner 'List, and soma othar waii known men, knowing of my rath er successful manasremant aF tha redmen. Joined in asking my ap- pointment aa Brown's successor, SUPPOSinr that the nosttfan mrnn to be a permanent one, practically tun same aa ine position or super intendent of Indian affairs had been. "Hoa Zack Ghandlnr vn thmt secretary ef the Interior In Oen- w uram a caoiaet, and John Q. Smith was commissioner of Indian affairs. General Neamith vr personal letters to these men, and uaro copies ot them. Nesmlth had serred with Chandler In the senate, and he wrote familiarly to him, in part as follows! " 'Mr. Applegate Is a gentle man of culture and ability, ant, unlike myself, la a prominent re publican, and la as honest as it ts possible for a man to be nosseaa- tnx his perrerted political no- uvaa. i on wui pardon me, 1 know, for proposing appointment to an administration which I do not endorse, but I do so In order to promote the reforms which yo haTe so happily inaugurated. ? "I cannot say how much I ap preciated the work these men did la my behalf. ut, alas for their hopes and ay own. the office had been Itself discontinued, and ap peared to hare -been personally created for One Arm only. I am. always, yours truly, "O. 0. APPLEGATB." , "a In the Installment of yesterday, -0" w UUVfV tt!?!T2!t ?Ta? D- piste's T"'""1 n uyrns Townaenl Bradra "NorthwatM h.v. . Ilatsaa-as."- That chapter ef Bra- WUI I0UOWSI ; 3 v 3 ; Lighthouse and Fog Have Their X ; Political ParallelsJPerchance By P.M. Talinatige. Sae of&i'& Ferhana thla atorr ti at n.rtL. nent to anr aitnatian at nru..i existing-; Arala. it may be. ft seems at least worthy of record Whea two men find Clearneaa rwf purpose ta a fog. ; t Once In aa unguarded moment I accented an lrltatioa t in.ni an afternoon cod fishing with twa gentlemen friends. A day ta late October of a presidential election rear. .;, , -, f , . ' " ; Our folks were not much can. corned orer the presidential raea. The state waa all sewed nn la a bag and ready for dellrery. Bat in our congressional district IS fight was on. On .the .war to the fishina grounds the talk ran largely ta mattara nertalnfns' ta thla flrbt- A Tanraaaalatfr wh haif halil nf- flee for four years was threatened with aeteatv'.'. We were on a steamboat. On of the tuglike sort of steamboats that stand first on one end. then on the other, in rough water. But after a time on this particular aft ernoon the wind died dowa and the water ceased to rage. rAhal'r we chortled. "Codfish, take care ot yoursslTes, for we're coming to get you! u Yet not a codfish did we get. should be for the farm ers of this country. They could - stand a Giree-year tnoratorina. on their ueDts. ' . HENDRICKS - "Perhapa tew plasea on eartX n uii area, naTe cost so musa ta blood and trumn wi.m.fs land, and toI it mir ha warta th price, dear as it was, tor It la one i namre a Dngntesc gems. Tae natlre noasaaaor bald it with m. tenacity which compels as to ad mire nis patriotism, bis rerereaee for the land ef his ancestors, while we deprecate the methods ot his warfare. As he would pat Its 'Here is the dast of my fath ers. Better for me ta At hr tha to be remoTod to any other coun try. ii i aie nere I go down to the dust with my father aad my people. If I die in some other land i snan no lost foreTer.' "The Modes stood as bloody sentinels along the line of the em igrant roaa. as iar naek aa Ills (he ahould naTe said farther back than 1149). the- bec-aa th v of ambush and slaughter, and if o doe land was for a qaarter of a century the seene not only of sar- u-eacnery ana cruelty, but of heroic deeds and tragie 'incidents. Weary-Immigrants toning: onward mwara me setting sun no record ius now many were here sacri ficed almost on the Tory thresh hold of their land of promise. "Later when tba white man, haTlng seen and an- amau.a-al a . . w prwaiwa tnis isna of green mea dows. eUTerr lake and mai streams, determined ta posseaa it. nrare settlers, representing that naray race or man and who hare led the hosts at atTO- isatioa across , the contlaeat, planted settlements here; but a band of about is hini. ua docs, under the leadership ot Cap- ca, renouncing ine anthor ltr of braT M cuvAm.ai. u- aaiat, inauguraiea a rairn wmr lurougaout the lake country. a "Duriag the summer ef llfi SXanr natitiooa r fnrwrmmAmA throuah tba Tnlfaa tr)M asking the anthorlties at Washw ui w oraer ine remora! af Caotala Jack's haa' fMn 4 dnlty of Tale lake, their ancient noma, to me Klamath reserratioa, aad to keen them thar rvAmm were finally recelred by the sa- nwmieuueai oi inaian aixalrs ta Oregon, Hon. Thos. B. Odeaeal, to secure their nmnni mm. It possible, but br force if aaea. ary. - ' . --. D. H. TALMADGH For, with the fishing-grounds al most attained, a for tHft. . settled downer-1 hara pail tea cants a bowl for soup that was thinner than that fnr r K.wit in our nostrils and gurgled in our threats., it made as to fi.h r i it -".WC fTura.tA I.a a-, SYNOPSIS " : Ted Wynne aspires to the higher things in life so be leaves bis poai- tioa m a steel ssiTI and worka bis way through Old Dominion College. He succeeds creditably. Under Coach Barney Hack. Ted becomes tarterback oa the Bbae Comets, losing onry eoa game darmg the seasoav Ills only enemy at school is Tons Stone, who cosoiders Ted his tnferioc. Both aoys are rirala for tha lore of wealthy, and spoiled Barb Roth. Following a mlsanderstand ing; Ted Ignores Barb, but, bis thoughts are slwsys of ber ren while with lorejy Eosalie Downs. At the Christmas dance. Barb alights Ted, Eoaalie triss ta make Una ma daratand be baa bis Ideals centered around the wrocs; girt. Later ia the evening, Ted, f ot the first time, teaHaas how sorely RaeaSe fa. Days iel baypy eorayanionahip follow. Barb ia posxled. Back at echool. Teda tnovghts retora to Barb. Tbea be meets Betsy. They axe excep tionally food of oaa aaother, ' bnt reaSalng be Is not ia a peaitioa to be acriooa. Ted diacoBtJnnea oeemg her. Ia the spring, Barney lectures .oa football. Ted la commended for bis sonnet. "The Uaa ef SteeL'That eammer business is slack and Ted , ' cannot find work. ; : : - - CHAPTER XXIII : Rosalie was out of towa agaia. probably with the band leader at the Lake Erie resort Barb was chasing about with Stone and their mob. They had taken ap golf aow -ou was expensive. . Money old form, a barrier after alL He had beea preantnptions to pretend to their level. Barb bad abowa bint where be 'stood. He was of the wot Una? elasa. deatud- eat ea the whims of Seventy One o roadway when the torn dowa he waa Just a tramp oa the rrrer Sank. Loo kin at Ices. . The glory of the .gridiron, p Ze ro res ia the papers, names la the leadlines all a mirage which fad d whea the pockets were empty. FSghty little dambbeOs came to tba beach every day, came ia abort fkirts and conscience bathing suits; pretty little baggages whose con stant message seemed to bet Look -isn't this a eke pair of legs? Dotty. , Clare. , 1 Lucille Nancy. . Louise, m The mooa shone benlznlr on the rater, and the stars were low at sight aad the breezes warm. Dotty would become a stout wo nan after ber first baby but ast low she was modeled perfectly: jaU limbs, arms, breast black car w hair and lashes; square face, fpnnd eyes; pink cheeks in an ap le green bathing suit Dotty was a roluptuous figure. But Dotty wasn't voluptuous, merely passive, willing to be pusb td around like Betsy, bandied like Ay figurea. What was ia their binds? ' Lucille. . , , He met her at a lance oa a bill top, walked dowa the road ta a pomp, and kissed her two minutes later. Warm lips, hair M at . " ana coloring ot a yellow peach; white dress, slim. Lucille was a natural creation but a mental vacuum, You could play a tune on ber Hps or ber nkelele aad It was aS Jake with Lucille a gorgeous waste of material. Nancy was stoutisb and fall cbeeked aad coquettish1 as a caxni Tal doll; givea to bloc Eneas with white collars; harmless, vapid. Clare. Deadly serious, impetu ous, dangerous.' the load of girl who punctured delicate canoe floors with sharp beds. : ' Girls saw a look ia his eyes and responded. Ia the trmming h( lent late aad cursed himself for a coward. Bat at eight, whea the mooa bathed the river basin with a silver lure, bis heart pounded blood ever his intellect ia a hot fioodL. But it aever drowned rntmn bated bfmaalf for that. Oa his antral from alm. Mr OdeneaL - having by messenger called noon the Mod oca ta ratnm to tha reserratioa without arafL aecerminea to puce the matter in tha hands of Cant Jam as Jwtim. ot the United States army, an of- ncer or weu Known ducreuon aad eoorara. At noon on tba 21th dav Of Norember. 1ST 2. Cantata Jack. son, with SI men ot Company B, s-irsi unitsa states earairy, left Fort Bamath aad arrived at the pioneer town - or Linkvuie at a little after dark. Hera be met Sa perlntaadent Odeneal aad re solved Instructions as follows: Whea veu arrive at tha cams Of tba Modocs. reauest an tntr. view with the head men and say ta them that von did not can tn tight or to . barm them, but to nave inem go peaceably to Camp Talaaz oa .Klamath .Musmtinn. where ample provision baa 'been maoe tor- tnair comfort nnd sub- sutence, - and where, - by treaty, they agreed -to 4Ive. Talk klndiv bat firmly to them," and whaierer else yon may do, I desire to urge that If there Is any fighting, let the Indiana be the aggressors. Fire no. run exeent la air t. tensa, after they hare first fired upon you. L D. Asnlerata will aa. company yea as my representa trre; win also act as guide and in terpreter . ' .V ; , , ; "Ourlna that dark rain nfrht. we made ear mt tram T.inviiia dowa tha Klamath valla tha stoae bridge an Lost river. Daily Thought "No delrer after the tMhtta r scandal .need climb oat at bis gar- narrei xo ten mo that the leaders ef tha American revolu tion were man.' nn mii . wen break -lato my bouse with tmmpetings v to Inform me that grass Is green and snow ii am No more does the normal mind earn tor trifling j defects ia the man It is reading about The only real Question la what aim ... 4o, of what use was he, what did he fontrlDqte?" Charts Edwtrd a a 1 m t . as 'k 9 ?p'? WtizS 1 fefea Flighty Etde dambbells came to the beach every day, came bt short skirts and conscience bathing suits. Escape. The Valley waa a damp, stifling prison; ae was thankful for the train that took bins away. Many Of bis bid school classmates wen already married aad chained there some ot them mismated, regret ting it Spiced nights wafted youth in to marriage. Ted understood it Ow. after his summer. It was a way the Valley bad to retain its V wu. Bet Ted bad escaoed. New Da. minion waa ahead, Junior year was gorgeous !a be- gtnaing. jaoiors know everybody; everybody knew tha mnmn A a first string variety quarterback Ted rvynne was a personage; some body to be friendlT whh TT .hml ands with. so many people that a punpie Degaa to protrude between nis nngera. Ptdre was unhmni i- . .. . . . : '' was ucunea to tna eiarnom mA more to tae rugged type. "NothinS- tO do btlt riT nt hna and swim and pull a boat boy you might as well have "been with us if 1 naa known von weren't clavinv hi the mill," be said ia, one gulp. "No body there but The Thinker; and she bad me nuts asking about the Man of Steel and how be wrote poetry" "Lay off." "No foolin. she hf u You might as well get ready to peak your piece whea she meets yon. Boy, you're gonna have to talk." "First thing I have to do Is get ia shape, Pidge did nothing bat bum around, 4ad boors and every thing anything can happen this year." ' The first thing happeaed ta Ted Wrttae. The ninal htw. t.1. fingers develosed hmta an lafe! which' sent him to the infirmary. as k was cieanng- op aaother start, ed. "Yonr bloetTa ia bal .s.. ia Doe Bowers said as be slashed an X acroaa tha ni L(.iu rWbatVe roe beea doiagr 1 naa a case of poisoa hrv this summer." Probably it" Everv dsv the ioctnr . the hand again, oour alcohol into1 where Captain Jack was eacamp- n on u west side or the rrrer. AbOUt a third Af bla fnmu f .. Hooker Jim and tha Cnrley Head ed Doctor and some other of bis trusty nontenants, were encamp- on on ui east aide of the river near the Dennis Crawl mSIi "We found it very difficult la tha darkness to make our way through tha heavy saga brush, for we bad to leave tha road tn order to avoid being discovered by tha wily Indians who. doubtlesa, ware observlBg aa closely aa possible T"ry movement We . followed along the fOOt Of the ahaln nt kill. west of Lost rlrer, and . at day- " we were anont one mile west of the Modoe camp, which was at that point oa the river bank where Dan CoIweU't residence " now stands..; '.. ,.-o'.'.i . . .. The company was formed lato two platoons, and we rode directly through the village and baited upon the river beak, faclag the encampment. As we came near tha rlTer. Scar faced Cbariav .Wk.i ojoesed just before we came up. ir at as rrom tna other side of the rlrer. shontins- at. tha. Ume to arouse the sleeping Indi ans. In a moment there waa great excitement and commotion.4' iwontinuM on Tuesday.) ; CANDIDATES AT DCfXEB INDEPKXTlTTlcrw rv. The chicken dinner gtren Wed- NOW PLAYING HOLLYWOOD .. r.n j u u w Horn Itasr'r trxlzX fitorr ta ; f VI f - Amtrlcaa dnunm ass era 111 7r7? ByFRANGIS WALLACE the'opea wound, twist aa iodine brush about ia it Ted held out his band aad used the other to puB his hair while the medico was at work. Tbea, after it was packed with bandage and wrapped la a hot compress, be rejoined the other cripples at the college hospital Barney came orer; Ftdge. Pat, the Brute. Jack Boomer. They urged him to quit stalling sad come out with the rest of the gang. . "Pretty good food orer here." Pat said, "bow do you go about - eettinr roar band ia on of thn.. things P - Pat found the way later oa. Ted bad BOQlsS al n aTia'atlA sHrMnanfa Another boy bad rammed the prong of a pitchfork ia his hand and neglected it After preliminary treatment by Doc Bowers at the infirmary, he was taken away to a hospital and lost tha Tt usually felt better in the morning; tru. one nignt ae didn't sleep well and ia the moraine, instead nf h. customary relief, angry red streaks ran up his arm and a lump appear ed under bis arm pit Barney came over dnmVi. ,.j talked to Doc Bowers. That afternoon the taeA hin. the hospital dowa towa. "Quieter dowa lOrr. vu.it . better care," Barney said casually. ananas. r en better care the last guar they took down thera cam K.rE. without bis hand. His rieht band.' roa. W. thwrL a moment of what Hut would mean and thea he: thought nf m thing more oleasant .U v. could. Old Doe Bowar m. -?n :.u- him: laiehina aa if ha f..-a ling a horse; snipping with bis Ciimm to!. at. . v.. ( a same scissors to cat bandaeren aad rra .,t without anaesthetic. DUX the BUT waa a Kt. J beaded. ioSv kU wKa .a. lasgb, She kept patting fresh hot cypresses on.'; utber nurses drop ped fax Pidge aad the boys came dowa at times TeTa tv.i Cke a sororiry4ionse party. The old Doc kept plowing is with bis Iodine brush and pouring ia bis alcohol and packing ia his oanaages. j 1 ;'.,.. fT a CaaoaarA ' neaday evening, by the MetBodlat Booater clab was a great success. A large crowd ate dinner at the church. Among Visitors were 0. A. - Peterson, . democratic candi date for state represents tire, Bd Dunne, democraUe candidate for coaaty assessor, and W. H. Boya toa, candidate tor county treas urer. - . , : YOUR v : 5AVINGS ' Represent . 'v Tottr Cod v AN obJectlTo U a great laceaUve to aavlng. . Whether or not yoa use tha money for its original purpose is unimportant, yoa H1 hare built ap the lmpor ; tant habit of saring. : Open an account with Salm Coramnnftj " , Bank . .. " - ''... :...-..- ... ...... . - liwsh-r-ssaasasa v.. " - - I