Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 2, 1933)
pagi: FOUR The OREGON STATESMAN, Sakrt Oresroa, Tuesday Morals?. I far 2, 1S33 , . r, pound 1 "No Foror Sways IfarlVo For SmH AtPi" From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. . , Charles A. Sfragus - ... Editor-Manager Sheldon F. Sackctt - - Managing Editor I Member of lb Tba Associated PrcM to exclusively . .. . a 1U. 1 ot ail urnwn aipm.icnm crttuwi this paper, ADVERTISING ... " Portland Representative ; Gordon BV Bell, Security Building, Portland. Ore . Eastern Advertising Representatives Bryant. Griffith ft Brunson, Inc., Cfclc, Ntw Tork, Detroit, Boston. Atlanta. ' Entered at the Postoffic at Salem, Oregon. as Second-Close Hatter. Published every morning except Uondaf. Business el fice, SIS S. Commercial Street. ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES:. sfn Subscription B(9'i ";' .EfttS? ' Sunday. 1 Mo. 0 cents: S Uo. L2; Mo. 13.11 year ft-" Bmhtr BS wnti pr Alo? or f CM Cor I gar Xranfla. Par By City Carrier: 45 cents a month; jI M a year la advance rar Copy S ornta Oa trains and News Stands cent. The Higher Education Budget THE Eugene Register-Guard appears to be launching a campaign to embarrass Chancellor W. J. Kerr over the matter of the budgets for the higher institutions of learning. On top of all the previous cuts, the legislature made further reductions in appropriations to the schools; and in the allo cation of those reductions the Register-Guard becomesre jjentful; and charges that the budget which Chancellor Kerr has submitted to the board "indicates a complete lack of un derstanding of the problems which the New Deal in. higher education was supposed to solve.".. - : " The budget as reported by Dr. Kerr gives the state col lege $938,454, the university $646,979 and normal echools $267,543 of funds exclusive of allowances for the medical school at Portland and exclusive of federal match funds, etc, for agricultural extension work, etc at Corvallis. This Register-Guard demands more money for the university, and cites the fact that the university enrollment the past year has passed that of the state college by a small number. The first story the R-G printed was that the university would be called on to bear $300,000 of the reduction, which brought prompt denial from the chancellor's office. The bud ret submitted Saturday shows a cut of $235,055 for the state eolleze to $147,132 for the amounts.to 20. and that for on budgets which were really prepared before Dr. Kerr was the chief executive of the board. The strictures and insinuations of the Register-Guard are in poor taste. They appear tility, to Chancellor Kerr. Perhaps the R-G sees in the re cent annointment of two new members to the state board, one of whom is said to cherish the university viewpoint, a chance to upset the applecart, oust Dr. Kerr, and then pro ceed to strangle the state college further. We do not presume to know to the dollar just how the funds should be divided among the several schools. We would call the attention of the with all the other technical (and hence expensive) subjects lonir located at the state college, the friew deal transferred all upper division pure science there. This work is admit tedly expensive. It calls for highly trained and well-paid Drofessors. very expensive equipment and supplies, and small classes. The net effect Is to the Corvallis institution, 11 deDartment. Classes are large; instructors In the courses mar be bought at by-the-dozen reduce the ner caoita cost of the There are undoubtedly matters of policy respecting do na rtmerits and functions which it is the province of the board to decide ; and Dr. Kerr would justment in conformity with any changes in board program. We have, and believe the Deople of the state have, full confi dence in the comoetence and Kerr. He will be fully able to ; prepares. If the Register-Guard is looking to start a new fiirht in hizher education with Dr. Kerr the football, it will get all it is looking for. The state is looking for peace la the educational sector; and the people will show an ugly mood - if another scran is now to be staged. And this goes for Mrs. Pierce too, who is reported to sharpened tomahawk. . ' i Milk a Public Utility BACK in Wisconsin where they have had milk troubles in oast months, with farmers' strikes, etei a solution is be- In attenuated bv declaring would certainly qualify as an essential for human sustenance, the same as water; and fully as necessary as electricity and gas. - But what would happen to milk prices if they were "regulated" so that profits would be "guaranteed?" ' The Pacific Rural Press, which is the best agricultural paper printed on this coast, ject; It comments as follows: Why not make milk a public utility under state regulation like railroads, electricity, gas, water and the luce, asks a dairy group? "Let's meet the question Yankee styla by asking' questions, "Are you satisfied with the deal you gat la rail and electric , rates? . . "Would you be willing to bare the same commission fix the . price on your milk? 'In the case of eIectrlcltywfor Instance, the producer and ' I distributor are the same. The commission has only two interests to consider, that of the utility and that ot the consumer. : "In the case of milk there would be three interests. One would be consumer, another would be distributor, and a third . producer. - , - T "Would you be satisfied to take your chances in this sort ot triangle? - , . - "One of the big distributors in this state la said to bare remarked that milk, would soon be- a public utility and he would welcome it. That particular distributor has a large amount of i "good will" in his capitalization. Would that be allowed oa it? ' Is It so with railroads and gas and electric companies? ' "These questions don't answer the jorlglnal question. "Frankly we do not know the answer; Sanatnr tlnmo. TTinn& vrMn ..v. i v.tu..i emy league officers It they will pensions. - We are surprised at T-bone's moderation. Haying, repu diated the contract on mttiiiiiii( hnnfl. them down? Such a result appears certain if the emissions of rast riction is now in the radio the century the encineer of the JFi191 tt! JrBpoit . miica nn nour o Bare the heroine. Now i!JLfearet m."1ad trala' na tt automobUe story 7 '""uu w nas m XZlZlS?Jr luotea f." ..""."v""4 w u cuTerameni E Vor T9 tawg ---- - - - -Mwufc tju. f jui unaar tne constitution. Just as though there hadn't been a rerolutkm the tou of Mar?h! .. , " " '" nnaer u eenator soraa breaking radio programs, a new offering: "v flucw, xoraa mignr. tsa Mr a ii J MAnA-a A.1 .a . av twuiu cTcr vuierme ny narTJiony. I cwcf a mighty Babylon. i uuicipa auairs go, uiiymM, i jup pyucemen are unpaid, caaso me cuizens or unicago haTe - j.ir,-; peuinry oi progress. w.fc mm Associated Pmn ' .! snmied to tha o for public- a- A KamIi AVllfrAll HI u n ewn u-vmw. v. . . .... i university. The college cut the university 18.5; based animated by continuing hos Guard to this fact, that along increase the per capita cost at rates This would tend to university. be prompt to make budget ad in the fairness of Chancellor justify whatever budget he be coming back in May with a milk a "public utility." " Milk has its own doubts on the sub consent to baring the interest rate and airplane stage. At the turn ot Twin ratiaa ... v... WM of thrillers where cleTer y eep pace with commerce. W it he bad lire thousand in to go to hell, that It had m sit. - ai gold. Isn't Borah the queer a -managea dictatorship.' out la a m xtr "Borrah Mlnnerltch and his Har- go along with the -Titch' part: but ... , eTOTs awe While its tower still stand it Is a laiiea Babylon. .IU teachera are lis cm! serrants are unpaid: be- not paid their taxes. Tat Chlea.ro 4 r. '. .. .; " - . ' ..- " - -" - -T ' V, - ' v wl fez 1 BITS for BREAKFAST -By R. J. HENDRICKS- IMonear liquor fights: (Continuing from Sundayt) The Washington band press used to print the Spectator, first news paper west ot the Missouri rlrer, came to Salem, then, as the writer recalls, it went to Rose burg. It was taken to Eugene and used m printing Harrison JL Kin caid'a Oregon Journal thereafter, for many years. The Bits man op erated it there through the school years f S1-1. 'tX-t and '1 1-4. That pioneer machine Is now la the Unirersity of Oregon printing plant, doing the work of a proof press, as so many ot its kind are so used throughout this country. The Statesman plant has one. ' from all going before la this series, it appears manifest that the writer of the historical sketch in the 1IT1 Salem Directory got his wires crossed In telUasr about a rote la faror of prohibition by ine people; ana that the legislat ure disregarded the Tote; refused to carry out their duly expressed will. . ' Also it would hare been imnos- slble la the election ot July 11, is i, tor "one or the voters at Chemeketa precinct to "pot la a Dauot written on one side 'reg ulate and oa the osnosite side. . . Aft . a . me woras 'more wniskey," - tor Daily Health Talks By ROYAL S. COPELAND, M. D. By ROYAL S. COFKLAND, EL D. United States senator from New York former Commissioner of Health, VewTorttOthf -ANEMIA IS a Omk word which means lack ot tooX One who has this disease Is pale and his Spa hare lost their healthy colon, Be oom plains. ot short of breath, sweHlnt eC the feet and of tiring quickly. As a rule, he desires no food and suf fers from Aires tire clsturbaocea, such as nausea. bUlouaness,a in- digestion diarrhea. . Contrary tethe common ballet, pallor does not always indicate real anemia. -Dr. Oopeiond Many persons are pale yet their blood is normal. Others become pale when fatigued. But If a person has usually bad a normal, healthy color and then de relops a persistent paleness, anemia should be suspected, "Blood Couat" Test i, The presence or absence of anemia can be determined by means of a simple teat called the "blood count. In this test a drop ef blood Is ob tained from a pin prick of the finger or lobe of the ear. ' The "hemoglobin, or ooloring mat tar ot the Mood, la detarmmed by a special appliance. By means ot a counting chamber and microscope, the number ot red blood cells la es timated. In anemia, there is a narked decrease la the amount of hemoglobin and ia the number of red blood cells. It la row over ten years since a norel cure for anemia was an nounced. At that time it was dls ttnrcredthat a UTar diet was of ralue in correcting' anemic conditions. When first described, the real value of this new treatment was not sus pected. ; , :s:,:.. A. - Since then, the giTlng f Brer to patients suffering from pernicious anemia baa been valuable far beyond the expectations ot the discoverers ef this treatment. Urer Increases the hemoglobin and the number ef the i-a Diooa ecus. 4- ' 'v' Ik -f i v ;. ... I.rr - - t. Spririg Rtimba! the rotlng was aot by ballot la that election. w Governor Abernethr. In an snort of his contention that. the 1141 leguuture should either let the then existing dry law stand the one ot the 1144 legislature or else submit the matter ot prohi bition or license to the people, be sides the ar rim ants raantloriad aboTO. rerlewed the history of regulation and attempts at regu lation of the liquor traffic. He paid high tribute to the good or der of early pioneer Oregon, when the country wag dry. U Bis argument la taror ot limit ing: the sales of Uquor to few per sons, and those persons physi cians, for ase as medicines, sounds rather strange now for most doctors hare girea up the old Ideas that alcoholic liquors are necessary la the treatment ot human ailments. But in his day few it any doctors wished to get along without their use. Ir, - And his argument In faror al lowing liquor to bo sold without expenslre licenses, federal, state, district and elty, if permitted to be sold at all for other than med icinal uses, has been beard for many long years. Note the "whis key rebellion" ot 1714 la western Since fresh Brer was often dlSlcalt to obtain and many patients expert enced difficulty la eating large qua. tttteo of Brer, ft became neeessary to find a better way to aire it. Wtta In a abort time after the oIsootcsw of the value ef Brer In anemia, a liver extract was enveloped, This was made in the form ef a powder, whcOi can be sprinkled en the feed. The value ef the liver treatment was farther Increased try the maxta of a solution ef liver extract. This Is prepared In such a way that It can be injected Into the veins or muscles. Reoent reports titrate that method ef treating anemia le more advantageous and that the fel action occurs within a abort period of time. It la reported that there Is rtspense to the , Injection within twenty-tour hours. When Ivor Is taken by mouth it takes more than ten days for the body to shew signs of Improvement. If some member of your family has anemia, talk with your doctor about the liver treatment. Be will advise you. : . . ;. Answers to Health QaerUe Mrs. J. T. Q. What rsna akta to be purple following' a burnt a. this win clear up la time. M. A. S. Q. Is It advisable for one who has blackheads and pimples to take cod liver en? Aw Tea, take it If A, K TA Q. What would cause the noes to be dry and Itchy. A. Probably due to some catarrhal condition. For further partisulars send a self -addressed, stamped envel ope and repeat your question, Keep your system clear. - f Cv What would yon advise for pimples on the facer It What should a woman ef IS. I fast tBbaa tan weight 1: Is yeast In itself fattan- mgr ft wnat would be apt to cause falling hair In a three-year-old child T Aw For fun particulars send a self, addressed, stamped envelope and re peat your question, li She should welch about 1SS sounds this wont be about average as determined by examinauon or a large number of. persona v it No. 4i This wtmin fc rather difficult to determine without cramming' tne ehud and knowing more about her condition. Bao no doctor for his advice. (Copyright, mt. X. T. f. Pennsylvania and Virginia, over liquor taxes: the moonshine nn ia the mountains of the south lasting more than 111 years; the bootleg, rocket earing and hijack ing troubles that have persisted under all forms of regulation or prohibition, etc.. etc History Is now repeating and will continue to repeat itself. The education af tha. mmu m v . . . - --'. wit u-mjw to be undertaken all over again. If it were possible to make it suf ficiently general and thorough, that would furnish the best con trol. But it Is a huge task, and as lonr aa knma ,tn. .t..n main selfish. It win bo necessary to continue ft throughout every new generation. - S A study of the legislation ot Oregon's early days, under the provisional, territorial and state governmenta, is interesting-. Aug. 11, two days before the adjourn ment ot the provisional govern ment laa-iala.tnra.'a . , - -wwiMt itwwi of 1141, a new district (county) -). lauuung au land north ot the Columbia. That meant clear up to 14-49. the low er boundary Cf Alaska, which then belonged to Russia. The oth er districts (counties) were im mense; but Vancouver was an ffiftA TU Ie1Ito" of V itf iU Dcwabr tsion. de fined the territory as extending-to 84-41 and from the crest of the Roekies to the Padflc ooean denning the boundaries. ment in 1144 was Hit st t meet which there werl uiVil the treasury, the tax collector nr 7 wmpleted hialll only improvements oa town lota. The revenues were mostly from merchant. licenses, ferry llce te.. The cost of gov ernment was leas than 10a ner Z! V"? W the eoSnt ' t.??I 1Ut' ttt6r WM kind of iSifJ?' th '"'ioiial gov rnment. The money was ralaad by subscription. nSna. T-T- V ,r,c"cJly no mon ey in ae Oregon country la iiii d the legislature wed n ill deflain, legal tendi! U th.uS were included wheat, Wdsa. tal- Iwf' ork bn". larTposl lumbar and other articles Tof Z Port of the territory. - v - ' W - - 222; jjm 1 1. tvrt it. S'tt.r II. HI, Mpjortw, .r. KoUrt New Vi ews M cents? Why, or why not? sutesmaa reporters asked these questions Monday, and were S wered as follows: Q. 0 Smith, salesman: "It looks .like anything; can happen after the boost of last week. They may co to 11 and again they may not. But I guess the hop men are happy with 41 cents. - ...- ., - .M 0hm. bookkeeper, "Oh,.! eaat tell much about thatt rm not aa expert on hop prices. Now it yon were to ask me about prunes I might bo more specific My father has had n prune orchard for some time T. T. Blum, farmer! "Yea, I do, provided ail markets continue their boom, as I think they win. People are getting more confi dent; Roosevelt is doing some thing. Hope we aren't fooled this KrM ''r tlTnm MARY SYNOPSIS " JJUry Faith, comely young orphan', Is secretary to Mark Nesbit, wealthy badness man. She gives op her po aitioa to marry Kixnberley Farrea, shiftless young lawyer. Mary Faith believes that loving' a man hard enough win make everything come out all right ia the end. It was this confidence that enabled her to marry Kkn after he had once broken their engagement. She realises he has an eye for every girl, but hopes that married Ef e wQ sober him and make him successful ia bis profession. In stead, Kim . is annoyed at Mary Faith's 'Puritanism,' and Us Jaxsy friends, Claire and Jack Maldon, find her a doll companion. Learning that she hi to become n mother, Mary Faith, for the first time, visits Kim's ofSee. Kim Is furious when Mary Faith finds him flirting whh bis blond secretary. That night he In forms his mother and Mary Faith that he is leaving. Mary Faith, hcart- broken at this turn ef aft sirs, decides not to tell Kim o her coming moth erhood. She and Mrc FarreH decide to struggle to keep the home for the corning baby. Mary Faith obtains a position as typist. She refuses to accede to Kim's request- for a di vorce and asks him to wait six months before carrying: oat bis de sire As the bells are ringing in the New Tear, Mary Faith's son is bom. Kim, informed of tins event, returns homo and becomes, for a time, a prond and happy lather. Kim is re stored to his old position which he had lost dne to money irregularities. When his salary is increased, Mary Faith tells him to buy new clothes. Mary Faith sees Kim watting with a girl from the neighborhood Library. She excuses him of being- a fast worker. CHAPTER XXX Late in August Aunt Etta came up from GarrettsviSe to spend a week at the flat while her little house was being painted. - "The smeS of turpentine always makes me sick," she explained when she arrived. "I can smell it all the time and I can taste k m my food, seems like So I Just said to myself, Well. I slat paid a visit to see that redous baby ia a good whOc and got the noon bus, end here I am." Mary Faith was glad to sec her. She loved to hear Aunt Ella's never ending flow of talk. Aunt EOa read the paper aloud to the family before breakfast every morning and, dis cussed the events of the nation and the world with Kim. "What do yon think of Coolidge as a President, anyway, Kimberlsy T she would ask; and then she would answer herself before be had a chance to get a word in edgewise: "Seems to me .he does a pretty good job even M be doesn't say much. There never was a President like Teddy Roosevelt, though. I heard him talk once, and my but be waa full oi red pepperl Jolts and volts were in every sentence that came out of his mouth 1 I remem ber that I was hoarse for three days afterward, I cheered so much." She was filled with the quality that she called "red pepper," herself. All day long she trotted around the house, helping with the work, play ing with the baby, snipping the brown leaves from the Boston ferns la the dining-room window, talking constantly. Every afternoon she and Mrs. FarreQ took the baby lor n walk while Mary Faith stayed at home and put the dinner on to cook. They never started oat antu four or five o'clodc the part of the afternoon that Aunt Ella catted, "the cool of the day" and they never got home until six o'clock. They were out ef the flat on one of these Jaunts of theirs one after noon when Claire Maldon came driving up the street m her little yellow roadster. Mary Faith saw her through the open windows of the living room and flew into her own room to powder her face and take off her checked apron. She always felt dowdy when she was with Claire who was always dressed within aa inch of her lift and made up Eke a screen star. This afternoon she bad on a dress of coffee-colored sttk with n little hat to match pulled down to her eyebrows, Her hair peeped from Newell, J. M. Garrison and M. O. Folsy ot Champoeg county, M. M. MeCarver and Isaac W. 8ml th of Tualaty county, and Abljaa Hen dricks, his colleague of Yamhill. It was a dose squeak between failure or success la Applegate's first move ef his program to avert the war that was surely Im pending, with all the medicines mixed or being prepared for the hell-broth to make It inevitable Ther were notable lnconslsten cleev One, for example: Applegate got through a resolution in the first tension of the 1145 legis lature, .reading, "Resolved, that the goverament has no power to annul a contract entered into in the United States or Great Brit ain." Disclaiming any power to legislate before being given pow er by the people at the polls, that body granted three divorces, two ot the applicants having been married la the United Statec. A fourth applicant, who gave aa a reason for desiring a divorce that he was not able to return to the United States for his wife, was denied; ft being held that "a good wife would pay for a long Jour ney." a "a Is The first law of the duly auth orised leglalAturo, ia August, was one against duelling. It came about la this way. 8. U. Holder ness and J. O. Campbell, promin ent pioneers, had arranged a duel to settle . a quarrel. Applegate heard ot It. He prepared a bill, got It considered under suspension of the mice passed, and signed by the governor all in 11 mlnutca. The would-be duelists were at one arrested and placed under bonds to keep the peace. . a. - - The 1IT1 Salem history sketch Is badly mixed on the 1141 and 1141 . provisional governmentc too, as nearly every history yet xriitea-hae-beeaJnelndlng.. the FAITH "Hello, housewife," Claire greeted Mary Faith, dropping- into Mrc FarreXTa armchair. under it in brisrht mTK wm add her Hps and checks were bright whh coral-colored salve About her huag the scent of the lotus perfume that she used and the odor of ds arettec "Hetto. hotuewtf." aKa awMt Marr Faith, droooinv Inta Urs. Par. re ITS armchair and lighting a ciga rette -i came to ask yon about tak ins; a trio with nr T Knr n, Sandy's aB for it. I saw him down- . . e m lown just now waen t went up to the office to get the key of the car from Tack. I thattfffct It annM Ka fun lor the lour of us to drive down to Cambridge Springs. Marr Faith looked ttiaaht fully. If she and Kim went it would mean spending twenty-five or thirty s e - - a . . aouars coat uey couldn't afford to spend that way. It would mean leaving: the baby for two or three Tm sorry, Claire," she said. "But t doot see bow Kim and I can get awav. We've aerer left (ha KaS sad rd be miserable wondering O ne were covered at night; and be- smcs st woukx coa a tot of money aaasssas) . "Mary Faith, you're a little fool!" Claire's bright sharp voice cat across her sentences ilka .a. fcaifa. "Yoa doot think you're making :anay nappy by patching pennies and Staving at home ihrea hmdrMt and sixty-five days in the year, do your xou're a nice girl, Mary Faith, out yon know less about men than anvbodv I ever saw fas ar life. Km yoa take Sandywhat be likes is plenty of nppo going on around him all the time If yon were smart you'd get him awav from the haW nA those two old girls once m a whtte SB) WW a a - ner cntna-oiue eyes were on Mrc FatTtA and Aunt Ella, who were coming along the sidewalk waeeung the baby's little cart In the mellow afternoon light that came slanting In throoafc thm t'r). windows she looked haggard at spttc oc ber paint and her powder and the black oil that a-tictMMt . her eyelashes. Studying- her face. saary rarta cooia see where there would be lines and wrinkles U ft I. another ten years or so. Her con stant bunt lor hagpiness that ahy ana quiet t rung in places where it never could be found in a HmntI years seemed to have wora a m Late hours and cigarettes and the t rungs she drank had aa left their mark on her. too. At twenrv-four she looked thirty-four. At thirty Yesterdays . Of Old SalexB Town Talks front The 8tatee man of Earlier Days -. Jlay a, IPOS The annual relay race from Salem to Portland will be pulled off tomorrow and the imt creating a great deal of Interest. ue rumors win carry a message from .Governor Phamhariai . the state bouse to Mayor Lane at roruana. . - Friday. Mar I, baa been de signated as "clean-up" day in Sa lem according ta a nnvl,m,Mn. issued today by Mayor George F. Willamette's aggregation ot ball tossers went down to defeat at the hands of the O. A. O. bunch yesterday by a score of 1 to 4. The first tew Innings started out aU right but la the third, by a eeries of errors, Wil lamette allowed seven men' to cavort around the cushions. - .': May a,; 1023 -l , Approximately , 1 1 f eighth grade students in county schools outside ot. Salem wm graduate this year, provided they are able to pars the eighth grade examin ation, according to Information given out from the county school superintendent's office yesterday. . Washington Announcement that the government In 11 days wCl begin to "vigorously" en force the law as interpreted by the supreme Mart to prohibit latest out, that of Dr. B rots an, to say nothing ef Bancroft. B-BEATRICE Uy BURTON she would look fiftv If ahe Wot aa as she was going. And at fifty she would ha wearinv 'thm lotfce aiuf aping the mannerisms of the giam- "She's arron ' atjaat PTtm.' taa." thought Mary Faith as she watched ner stop oesioe tne nanys txtuc cart and bold out a gloved finger to him and smile at him. Kim seemed to be perfectly contented these days. wan ner and his baby and bis home. nut rust to make sure she spoke to Kim about the trio that night when the two of them were setting out for the moviec "Claire stODoed in this iftrraoM . she began, "and told me that yon and ahe had been talking over a trip ia the car " "NOW. we didn't talk It (rai a aSr Kim interrupted. "She came down to the office this afteniMa tn talk over an entirely different matter wnn me ana just as she was going she suggested that the four of as go to Cambridge Sonars lor a coanla of dare 1 said I'd sneak ta ma shout it." "But yon didn't." "I forgot about it. And anyhow Tm not so keen about going with them. They've been scrapping a lot lately, and I hate to ba ia ma at these huaband-aadwife cntarrels. dont yon? I stopped in at the flat the other , night on the way home from the office I felt like having a drink and they -were right in the middle of the tenth round I Believe me I got out m a hurry!" - That was on Thursday night. Oa Saturday Khn came home sick . from the office. He hail a bat iIimi and a fever. His hands were dry and aot ana us gray eyes guttered aa der half-abut lida. Two minutes after he walked into the bouse bis mother was oa the telephone, asking Dr. Thatcher to come right over. "I doot need him. Mother- Khn called to her but she pretended not to bear him. She went into her own room and powdered ber face and put on a clean house nress before she appeared in the sick-room where Kim lay In bed. . She ambled around the room, do ing unnecessary thing towering a window shade and then raising it again, shaking up the fresh smooth pillows of the bed, disturbing Kim in order to do ft.' , CTe Sa V flssifj k- - - w aUaaraataxaaaxMUaUa. American and foreign ships from carrying liquor within the three mile limit was made tonight by Attorney General Daugherty. A delixMfal treat was given to the aeudleneo at the Methodist church Sunday when the Wrtt ney Boys chorus, aa of whom a E,an from Vancouver, PfUa4' Newberg and MeMInnl Tllle, took charge of. the entire service t- . ' - . - a Two Big: Program To Feature Music Week at Woodburn WOODBURN. May 1 Mrc Paul Fembertoa, and Mrc V. D. Bala are la charge ot ar rangements for music week which wm bo observed In Wood burn this week. The churches had special music at the services Sunday and the various ergant. fatlons of the community are presenting a musical program at l Woedburn high school Friday alght. May 11. The church, schools and clubs wm all eon tribute to the program. Thar will also be aa instru mental ensemble program, at the Methodist Episcopal church Sat urday nlgbt, girea by the plane pupils ot Mlas Joyce Wood fin, as alsted by singers from the high school. ... Coates Succeed to -Brown's Church Work SILVERTON, May l.Rav. and Mrc J. T. Coates of Seattle have arrived at Sllverton and wm bo In charge ot the Calvary Pentecos tal church as sueewsors to the Rev. John Brown and afrm. Rmwn Sr iwho.fhaie;gpn.,o.X-atipgto'3.