The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 07, 1933, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
The OHECON STATESMAN, gataa Oregon. Sunday Morning May T, 1933
. BaSBLSaaMBkah - t -
7 :
"No Favor Strays (7; No Fear ShaU Aw$
.".., From First Statesman, March 28, 1851
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING) CO.
Cbakles A. Spkacue ' Editor-Mcmagir
Sheldon F. Sackett - - Managing Editor
II ember of the Associated Press
The Assocfated Pres is exehtatrely an titled to tha uaa for pabllca
i tton ot ail news dispatches cradlted te tt or not otherwise ci edited In
f this papar. , :
ADVERTISING
Portland Representative
Gordon B Bell, Security pundlag, Portland, Ora.
Eastern Advertising Hepresentatlves
. i Bryant, OriftUb A Brunaen. Inc., Chtcas. Mew Torn, Detroit.
" - Boston, attest. .......
' Enttrtd at t& PnttffU at SaUm, Ortgon. as cond-Cla
: (fatter. Publisksd eWry morning except lltnday. Busins$
f- office, tSS S, Commercial StrteU -
, . SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
MaO SubacrtpUoa Rate, la Advance. Within Ores: Dally and
Sunday. 1 Ma. (Scents: S Mo. Ui; l Ua. t; 1 year flOO.
tUeawbare eeats pa ate, at JC tor & year la advanca.
By City Carrier eents a mantti; 15.08 a rear ta advanca. Per
Cepgr t arota. Oa trains and Kawa Standa S eanta,
Yesterdi
ays
. , . 01 Old Salem
Town Talks from The State,
mas of Earlier Days
May T, 1B0S
FALLS CITY All business
houses and amassment . places
closed don it I o'clock last
night to attend the booster
meeting staged by the Commer
cial dub with Coloaol B. Holer.
president of the Willamette Tal
ler Development league, a
speaker. The great sawmills her
and at th sabarbs ot Black
Rock bar eontlaaed operations
all winter and ar now running
fall blast. Th payroll ot this city
is oTar a Quarter million dollars
annually and th population
1800.
The Elevator -Gomg Up
THERE is renewed crowding and pushing in the lobby to
be first to get Into the elevator, for the call boy has sig
, naled "Going Up!? Orders are rolling in to buy stocks till
the ticker gets all jammed up. Wheat is reclimbing the lad
: der. Hops are doing a sky rocket. Even wool, staid old wool,
i I -Js turning handsprings.
" ' ' It is the old fever of speculation. It's in the blood. Peo-
pie buy if they think something is going up in price. They
i bought U. S. Steel at 250, when they knew its earnings did
. not justify the price, simply because they thought it would
go higher and they could unload,
i 4 There is justification for a recovery of prices which
i have been depressed far below costs of production. Specula
i tion is br no means all a sin i but it so easily gets over into
the gambling fever that periods of deflation inevitably re
sult. They are the natural aftermath of speculative excesses.
Trees do not grow to the sky.
Congress may pass all the laws it desires to curb spec
ulation. It may put bridle and breeching about issuance of
securities.' It may put hobbles on the stock evxhanga. But so
long as individualistic economy obtains, uun will speculate.
It may be Florida real estate, or Texas oil wells, or Central
Public service stock, or hops or hogs. Sometimes people win
i by speculation, sometimes they lose. 1
You cant stop speculation; but it might be a good idea
1 to post a sign like they do at swimming places: Manage-
ment not responsible for injuries, lost umbrellas, or stone
bruises. .
I A Frigate Calls
THE old frigate Constitution is moored in the Columbia
river off Astoria. This is appropriate anchorage for Old
Ironsides, because Astoria was founded in the days of the
frigates. During the same war in which the Constitution
gained distinction Astoria was surrendered to the British
who rechristened it Fort George. Frigates of many nations
called at the mouth of the Columbia a century and more ago ;
and the Constitution is but traveling old sea lanes for ships
of this classification.
Too bad the Constitution cannot sail on up the river to
Salem. It is expected when the water in the Columbia is low,
during August, that she will come to Portland, following a
visit on Puget Sound. But her masts of 200 feet are too tall
to let the ship pass under the Portland and upriver bridges.
She draws 10 ft. of water which calls for more draught than
the Willamette allows in low water season; and her beam
is about 10 feet too wide for the locks at Oregon City. The
vessel is 175 feet long, the same length as the steamer North
western which plies the river here.
The frigate does not sail under her own canvas. Instead
she is drawn by a naval mine sweeper. " ,
When the Constitution calls at Portland there may be
fitting exchange of salutes between her and the battleship
Oregon, which won honors in a later war. The frigate gave
place to the steam-powered battleship; the battleship may
give way to the aerial bomber. The mechanics of mass
slaughter we call warfare keeps marching on.
i " 1
Motor Boat Harmony
TN the day's news from Cascade Summit is the item that
Woiiaia Viow wplrnmp once more the sound of motor
boats on Odell lake. The ice has broken up after the protract
ed winter in, the high altitude. We suppose there are folk
to whom the sound of the motor Doat is music; dux not w .
t. mrm -nrivh tv ntM"Pvi ftmoTi or tnA &TOminations. bull,
after the winter's silence on Lake Odell, broken riy by the
occasional whistle of a freight train or the Cascade limited
hurling through the night, no doubt the put-put, put-put of
the motor boats ia stirring as the snare drum of the town
band. It signifies at least that spring is back, and soon bus-
1 Ml V, Viiimmvnflr of Vlf f ATI"! Oil S reSOlTt.
inC There are ems to the distaste at the sound of a
motor boat After a day's trolling in the sun, hours of jabor
rowing with the oars, it's great to jerk the outboard motor
Jord and point the bow for camp. Or if a man has been
.Er-C . mT . Mr nf land out in the lake, through
agy flyinVlow, i. peat tc rhear th. mo
tor the boat coming to take you off, to a warm meal and a
aoft bed that will ease suiienea joints.
there must be degrees of tolerance even among mo-
tor boats. . - - " -
The secretary f th interior U com pta .Jf
for cement for public work ar practlcaHy Identical. Bat tt pres
Sent u W. ewPdeal for Industry la wgUg Pefio of aatMrojt
Uws. and regulation of competition. That is not much m8 "f"
SsTit hoierer than th. president', slashing oJ f 'u n
teUlng business t. restor. wage lerels. Thl. Job of running we
country Is great stuff. . " " .
Mrs. Plnchot Joined the picket Un wtier boys and giri. were I
sulking against wages said to be as low at i , ,r"
I low wslits plUful: and when w pick np thea barga ia sMrU
and hosiery: and underwear, w ought to walls that oruntimes oar
bargain Is purchased at such a terrible cost In human iaoor. we
cannot continue to get something for nothing.
Got. Rolph retod the parl-mutuel racing bill which th. Cal
ifornia leglalatur passed. Now Rolpk is no puritan; and h had in
tlmat .nough knowledg. ot how th meet wr. conducted. Now in
cappers and touts from California who haT. beea managing meets
In Neyada and Mexico are coming north to Oregon to bloodsuck on
the -weakness ot men.
n. ..,. n at.f I. ahMmI aa mfclnr "faith that th a-
a o wa waa J v 4 wv w - m -
lightened nations" would do something for th economic salvation 01
the world. W ar sorry to confess w haT no guca xaun, paruy
because ther seems to be no enlightened nations. And In foreign
economic affairs the USA Is among th dumbest.
Medford reports another killing. But this time It was on ot
those "legitimate" killings where th wronged husband was trying
to square th triangle". The affair was a pastur romance insteaa
of a Jackson county pastoral.
SAX FRANCISCO Viewed
by thousands of peopl who
blackened th hfna for mile
around, th Atlantic battl fleet
sailed threngh th. Golden Oat
today. Forty-four vessels, rang
ing from th ie,0 ton Connec
ticut down te tiny torpedo boats,
moved to tho Market street moor
age, Joined by th Paclfle fleet.
The original and popular fire
cent movie theatre ta Salem Is
th randetta. Every performance
is crowded. Adv.
May 7. 1033
PEKING Approximately SO
foreigners, many of them prom
inent Americans, ar. in the
hands of Chinese brigands who
raided th. Peking- Express early
Sunday morning. Among th. cap
tives is understood to be a for
mer Eugene, Or., woman. Mrs.
L. A. Beaton.
Salem Senators yesterday de
feated th Portland police team
at Oxford park, II to 9. Frink
pitched th first three innings for
Salem and Keen finished, pitch
ing as pretty a six Innings as was
ever seen on th 8alem diamond.
Jones, Senator catcher, played
sad hit welL
Mrs. Williams Glven
Party as She Quits
Job Held Six Years
INDEPENDENCE. May C
Mrs. William Beckn wlU take
over th duties ot chief operator
for th Independence unit ot the
Pacific Telephone A Telegraph
company Monday. Sh succeeds
Mrs. Dora Williams, who has been
acting as chief operator daring
the past fonr years. Mrs. Becken
has been assistant operator tor six
years.
Mrs. Williams was the motif ot
a fareweU party held at the home
of Mrs. Dean Girard last Thursday
night, when a small group of
friends and co-workers gathered
to present a few tokens ot remem
brance. She leaves for California
shortly.
BOWKBSOX GOES SOUTH
MONMOUTH, May . Mayor
and Mrs. F. R. Bowersox and Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Smith left Mon
mouth yesterday for a month's
pleasure Jaunt la California, with
sldetrlps into Phoenix, Arlx., and
Tin Juana. They will visit the
mayor's son and daughter-in-law.
Prof, and Mrs. Maxwell Bewrsox
at Fortuna, and other relatives.
BITS for
BREAKFAST
-By It. J. HENDRICKS-
Historic trees In Salem 1
(Continuing from yesterday:)
Th writer has long believed that,
in th eours of Urn, western
Oregon will become the greatest
edible not growing section ot th
eattr world.
w V
California, most ambitious con
testant now, will not b. Nature
favors wactera Oregon la several
particulars notably three: First,
low priced land. Seoond. low over
head cost. Including a aeeeeslty
for irrigation ia average years
for the walnut tre seada down
roots in fsvorabl location! tor Its
own water r9nh,snatfl. her.
Third, quality. W d mot have,
here, weather sufficiently hot in
walnut harvest time to melt the
oU Inside th nut and thus discol
or and mak rancid th meat, as
in California. Besides, w her
slower growth, with cool nights,
sad a firmer, ''nuttier texture
aad taste. Thus, a higher quality
resulting in a differential la fa
vor of our first quality, grafted
product, over California's firsts,
called there budded," or som I
cents a pound. There ar other In
equalities, in favor of western
Oregon. That is, as to walnut
growing. It is th climate sun
shine and showers, and soil.
S
As to filbert growing, w have
an exclusive field, extending to
western Washington. Excluslv as
to both Americas; giving us fil
berts as a franchise crop. As to
chestnuts, w eaa compete 'with
the world on at least an qual
footing.
a W
In time, the writer bailor es. w
will be growing in our forests
blaok walnut and chestnut trees
for both their edible ants and
their wood, for us In furniture
and I ether manufacturing. We
wftl j be fattening our hogs on
chestnuts, as la Sicily and other
countries. With a dens popula
tion, which will eom. in all like
lihood, future generations will use
edible nuts as a meat substitute.
That tendency Is now gaining
ground in this and other coun
tries. "a "a
Th owner of the grafted wal
nut trees under dlacussloa is O. A.
Clark, who has had th property
for about 11 years. Th Clark
horn is at 6SS North Church
street. The Clarks moved to the
city from th Summit district oa
th Oak Grove road, over in Polk
county, where their farm is still
ia th family.
a
Ther are som fin old black
walnut trees on the next lot east,
in th back yard of th old Byrd
house, where Miss Virginia Byrd
makes her home but thee ar
younger, set out by members of
th pioneer Byrd family. Some of
them are beautiful, stately trees.
S
Dr. Wm. Wythe, who married
the second daughter of Dr. W. H.
and Chlo A. Wills on, Laura
Bell Willson, was th son of
Rev. W. T. Wythe, who was pas
tor of the First Methodist church
of Salem, end who also serred
WUlamette university for a time,
as president.
W
There is another historic wal-
Something Hints Caesar Would
Have Been a Tough City Editor
By D. H. Talmadge, Sage of Salem
0'
NE thing I like especially
about setlal stories: by sim
ply omitting to read an In
stalment now and then one- may
obtain much the same results as
are obtained from some of the
novels which are rated as "smart"
and at a much lower cost.
A Chines has died at th reputed ice of 111 years. He attrib
uted his longevity to his peace ot mind. Under those conditions the
present lit expectancy of the average American would be-about twen?
ty-nve minutes. .
Ann Harding left Hollywood, which U full of "sharks", and
went to Havana where the sharks nearly got her. A movie star has
a nara uz. alter an.
- The great financial teeter-board:
gey high," w" --
"Dollar hits new low; stocks
Stories ar sometime told whan
old tlm printers get together of
horse boom days, when every com
munity had its high-bred horses
and colts and every printing shop
was called upon to struggle with
pedigree copy used in the making
of advertising literature. 81am by
Clam by Blam, dam Mam by Pam
by Warn that sort of thing, you
know. AU pretty much la the dead
past now. Nothing like It la the
rural districts today. But the holy
matrimonial news from the movie
colony at Hollywood causes us to
think ot It.
O. young Lochlnvar is come out
of the wet.
And he's fully as wet as a feller
can get;
Better are wet spells than dr
thy spells ere,
So cut out your squawking, says
young Lochlnvar.
First and test, I have read a
good deal about Julius Caesar. I
think I should not have liked a
reportorlal Job on a newspaper of
which Julius was city editor.
An eastern publisher brings up
the question: Would these ancient
glories, Egypt, and Greece and
Rome, have cracked up as they
dfd - had 'they beea possessed of
newspapers? Interesting question.
Does anybody know the answers?
Bud Kelland, who writes excel
lent Action in great quantity.
causes one of his favorite charac
ters in a recently pubUshed story
to say: "When times are such thst
aa investor can't make a mistake,'
his bank win advise him right.
But let aa emergency arise and
the banka ot the country ere like
so many spinsters with mice run
ning up their stockings. It is
hardly fair to include all banks ia
this category.
Folks have different ideas of
garden-making. PersonaUy. I pre
fer in garden-making: to collabor
ate with some muscular person
who objects to permittlnj: me to
hoe or pail weeds. And th more
strenuously h objects th better
1 me it.
Lv--'!'"'- 1
D. H.
TALMADGE
lacking in consideration for other
plants. This is why tt la rated as a
weed. Some weeds are said to be
ot value in the making- ot reme
dies for the treatment ot spring
fever. They would be, darn 'em!
In an Iowa newspaper I notice
aa item stating that some person
from Crumpet had registered at
the hotel. Sweet Crumpet I lore
liest Tills ge ot the gulchl Do I re
member Crumpet? O, sirs aad
madams! Crumpet was the only
village in which I ever Uved, vea
temporarily wher th male mem
bers of th congregation played
penny-ante between Sunday even-
lag service aad bedtime.
It woa't do te think too much
about anhapplaess. Tot know
why you are unhappy, but were
the cause of your unhapplness to
be removed you know good and
well you'd skirmish around and
get something- els. to be unhappy
about almost immediately.
nat tree 'standing on the south
side ot what was first called Jack
son and Is now the west end ot
Mission street near wher. It joins
with Saginaw street, on or near
the line between the lot occupied
by the corner house and the on
next east of It That is, between
the LaY erne Winkler property on
the corner and the Pauline B.
Kehrberger property next east.
A .
This ti a black walnut tree,
supposedly eastern black, and one
of the largest in the city, with a
great spread ot branches, end the
whole growth symmetrical, beau
tlfoL The writer cannot yet cer
tainly find the nam of the man
who planted thl tree but its
history must reach; hack to the
beginnings of Salens.
w
The site Is oa the David Leslie
deaation claim. Leslie and wife
deeded the property to Gee. H.
Jena, la Its 5. Job end wife
transferred it te Laden Heath In
1110. It went from Heath te S. S.
Kearney In 1864, from Kearney
to C. B. Bellinger la 1811, end
oa. through a succession of own
ers, ineladiag the Inlows, there
after. All th first owners represent
names prominent in the history ot
the early days. Leslie was the key
man in the second Methodist mis
sionary reinforcement of 18ST.
One of the first wives ot Jones
was a Leslie. Luclen Heath was
the first mayor of Salem, chosen
at th. el actios held th first Men
day in December 8 6 9. H was
secretary of sUUdma 'St to '88.
Kearney was a proamnt lawyer,
and died very rick in Portland.
Beuinger was a noted attorney
ana juag.
a S a
If th tree was not set out by
David Leslie himself, the honor
probably belongs to Jones, or at
least to one ot the other owner
ia the early days, mentioned
above.
a
The tree is worth netinr br anv
one driving that way. If it were
thoroughly topgrafted te Fran-
quettes, with Marettee tor Dollea
lsleg, it would likely before long
thereafter be bearing a ton of
nuts annually.
There are numerous other his
toric trees in Salem, that have had
prior mention in this column
There Is little new to tell of the
Breyman tree that is in the haU of
iame ror trees. But there is a aor.
rection. This writer has assumed
that It was an eastern black, fmm
the Barlow nlaatlnrs. It ia a r.i.
lfornia black, to which fact Is due
11a very rapid growth. The twig
waa suppnea to Eugene Breyman
by Gillette A Co.. niinanmui
San Francisco, and he planted it
in 1881. When it was placed in
109 nan or fame for trees, on data
furnished in out br Hurt i
Rogers, Salem city engineer, yet
in that office. March 8. 1P8T. it
had a olrcumferenoe of 18.8 feet.
iuio apreau iz, ana height IS
This tree formerly bore greet
crops of nats. it baa trwi
small ones la lata vaara- .Am.
Umbs are showiag- decay, aad the
wueie growtn is declining. Its
years ar endeatly umbered, in
that location, either from too
much pavta and eoaienaant i..v
ef moisture for its root growth
tprkp troa lng reach
ed its maturity for som forest
ry expert think tt t about what
thsy call "ripe.- It may ere long
?Jh .w7 ot nn. ad an
1,Tin matter and inanimate
matter, too. for nothing is certain
tW! et,Bs: change, m
this world.
The Willson avenue trees, from
msny lands, are notable. Also the
cedar of Lebanon on Chemckcta
street, and the Waldo big tree
from California on North Sum
mer, and many others here, all or
!2f y.f.u of .wnl hT "'t
is v 00,B.mB- 8Im is favor
ed with beautiful tree growth. On
JSlr? 111 froat of m"7 omt
homes the annual English walnut
fropa pay the taxes, in some cases
more, besides furnishing shads
and ornament. The possible full
iVSZ?mn 0f 0ur tre Srowtha.
on hills and mountain slopes, and
in our valleys, would Justify and
support Salem grown to many
times its present site. That is the
Picture of the future for the Wil
lamette vaney, reaching to the
crest, of the Cascade, and Jhl
Ooast Range on each side one
great grove, orchard and gardes.
Mrs, Mary Adams, 62
W ei m
Purled at Molalla
HUBBARD. Msr C w
Mary Kayler Adams, wife ef J.
Frank Adams, wU-knowa reel
drat of Molalla. passed away ea
iue oio &ayier donation land
claim Suaday. Mrs. Adams was
bora June 1. 1870. en tha m
donatioa land claim of her par-
mw. no laic ueary F. and Ka
inenne nermann Kayler, two
miles south ot Molalla. Her mar
riage te Mr. Adams took place
June 18, 1881. Mrs. Adams is
survived by her husband, of Mol
alia; five daughters aad one eon
Funeral services were held at
the Bverbart Funeral Horn at
Molalla, Friday at t p.m. Rv.
Henry Spies ot Gladstone, old
time friend, officiated. The in
terment wss in the family lot
at Molalla.
Unhapplness seems to be the
natural human bent. It's all
wrong, of course, but it is diffi
cult to change. Go into th. street
with a piece of gossip, and unless
it has distressing features folks
don't take much Interest In it.
One thlnt Is pretty certain:
we'd be a hean leas nnhannr than
A weed la a. plant which over-1 we think we are if we'd think we
cornea an obstacles, aal is attarJzare happier than wo think re are,
AMITY PUTS 0!f PLAT
AMITT, May a. The Amity
high school stadent body present,
ed the play entitled "And Mary
Did" at the Amity high school an
ditorlum. Friday night. May S, at
g o'clock.
The cast at characters taclad
ed Roberta Mitchell, Wallace
Pearce, Jean Abraham,' 7 Glee
Odom. Jak. Tompkins, Helen Par
vln. Oral Davidson. Lorene Tomp
kins. Gwendolyn Davidson, Betty
Pearce, Ernest Jensen . and Wsl
lace. Pears. . .
44
MARY
FAITH
f
By
BEATRICE
BURTON
: CHAPTER XXXV
The nearest telephone wsc ia the
drag store Just around the comer
oa River Street. Mary raith rosbed
to the evil-smetling little booth aad
gave Dr, Thatchers number,
- - WHtlc she was waiting for him to
snswer she heard Kbn s volte feb
slow deep voice' that ,was like no
otner toic ia the world. He was
taBuog- to some one ia the prescrip
tion room just behind the telephone
booth. And before she had finished
talking- to Dr. Thatcher. Kim walked
past her en the froat of the store.
-Good-bra,- sh heard him caS U
some ae bchiad the partitioa, aad
a girTs vole answered:
"Good-bye, Sec yoa later.
Mary Faith watched him aro out
Then she heard the familiar sputter
of his roadstec. She opened th door
ot the booth and stepped out Be
hind her, ia the prescription room,
she could hear a girt tmsnsniog. She
harried late the feme-starred dark
ness f Elver Street and turned to
ward . home. Her thoughts were
where her heart was at that moment
ia the Sat with the. baby. At the
moment Jealousy and heartbreak
aad suspicion were trivial things in
th face of his Alness. The very
word conYuUion was so terrify
lag.
She reached the door of the apart
ment buOOiog just as Kiss came
around the corner from the garage.
-Where have yoa becar he
asked, waiting for her to unlock the
door.
-Sam. place yoa were at the
drug store," she told him, with a
flash of bitterness.
She ran up the stairs ahead of him
and through the flat te the bsrhroocn,
where Mrs. Farrell had th baby ia
a tub of hot water. She did not
think of Kim again until eight
o'clock, when the doctor had gone
and she was sitting beside the baby's
crib, watching his regular breathing.
Then Kim came to the door ef th
bedroom and beckoned to her. She
did not mors, merely looked up at
him thoughtfully.
-Kim," she said at last, getting up
from her chair, T saw you in the
store tonight, and X heard you in
the back room, talking to that girl
Kim, how can you be so cheap?
Carrying oa aa affair ia ta back
room of a store'
"Oh, for goodaess sakeT Kim
interrupted, whh a groan. They
were in the dining room now, and
he sat down beside the table, shak
ing his head. "What arc you trying
to do, Mary Faith I Make me con
fess that I'm u love with a derk
ia a store. Just because I happened
to drop ia for a book or a pack of
cigarettes every now and then?"
He got up and stood in front of
her.
-What's the matter whh your he
asked.
klary Faith shook her head. "Kim,
you were ia the back room of that
store."
-WeU, whet if I was? I was sit
ting back there talking to Jim and
that girl cleric That may be a crime
ia your eyes, but that's what I was
dome."
Jim, Miry Faith kaew, was the
proprietor of the store. She had not
heard his voice as she stood ia the
telephone booth, but that did net
prove that he had not been there,
and she wanted ta better that he
bad been there. She wanted so des
perately to believe that nothing was
wrong' that Kim had no interest in
that pretty blond sjrL
"You're been away from home so
LfS.
fir;
ri l wB a M u --aav m m
Ilk
I
I LrfiX
'1
LjfTSi V I I
Mary Faith watched bins go out
much lately," she said, looking up at
him.
m raise sus tnicx level eye
brows. "I've been working hard
lately, Mary Faith, aad you kaow it
I haven't bothered you with aB the
details. I thought, if I told you that
I had to go out and stay late occa
sionally, you'd understand. I aever
dreamed that you were torturing
yourself tike this."
But I was," she blurted out
"Kim, how could I help it, whea I
saw you smiling; at that giri that
night when we were in the drug
store? And lately yovvc been go
ing out every night aad staying so
late" She was crying now, aad
her fee was drawn aad white.
"Kim, I shouldn't go to pieces like
this." She knew that he hated to see
her cry. He was looking at her with
an expression of actual dislike ia his
eyes. "But I can't help crying. If
you only kaew bow sick the baby's
been tonight end you weren't here
aad, Kim. I've beea so jealous aad
nahippy the last month or so."
"I don't see why you should be
jealous," he said.
"Any wosnaa who loves a man is
jealous whea he seems to be inter
ested hi some other woman. Of
course, I know you love me and the
baby
-WeTL them, what are you having
hysterics about?" He spoke briefly
sod brutally. Then he went oa in
that sam hard, angry voice. 'New,
let sac tell you sometbJas, Mary
Faith. If you'd cut out the grief
aad meet me at the door with e
smSe now aad thea, you wouldat
have to worry about me and other
woenea. If I don't follow you around
Eke a shadow all the time, it's your
own fault! You hadn't figured it out
that way, had you?"
He picked up his hat end weat
out The door slammed behind hhu.
Mary Faith stood where he had left
her, wringing her hands ia genuine
psia at the unfairness of the things
he had just said to her. She kaew
that they were unfair and untrue,
aad yet she felt that somehow or
other she had failed him. It wss her
job to hold him, and she had failed.
She knew that what he demanded
from life was gayety and good cheer,
aad that whea be didn't get what he
wanted at home, he looked else
where. "But how could I laugh whea the
baby was sick?" Mary Faith went
oa thinking, aad the more she
thought the more angry she became.
"And how could I smile whea Kim
came home after aa erening with
that giri tmfle and pretend that I
didn't know where he'd been?"
But surely there must be men who
didn't look for amusement and love
making an of the time. There must
be husbands who shared the burden
of illness and anxiety with their
wives. Men who realized that mar
riage and children and home-making
areat all "beer and skittles," as Un.
Puckett would probably have ex
pressed it
Kim was like a spoiled boy, Mary
Faith decided. There was no use ia
talking to him; the thing to do was
te stand by and wait for him to grow
up.
He did not come home that night
The next tnonuag she telephoned
the office. Mr. Farrell had ram i
a few minutes ago, the telephooe girl
tola aer, but he bad gone out agaia.
He was safe then.
"Safe aad u!kiag- said Mary
Faith to herself. She woadered
where he had speat the nixht aad
decided that ia all probability he had
gone down to wa with Jack Maldoa.
(Ta Ba Caatiaata?
CaarHctt. im. Vy n..M BmrUm
Maarth ar
B3as Featataa .ralca, ae
IBS ill US1Q
FO EH C
FALLS CITY. May 6 Honor
roll students ot the high school
for the past six weeks are: Jun
iors Catherine Haha; sopho
mores. Dorothy Barahart, Jennie
June Hatch. Esther Logaa aad
Eugea Sample.
Those on the grade school hon
or roll ar: Leslie Arranee, Alice
BenetieL Teddy Crawford, U el vln
Ferguson, Donald Freer, Martha
Gottman, Virginia Graham, Bar
nice Inman, Stanley Rhodes, Dor
is Silvers, Shirley Mack. Roy
Gardner, Donald Reeber, Lillian
Zurer. Jean Silvers. Richard
Ma rr, Robert Gardner, Bobby
Hylton, Bobby Howell, Marilyn
Gronewald. Tern Pierce, Marcella
Murphy, Waada Taylor. Kenneth
Graham, Leslie Hudson, Edna
Barnhart, Frank Jones, Connie
Hylton. Arerill Morris aad Rosco
Hatch.
A mother's day tea will be giv
en by the high school girls at the
high school Friday afternoon.
May 18 from 8 to 4:30 o'clock.
All women of the town are in
vited. Falls City was represented by
the following grade school pupils
at the Music festival at Monmouth
Friday consisting- ef Dorothy
Ames, Jessie May Henery, Melba
Post and Frank Jones all seventh
graders and Frank Jones. Miss
Laurence Treat has trained these
pupil and nccompanled them.
Burt Brown Barker
Is Grads9 Speaker
SILVER TON, May 8 Vice
President Bert Brown Barker of
the University ot Oregon has beea
secured for the commencement
speaker at Silvertoa. June 8. Oth
er commencement plans have not
yet been announced. It Is estimat
ed that this year's graduation
class will contain 80 students.
1 INCHES OF 8XOT
DETROIT, May 8 Two or
three weeks remain before oper
ations msy resume on the North
Santiam road camp. C. D. Cook
and James Dickie took measure
ments this week and found 21
inches ef snow remaining at
Gathrle McDougaU's camp at Pa
melia creek.
i r
MEMBER
United Stales
National
Group
Its a good time to marshal
your forces.
There may be many places where we
can point out advantages in arranging
your future program to make the most
of opportunities. If you will bring your
problems to us we'll be glad to help you
survey the situation and to suggest )
possible benefits. Behind out own capa
city to serve you is that of our affiliate
the big United States National of
Portland. '
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