page ruuic The OREGON STATESMAN. Salem Oregon, Friday Morning, May 19,1933 ) , Wo Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Awe" : From First Statesman, March 23, 1851 I - THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. ; - Charles A. Sprague - - - Editor-Manager Sheldon F. Sackett ----- Managing Editor Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press la xcluslvely entitled to tha use for publica tion ol all dwi dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In Ibit paper. : ' ADVERTISING '., ' -f ' Portland Representative -- Gordon & Bell. Security . Building. Portland, Or. - " Eastern Advertising Representatives Bryant. Grlffltb a Brunaon. Inc. Chicago. Nw Tork, Detroit. Boston. Atlanta. ' Entered at the Potto ff ice at Salem, Oregon, aa Second-Class Matter, Published every morning except Monday. . Business office, SIS S. Commercial Street. - - : . SUBSCRIPTION RATES: - Mail Subscription Ratsa. In Advance. Within Oregon: Dally and Sunday. 1 Mo. 64 cents: Mo. 41.25:. Mo. SJ.25; 1 year 4.W. Elsewhere SO conta per Mo., or IS.vo Cor. 1 year In advance. By City Carrier: 4i eents a month; $5.0 a year to advance. Per Copy I ernta On trains and News Stands S cents. i Hitler Changes Tune A DOLF HITLER, who has been sending the cold chills up "France's spine and giving England more worries, chang ed his tune after Roosevelt's appeal of Tuesday. Hitler has J been, parading around his country doing everything to build up the national enthusiasm to the boiling point He had called lhe reischtag together for Wednesday to hear him make a great pronouncement. Europe started reaching for machine guns thinking (the flnext war'' was about to start, i Norman Davis,! who has been doing the free lance dip ; loraatic work all over Europe for Hoover and Roosevelt, sent a hurried call from .London for Roosevelt's help; and Roosevelt-responded in dramatic manner, with an address that was frank, forceful and comprehensive. It was a last and climactic appeal to Europe to who broke the peace "let the In the face of this address Hitler could do nothing but capitulate. It was the stupidity of the kaiser's government in failing to head the! appeals of Woodrow Wilson that brought Germany's crushing defeat in the world war. Hitler did not repeat the mistake. While the immediate peace is preserved Europe still is tense. Nothing has been settled or adjusted. The trigger is merely not quite such a hair-trigger as it was for a few days. While Hitler professed accord with the ideals of disarma ment which Roosevelt proclaimed, France has not responded with any indication that she will relax her militaristic policy. Hitlers position is sound tions which insist on a disarmed Germany, have steadily refused to comply with the peace treaty which called for their own disarmament If they go about armed to teeth Hitler thinks it 13 a national humiliation for Germany to be stripped of weapons. Common sense country is better off to be spared the burden and expense of a big military establishment; . keep up with the Joneses in armored tanks. i; The Polish corridor, the ern Europej with Rumania ruling over territory filched from Hungary and Russia, these difficult situations remain, and with them the impulse to continue Europe as an armed camp. And Japan merely shrugs its speech, and continues its drive - world peace is hot yet here. ing,tbut the weapons are still , follow-up work if his splendid world agreement. Who Owns miiE Astoria zill-netters seem to have the idea that they JL own the Columbia river in it. They have been out on strike because the packers would not pay over 61ac per pound wanted 8c Upriver fishermen packers at 7c. They figured for their labors than to do fishing season is limited anyway, and days already lost have meant thousands of dollars to . But the Astoria radicals mise. They stormed the meeting at Rainier and broke it up so the mayor there had to call another meeting and exclude the Astoria troublemakers. Not satisfied with holding off on any settlement themselves the Astorians were determined to keep all fishermen off the river by force or threat or other forms of persuasion. , One of the means announced was to take their own big nets upriver and raid the fishing grounds wherever they saw some of the upriver fishermen at work. This is forceful picketing of the fiver. , There is no reason why the Astoria fishermen should dominate the whole stream. The people of Oregon have been good to these people at the mouth of the river. By initiative they voted to put out of business the fish wheels and traps of the upper river, and have steadily resisted attempts to restore them. But the state is. not ready to give the Astoria fishermen a deed in perpetuity to the whole river. A few more gestures like those made this season and the state will open up the upper river to fish wheels. ; What the correct 'price for salmon should be, certainly no:inland newspaper can say; but the action of the Rainier fishermen in. accepting the compromise would go to prove that under prevailing conditions the seven cent rate is better than idleness. Certainly the packers have had tremendous losses in recent years. . '. 1 - We Learn How WHILE Oregon people are tucjr me me uumuesi, on ine coast, so rreaencis Osborn hasit figured out. Osborn is connected with the American Museum of Natural History and explained his .StUdieS tO the American TnrromVa on;cHr TTIs Tft ;, resultant of mental tests with w !: A i"iiujnce tests, etc Tfce states rank in order: Washington, California, Massachusetts, Oregon, Connecti cut, and on down with Arkansas, Louisana and Mississippi as tailenders. rllSLRS? aifot risin?- The tables parallel ra Th? SSt?1 tai eSi SUv hls those f or sch001 expenditure. SiJSS0"1! Pariy the northwest coast, isthe last stand. of Ihe original white stock that settled in America.lt has the lowest percentage of the hewer foreign element and ffiS?n'rW? are smart and W we are smart, outrhere on the coast. . . -1 l There la atpirir.fnn tA -.iVf . , . some dumb things sometimes. coast is a BDlendid enrmfrv Withjsuch amarvenous environment the people her ought to dedicate thorns. .nM-LT.? uu"1 wil-ZlZ. j3vt - Dermanent civil izflHnn Trtnoai natural resources, but on the innJr" keep the peace. For the one blood be on his head.' in this respect: the other na would make one believe his but nations think they must the matter of battleships and unstable situation in southeast shoulders over the Roosevelt to Peiping and Tientsin. So Roosevelt halted the gun-draw handy. There must be much sentiments are translated into the Columbia? and all the salmon that swim for salmon. The fishermen finally compromised with the it was better to get something nothing and get nothing. The fishermen. would have nothing of compro Smart We Are the fourth smartest in the school children, illiteracy sta- , But take all in all. the w ywvu, I" Tt wesc V uuuumg nere a great. is4- M Z development of the finest cul- i0unaa W tut strongest CTil CM T M J l vyLUvUV V li , STOLEN LOVE. By Hazel Livingston CHAPTER 1 "I don" want any foolishness, Aunt Ewie used to say when Joan as a child begged for a pet or a playmate. And, "I don't want any I AH,itiM- ana still aaldY when I .Avnt-n-Trear old Joan asked for - - I silk stockings, or permission .tol stay and play tennis alter echooL That tattled it so far aa Aunt I Erne was concerned. Bat "ioousn ness is not' so easily settled when yon are seventeen, and it'a spring. m a mm ! a. I. old Van Fleet place had burst into I a was Apru. me macs on ui bloom over night. Yesterday tney were tia-ht. dark buds, and now the I feathery blossoms sprayed over the I summer noose ana anppea, a gior-i iocs narole tide, onto the sun-bli-! tered bench beside H. I - Joan flrrinned imnishly and kissed I the sweet greed wood of the lilac tree. Joan was - always loving things the little new green shoots insr buds on the rose boshes, the UI MJV V1U VJflvos ncv(Qf Mi. .ntu I poor, rusty iron deer, who had stood for so many years firmly planted in the middle of the garden. s When you aren't allowed to have real friends yon have to have make- believe ones. At least Joan did. Major, the deer, was the best be loved of them all. Many were the warm kisses she had pressed on his cold iron nose, many the tearful se crets she had poured into his deaf and rusty ear. Major! Silly name for a deer, bat she was only three, and thought he waa a dog when she named him that. Perhaps, she thought, 1 the doggish name would give him a little more life, inspire him to pick up his iron heels and run "woof-woofing" around . the yard like the Sedgwicks' dog next door., Joan waa always imagining things. "Silly thing l" Mrs. Heeley, peel ing potatoes at the kitchen window, watched her disgustedly. "She's been op to somethin'i' The broVa Earings slid in thin spirals froic er red, bony hands, onto the newspaper-covered drain board. "Wait till Miss Ewie gets after her shell catch it!" There was an odd exulting gleam in her sunken old eyes, something vicious in the way she handled the sharp little paring knife. "Old Crazy Heeley. the Sausalito chil dren called her. Thirty-seven years she had worked for the Van Fleets. "Workin my fingers to the bone, takin' Miss Ewie's lip. and no de cent wagea . . . they'll see when I'm JSP S tiZlJ-ll ening to quit. But she never did. She hated change. She hated Joan, too. Joan who was young when she and the "Van Fleet" girls were old. Joan with the too red, too laughine mouth. Joan with the fly-a-way golden hair, tomboy Joan, always rushing and running and tumbling over things, never stopping to grow up into a proper young lady, "Lookit her now. Playin' with! them flowers like they was human. I've a good mind to can ner in an" The big front door, swollen after the long rains, creaked loudly on its heavy hinges. A voice on the front! porch, authoritative, manly. No need for Heeley to call Joan. Miss Ewie would see to everything. Joan picked up her feet slowly. Her heavy common-sense shoes scraped on the patch. They weren't dancing feet any more. The little secret smile had faded. Joan was afraid of Aunt Ewie. Aunt Ewie had found out; somebody must have told on her. She might have known. Aunt Ewie always found out Aunt Ewie was waiting in the very middle of the big red rag in the library. She stood, square and crisp in her stiff white shirt-waist and black alpaca skirt, a black- browed executioner, waiting for the culprit. Over in her corner near the ugly, air-tight stove, Aunt Babe pulled her pink ice-wool shawl closer over her narrow shoulders, and rocked very fast. The disciplining of J oan, though pleasurably exciting, was nerve wracking, and likely to give her a headache. Ewie never knew when to stop. "So you spent the afternoon with the Sedgwick girls!" Aunt Ewie's The Call Board By OLIVE M. DOAK "Gabriel Over the White House." HOLLYWOOD " Today Robert Montgomery . . and Tallulan Bankhead In "Faithless." Today Tom Mix In "Flam- lag Guns." GRAND Today "The Big Drive." Today's most vivid headlines from Washington ' form the en grossing subject matter of "Gab riel Over the White House," new Cosmopolitan - Metro- Goldwyn Mayer production which opens to day at the Elsinore theater, and bids fair to be one of the greatest sensations in screen history. - . The anonymous novel on which the picture Is based Is already a literary sensation. Appearing ear ly In February, it immediately leaped into the best-seller class. As the first photoplay which has taken a United States president through the turmoil . of modern days, it Is considered to be the most daring motion plctore ever produced. Walter Huston heads an excep tional cast aa the Hon. Judson Hammond, president of the Unit ed States, around whom an amaz ing chain of events revolves. Haa- to is an expert on presidents, having portrayed both 'Lincoln and Grant for the. eameraa. Karen Morley, who scored in that other Plctore t national affaire, "The Washington Masquerade," playa the mysterlong woman in the to ice was heavy, bass, almost like a man's. . ? ' f . Jean's head went vv. She bad fighting Mood. Yes, I did!" rjuiarl" ifiwie spat me wora Oat. "Liar I - A girl that will lie, that will sneak, and i I didn't lie! I said I spent the! afternoon with Hilda and Anne, and I did " ( At a dance han, a common, pnb- He " " r Everybody at school goes all the nice girls. -Hilda -j and Anne, and Dorothy Nailor. Ton can't say the Sedgwicks and the Nailers aren't nice" i "very nice. I'm. sure.. ..Evvie folded .her arms on her militant cnesx, ana oroppea ner voice to a sugary ramble. Sarcasm was one of her favorite weapons. "Quite as nice as hm xia-raii wai astenas. Maybe nicer. Bui in the future yoo will have nothing more to do with these nice e-irls 1 I forbid yon to speak to them, except as may be necessary in school. Ia that quite clear? Let na not misunderstand ..ww. m.m,mn "But Aunt Ewie they are my "I don't want any foolishness, Aunt silk stockings. f rlenda almost the n1- onea!" Poor Joan's voice was shaking a little in spite of herself. She couldn't lose Hilda and Anne she must make Aunt Ewie see. "Oh, please listen. You dont under stand! IH promise never to dance again if you'll only just let me " Pt her head in the doorway. Her "Dinner is served!" Mrs. Heeley thin face was flushed with excite ment. "Dinner is served, ladies!" Aunt Babe got up and led the way automatically cross the bau into the dimnz room. The others followed. Ewie tasted her soup. "It's cold. Heeley take it out I" Heeley glowered. Babe hastily tasted hers. "Why, sister, it isn't cold " I said take it outl Heeley flounced out, mutterinsr, They heard her bansring around in the kitchen, talking to herself. Ev- vie was hardly conscious of it. She began on Joan again. This this dancing teacher came here. She had the effrontery to call here, while you were dawdling on your way borne. Wanted money so that you could learn dancing. Joan's face was flaming. "I never asked for any! I just went with the girls to visit, and she let me dance this afternoon free Free! Humph! Throw a sprat to catch a mackerel. Well, she caught no mackerel you'll do no dancing. "I never asked " "No, you wormed your way in free. Free! A Van Fleet" "I'm not a Van Fleet. I'm a Hast ings " Ewie's lip curled. "It's nothing to be proud of. The less you sa about that father of yours to me "Sister 1 Please Aunt Babe reached a skinny, trembling hand across the table, "zoo forget your self" Bat the black-browed old woman, and the golden-haired girl didn't even see her. There was no stop ping tnem now. The fight was on. "Proud! I'm not croud of any thing. What have I got to be proud Spring Show ot Jersey Club is Slated June 7 The Marion county Jersey spring show will be held at the state fairgrounds here Wednes day, June T, county officials an nounce. Judges selected for this event, one of the big undertakings of the club, are A. D. Cribble, Canby, Robert L. Bnrkhart of Albany and John Gale ot Oregon City. Victor Madsen of Silverton is county president; and Mrs. T. C. Kuenstlng of Woodburn, secre tary. Judges Cat Salaries Records of the state department here show that three members of the state supreme court voluntarily have taken salary reductions of 20 percent, while four others have submitted to cuts of II per cent. Those who have taken the 20 per cent redaction are Justice Ross man, Bailey and Kelly. Fifteen per cent cats were accepted by Justices Belt, Bean, Campbell and Rand. ACID CONDITION Is a Danger Sign Acid condition means trouble ahead unless it is given Immediate attention. It ia often caused by mineral shortage , lack ot some of the essential cell-salts needed by your body. Dozens of local people have ended acid condition by drinking CAL-O-DINE, a natural mineral water which contains all ot the cell-salts and minerals essential to life In natural form, assim ilated by the blood stream. Let us tell yon about their results. Get a bottle, today. It Is pleasant to drink and a half-gallon will last you a whole month. - Phone 172 C. or eall at 221 North High street, Salem, Oregon, for free information absolutely no obligation, s-2. f Adv. By HAZEL LIVINGSTON oft Cotton stockings when arm other girt' in school " has - silk! Patches. Crazy eld clothes. Tm the laughing stock of the whole school. But I could stand that if you'd let me be like the rest play basket ball, and go en hikes and alL Yon never let toe have a single bit of fan my whole life. . And when any body like Hilda tolerates me a little 'cause she knows it isn't my fault I cant go anywhere, then you want to stop that- "Joan!" Aunt Babe was holding her head, crying weakly. "Joan, my heart, I cant stand itP "Babel Keep oat of this, will you? Ewie's face .was purple. Her hand on the water goblet at her place was shaking. Joan went right on. heedless of them. "I never had any fun! I'm the only girl in the school now that can't dance. I dont even know a boy. Every girl. I know goad to dancing class en Wednesdays. It doe sat cost much. I guess all my mother's share of grandfather's money isnt gone. SheTd have let me go she'd know. How am I ever to meet any boys, when I cant Aunt Ewie'a glass snapped in Ewie said when Joan asked for her fingers. The water dripped off the fine damask cloth onto the faded carpet in a forlorn, slow trickle. Ol t 1 l V ' i , . , one pusnea ner cnair oacx sxooa up, pointing a thick, trembling fin ger at Joan. Boys! It s come to that already! Boys! You poor, misguided girl! And money dont talk to me about your mother's share! If I hadn't been the businessman of this fam ily, investing and saving like I have" But you did lose on that oil stock!" Babe quavered. That word oil was enouen to madden Ewie. She had never ad mitted even to herself, how much she had lost on that. She had plunged to recover the losses on the cactus farm lands and the Florida real estate. The last vestige of her self-con trol vanished. "Dont show your ig norance!" she snarled at Babe. "We'd all be in the poor house now u it wasn t for me. Now keep oat of this. I'm going to settle Joan Hastings, right now. I'm talking about boys boys! She's boy-struck like ber mother. Do you bear me, you silly girl? It's boys I'm trying to save you from. We lived down one disgrace in this family " a 1 a aa v a is. rvTier uare was pieaamg. tier hands were clasped. "After all these years nobody knows. You wouldnt teU her?" . Wouldn't I? It'a been told at every tea party we didn't go to for seventeen years, and dont you evei think it nasn r Skeleton m the closet! Bah! Skeleton on the clothes lines that's what ours has been!" Again the thick finger pointed at the shrinking Joan. "I don't want that all over again do you hear me? I wont have it." "You wont have what?" "Ewie, for my sake please!' Babe's frizzed gray head was down on the table now. Little sighs and moans. Stifled sobs. Her thin veined hand reached for her hand kerchief. And Joan, her cheeks flaming, her tawny hair pushrd back, panting. "TeU me you've got to tell me now you've got to" (To Be Continued Tomorrow) Ellen Tokstad Dies Thursday At Silverton SILVERTON, May 18 Ellen Marie Tokstad, 60, died at her home on 339 Welch street here this afternoon. Mrs. Tokstad waa born in Sweden and came to Port land In 1893. In 1903 she was married to H. C. Tokstad and In 1921 came to Silverton. She is survived ey ner widower, one stepson Lara E. Tokstad ot Silver- ton; three brothers and one sister in Sweden. - Funeral services will be Sat urday afternoon at 2:30 from the Ekman Funeral home with Inter ment at Evans Vaney, Rev. J. M Jensen officiating. Today and Saturday Story by Peter B. Kyne II Our Gang Comedy "FREE WHEELING" News, Cartoon Comedy and Serial, "THE DEVIL HORSE" Mickey Mouse Matinee Saturday 1:30 P.M. COMING SUNDAY, MONDAY AND TUESDAY ; Charlaa CAYr:02 FAQUEll STORM COUrsTXY JVU Uj Ap BITS for --By IL J. HENDRICKS Salem's oldest business: , , ..., Some days ago, the local news papers contained articles telling ot .some ot the oldest - business houses in Salem. The Statesman newspaper and printing -. plant were not In the list. Of course it should have been. Thla ia the oldest buslnaea in Salem, antedating by a consider able span or years any that baa had a continuous existence to date. V The first lailia Af th Orarnn Statesman waa that of March 2S, 1861, at Oregon City. Thla news paper Is therefore in its 83d year. The first issue) In Salem waa riato June 21, 1113, published from the nesmiin-wuaon building. Front and Trade streets, whera thm. w warehouse stands now. V The Statesman slant feat n.j M the territorial printing office vreson jny. ana IMS was true for the Plant after bains Tmmn-A to Salem, and in the same build ing me sessions of the lower house of the territorial legislature were held, that is. of the '53-4 session. JACK, WHY DID YOU CHANCE TO CAMELS? I ,i J V,xtX '. u I GOT THAT ft - r - IT'S THE TOBACCO THAT COUNTS WL To the People f O 1 or oaiem We promised-you the greatest array of Super-pictures ever offered . . . We have delivered . . . and we thank you for the splendid way you have responded to the entertainment that we have pre sented, also for your patronage and con fidence . . . and still they come ... "Gabriel Over the White House" Geo. Arliss in "Working Man" Ramon Novarro in "Barbarian" Ruth Chatterton In "Lily Turner" Joe E. Brown in "Elmer the Great" "Hell Below" Maurice Chevalier in "Bedtime Story" Edward G. Robinson in "Little Giant" "Gold Diggers of 1933" . . and many more to come. Carl A. Porter, Manager Elsinore Theatre TODAY AND THE PICTURE : . ' ('- U-CJCJ ka;V 'J W .. ... " - 7 sssVsjnisni We. alter spectacle . . . sensation after sen sation will make yoo want" to stand up and cheer I Mm mm WALTER Karen MORLEY U C.HanryOORDOMDickiMOOI Mickey Mouse Matinee Saturday at 1 P. IL Extras "DIRIGIBLE" Feaxare BREAKFAST .The legislature or '1 4-1 held Its sessions in finished rooms of the unfinished - territorial capltol. standing en ground occupied by the present state eapttoL That session voted the capital at Cor tsUIj. -and the Statesman plant followed the capital, its first issue in Corvallia that ot April 17. 1885. S Washington authorities ruled against the validity of the legisla tive act locating the eapltal at Corrallls, and the session that had convened there the first Monday In December was back to open its sessions In .Salem December IS; and The Statesman was back and published under a Salem date line the aame day. And Its plant was the territorial printing office, as U had been from the first, and continued to be. Besides being the oldest busi ness enterprise in Salem. The SUtesm. i is the second oldest liv ing newspaper west of the Mis souri river; next only to the Port land Oregonisn, is weeks Us sen ior. But for a mistake in .billing its printing plant from New York. The Statesman would have been the older. The Oregonlan plant -AW v ' ;-' WIJETO COSTUEP. TOBACCO f ;,4V. T SATURDAY OF THE HOUR! 'Like a thundering army its characters. its drams, its ter rlfic spectacular scenes march for ward to meet your gazel Thrill after thrill ... sneetarl HUSTON Frdnchet TON! with. JACK HOLT .... w - --"I - was secured In San Traaclsco, havlag: been brought some years before by the Catholic mission au thorities from Mexico to Monter ey and Commodore Stockton ot the American fleet having seised It and turned It over to his chap lain, who, with a partner, started The Calif ornlan there,' and short ly afterward changed Its location to Yerbsv Buena (San Francisco), and then soon sold It to a concern which had acquired also & plant from the Mormons there, to pub lish the Alts California, and could spare enough ot the mater ial from the old Catholic mission plant to serve In getting out the early Issues of the Oregonlan. (Continued Tomorrow) CHICH srf$S. I Ufcaaa. -' K V enSTcWrTfFBta niaaen PILL. k. rmmtmmZ lMrt.Ma.aHmt4a. In SOU ST MOU1STS ITtxrWEXXX pGalea of Laughter - Sparkkl I ing Lines - Uproarious I a -A "Harvest1 of Lie" CLOSING PRODUCTION OF Sdrwk Own Ptoy Prrxfuoers Frt and Sat Nites I I Adnata ton 15c -25c I - Curtain 8:15 PL ! Nelson Auditorium 1 I "Salem's Intimate Theatre Cheraeketa at Liberty OFFICIAL GOVT WAR FILMS FROM EIGHT DIFFERENT NATIONS WITHHELD TILL NOW The ' BIG Drive EVERY SCENE AUTHENTIC Not a Single Scene Staged Ends Tomorrow Bee-Associatioi HAUNTED IVIH.L RickreaO Featoiing DON WOODRY'S MELLOW BIOON BAND 10 ARTISTS 10 Entertainment galore. Home-made lunch 10c Admission 25c ,, Special at Mellow Moon Sat. May 20th. Featuring CLAIR-ASH- BAND One of lerUanda leadiag bands direct frent KratUer Chateaa., NO RAISE IN PRICE Admission 25c Learn te banreont tange, the new erase. Lessens liven rreae t te every Wednesday evening at MeUew Moon. Regular Dance Every Wednesday & Saturday 9 to 12 f, Don AVoodry's JNIELLOWMOON BAND ' 10 ARTISTS 10 ADMISSION 25c ir P M Sevens '.4. k 4 4 wmie uouse.