The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 02, 1933, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Friday Morning, Jane 2, 1933
- - till .
i , Faror Stray Uk$o FStaU
v . . ; i rora rtrat statesman, uarcn zh, isox ..
i v THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
SHELDON F. SACKETT 1 - -
- Managing Editor
J 1" : :r Member of the associated Press
The Associated Press U exclusively an titled W 11 a for Public-
twn ot all urn dispatches credited to It or oot thrwls credited t
this paper. v
ADVERTISING
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STOLEN
LOVE
By H A Z EL
UVINGSTON
Off to London
THE personnel -of the delegates appointed to represent
'this country at the London conference has been an
nounced. The names are not particularly impressive. Not
that we worship "big names"; but some of the men appear
to be rather third rate. The big man and the big name is
Cordell Hull, secretary of state. This is really his party; and
to career may stand or fall on his, accomplishments at the
conference. Hull is the proponent of reciprocal tariffs and
of tariff readjustments in order to thaw out the trade block
ades of the world. He has -worked out schemes which he
hopes to put over in London that will aid this country and
the world to recover prosperity.
; ?:The next big name on the list is that of James Cox, for
mer Ohio governor and 1920 democratic candidate for pres
ident. He made a big flop as a presidential candidate so that
hisiame has been dim ever since. He has had sudden halo
lately because he was the only one to turn down the Mor
gan bid to buy stocks at bargain prices. Cox is a newspaper
publisher. The record does not show whether he turned down
the of fer because he was too poor or too conscientious.
:Key Pittman, senator from Nevada, is another delegate.
Pittman is a bright fellow with one idea, to get silver remon
etized so Nevada will have a burst of prosperity. With the
country going bust on paper currency even silver would be
better, but it seems inappropriate to designate a propagan
dist to a job which calls for a very catholic temper on all
world problems.
: Senator James Couzens of Michigan was named after
Hiram Johnson declined. Couzens is neither fish, flesh, nor
fowl. He is an honest man who defies classification. He is so
erratic that he may be more of a liability than an asset.
- iRenresentative Samuel D. McReynolds of Tennessee gets
his job because bythe accident of seniority he is chairman of
the foreign relations committee of the house. His qualifica
tions are considered very limited.
'Besides these members there will be advisors and sec
retaries who may do most of the actual work.
i Important as the conference is. one's heart sinks as he
reads of the numbers who will attend. With so many attend
ing the new deal may get bogged in a maze of cloakroom
. -, , - in
cigarette smoice ana pacKstaira wirepulling.
y, , r
, 1- " The Crowning Glory
YI7TTH a circus midget perched on the lap of "Morgan
the Magnificent". ir and photohounds shooting the
scene with the aid of electric flashes, the inquisition at
Washington attained its crowning glory. It might well be
dramatized as the mob scene in the reverse of the. defunct
Ttw fr. Th eacrerness with which DarticiDants seek to
I ; cash' in political capital out of the assize adds further to the
1 disgust of the spectacle.
; 'It ia something of course to throw old Morgan to the
wolves, and if a coliseum could be obtained the rising tiers
of seats would be thronged with the curious. The crowd no
doubt applauded when Hector was tied to the chariot and
his body dragged round the walls of Troy. The Morgan near-
ing passes from a decorous and well ordered and purposed
i investigation Into a big entertainment with the proscenium
i of the staee enlarged by the vehicle of the newspapers. Any
S one . who like Sen. Glass is distressed by this aspect of the
l, hearing rets letters threatening him with-death.
It would seem that all the pertinent facts could be
1 fcaought out without resort to the methods of a county seat
prosecutor. Certainly it is disgusting to see anyone of per-
sonal respectability made the involuntary ballyhooer lor a
i circus nudeet
There is no doubt that out of the hearing may emerge
l a better understanding of the methods of high finance, there
may be stimulated a higher sense of ethics and ox social re
sponsibility among the financier class, and there may be
found ideas worthy of being made into laws for restraint
of excessive greed. Let the hearing go ahead to a conclu
sion; expose fully any signs of wrong-doing or of injury to
the public weaL But end the sideshow flapdoodle and the
circus midgets sitting on the laps of the mighty.
' Wall the peasants starve the soTieta open up a new tractor
plant said to bo eapable of taming oat forty thousand sixty horse
power tractors the first year. That will ho tally exploited in the
Rmsslan press, hut the dull-witted peasants are still wondering when
they will eat. They did eat without the aid of tractors.
.The government is giving thought to unemployed women and
aa experimental camp for them will bo opened in Bear mountain
park. New York. Now the women may Join th army and sea the
w(o)ild. . "
The house of Morgan 'is under damnation because it has made
profits; and again under damnation when it. lost money, because
then the government got no Income tax. It will bo interesting to
see how the politicians reconcile tho two attitudes.
WiiAi mas nArr&nAu i
- - . SO FAR. - -
Joan Hastings, seventeen and
beautiful, Urea with - two . old
maiden aunts. Eyrie and Baba Van
Fleet, in a house long run to seed.
Joan, lonely and impressionable,
falls in lore with Bill Martin,
whoae social status Is far beneath
her own. The aunts plan to send
her away to school. BiU is ar
rested, the innocent victim of
bootlegging gang, and Joan, fran
tically asking for money to bail
him out, confesses to her aunts her
love for him. Horrified, they pat
her on a. train, bound for school,
in charge of a member of the Trav
elers Aid Society. Joan slips oil
the train, and Waiter Dunne, a
kindly motorist, gives her a ride
back home to Sauaallto, CaL
NOW GO ON WITH
THE STORY.
CHAPTER ZHI.
Aa Joan settled comfortably be
side him in the deeply cushioned
seat he reached over and. placed a
Diamn. nneed hand on her. "In
minute I'm going to be too busy bib-1
bug it up to talk. Now listen, IV I
a poor, chicle en-heartea tool. Dot
they aren't all like me. I aint al
ways sprouting wines myself. Take
it zrom your Uncle wait, and doo t
go riding m any mora Strang ears
get mer"
She lauehed at hint delightedly.
"Why you sound -just like Aunt
Swier
Ho started the motor. "Well
next time you take Aunt Eyrie's
advice."
They sped silently, smoothly over
the loner erar ribbon ox road, lie
did not speak again, nor did Joan.
She waa truly grateful for tho lift,
but her thoughts were all for BilL
The miles slipped by, every one
bringing" her nearer to BilL
Dont think Ive failed youI'm
coming fast fast as the wind'
Another woman was coming to
BilL Dolores, with her warm dark
eyes, and the cloud of blue black
hair, so faintly, finely lined with
Tray.
"It's my money I" she said sul
kmlv. when Gerwin demurred. "If
I take a notion to bail him but, la it
anything to you?"
"You're my wife!"
"Oh, forget itl"
"It seems easy for you to forget.1
"Don't be a fool."
"I'm no fool,'' he said stolidly.
"It's rou."
But he let her go. What else
could he do? It was, as she said.
her money.
Her dark eyes were hard when
she came back to the shop some
tnere, dear, xaitnrul, lonnr Joan,
too rood, all too good for htm. .
"ITB not wortny ox touching her
dusty shoes!" he thought, extrara-
gantiy. and bis arms ached to bold
her, tightly, tightly, never to let
aer go again. -
He crawled through the hole tn
tho hedge, stood looking wistfully
across the lawn. Over there, near
we garage, ne naa Kissea ner nrst,
in lute time. He remembered the
way she had looked, slim and gold
against tho purple blossoms. A
princess out of a fairy tale.
A lump rose m his throat. "No
body also would ever forgive we
but she will. She wont care. Shall
understand. Shell know it wasnt
my fault I got mixed up in that
dirty Begoni deal"
An uncontrollable Impulse to see
her now this very minute seised
mm. no eouiant wait not another
second. There had been too much
clsndeatrno meeting. From now on
it waa going to bo right out in the
him oontemptAousiy, and an the
dead and gone Van Fleets were be
hind her, creeping out of the shad
owy corners of the dim room, look
ing at him contemptuously too A
long lino of them, rich, arrogant,
sneering'. Sneering at him, who waa
Just Bill Martin, needing a shave,
and a haircut.
Bat he didnt car fer thai. Ho
wasn't going to let them get tho
beat of him that way. It didnt mat
ter about the Van Fleet. It waa
Joan . . . she was slipping away
from him, turning into a dream, A
mis ate ago she was warm and near.
She waa part of the warm sun, and
th gentle wind. To think of her
waa to feel he dose la his arms,
her breath on his cheek. And now
he couldn't reach her ... she waa
iuat a young girl who had smiled at
him from V window. It waa all
droam, a mad dream that had never
happened.
Ho brushed tho toteblad hair off
hi forehead with th back of a
x
A night and a day and a night since Joan kissed him and said "111
always love yea."
open. Tho devil with the aunts
he'd take Joan away
He bounded up the front steps,
polled the heavy knocker firmly.
Darned if he'd sneak to the back
door.
He knocked again.
liiss Ewie Van Fleet answered
the door herself. They stood meas
uring each other for a moment, the
thin lipped elderly spinster, and the
impetuousno less determined boy.
"I didn't send for you yet!" she
said. "And we have a back door
hours later. "They let him go be- traoesraen and servant.
for I got there. Dropped the whole Bill moved forward, aa if to n
thing. Milt Rosemer didnt know ter the hall. "I didnt come to see
anything about it. He said he didnt you," he said, biting each word off
know who could have pulled for shortly and hurling it at her. "I
him, but Begoni's went to the bat came to see Joan and that'a why
got it all fixed up." II came the front wayl
"I told you you were a fool to get
mixed up with lt.
"Oh dry upl" she cried in a high,
ouirerme voice.
Her eyea were fixed on the yel
low turrets of the Van Fleet house
on the hill, just visible through the
mall, dirty window.
Gerwin followed her brooding
gaze. "Old Captain Horner saw
Bill and the little van Fleet girl up
near the Power House once to
gether "
"Homer's in his second child
hood!" she said contemptuously.
and burst into tears.
"Don't think rve failed you
I'm coinine fast fast as the
wind!" Joan'a love went winging
aver the miles
"Joan wait for me!" the boy
panted, as he plowed through the
dnstv short-cut to tho hilL
A night and a day and a night
since she had put her slim hands on
his shoulders, and kissed him and
aald "111 always love you and
IH never be sorry ever!" A night,
and a day, and a night ... a thou
sand years ... she should be on her
way East now, but. she wasnt.
"She'd never go off that way I
know true blue--shell be wait-
We'U discuss that." She mo
tioned him into the long, dark li
brary, and they stood at oppoeite
sides of the eld mahogany table.
facing each other.
Joan is rone. I said she a rone.
Don't you understand? Gone!"
Nol" he cried. "She wouldnt
go she'd never hare left m that
way
She's rone. Erne said harsh
ly, "on the Overland. She's half
way across the United States by
now,
"When " he gulped miserably,
did she go?"
"Yesterday morning.'
Bill looked at the towering.
square old woman, at the spacious
book filled room, and the long red
velveteen curtains through which
the light filtered dimly. Then he
looked down at his shapeless old
shoes, his rough, scarred hands. He
saw Joan again as he had first
seen her slender and gold and re
mote against the red curtains.
"Have I been dreaming?" he
thought in a sudden, cold despair.
"Did I imarine ererythrnr?"
He choked. Air he had to have
air! He clutched his cap and
brushed roughly past her, for the
door.
Her hand, large and strong aa a
man s, tightened on his shoulder.
"Not so fast, young man, not so
far"
He struggled through th soft
sand, rrabbed at the root of a tree.
There he waa up on tho road. The I fast. We're just beginning "
big old house loomed ahead, yellow I
against th eucalyptus trees. I She s gone harx way across
By th south hedzs hs stopped. I the continent by now!"
almost expecting to eec her waiting Ewie Van Fleet was looking at
grimy hand. "X see," he said, Tm
going, k m sorry I troubled you."
Eyrie's lip curled. "Yes, sneak
away. You're quit safe, I cant
touch you without harming my niece
and myself more than I harm you.
Run away you scum" .
JBU1 wheeled. It waa no dream,
t was real. Joan'a lore waa real.
and the woman knew it. She had
separated them. Sh had made
Joan go ft wasnt Joan Joan
would never have left him. "Be
careful what you say because I'm
going to marry your niece. YooTl
have men in your darned old fam
ily whether you like it or not aad
dont uk it any better than yen
do. You sent Joan away all right
but you can't make her stay after
she's of age. You'll see
You'll never hear from her
again!"
He laughed. All his confidence
is back. Joan was near a rain
He could see her smiling her arm
outstretched '"111 always love you
Ill never be sorry ever!' She
had promised. She would wait. -
111 take a chance on that." he
said arrogantly.
a wo ongnt xpoi Durneo in sv
vle's cheeks. "Six week and shall
be wondering what she ever saw in
you a girl like Joan, a Van Fleet
and a beauty and you Oh. I
know girls . . . she wont be think
ing of you long "
You dont even know where
she's gone. I changed my plana.
I -
He shrurred. "No matter. Ill
find her. Ill find her if I have to
trail her for ten years. And shell
wait for me till I do."
He picked up bis shapeless Id
''Wait" Ewie said. She kept
wetting her thin, blue lips with th
tin of her tongue. "Do you really
love her?" ah asked tn i
unnatural voice.
And now it waa BUI who looked
contemptuously at her. Ho just
spread his big, rough hands in a
hopeless gesture, and turned to the
door again.
"Because if you do." she said,
breathing fast, "you'll not hound
her. You'll let her forget"
"Let her forget?" he challenged.
"Do you take me for a fool?"
(To Be Continued Tomorrow)
delivery, ha baring pat to sea' in
hast for fear that such orders
would eoaeORThea Jbattl was ,
th officers of American ships
were So oager to board th en
emy's vessel, that they sometimes
bald ono another back. U th ef
forts ot each to b first over tho
aide of th ship. . . V -
Th loss of firs war ships la
many months was a grievous
sbpek to England, and sh iamd
bar naval authorities for having
underrated th American navy.
"Th next year opened with an
other loss for England. In Febru
ary, HIS. Captain Lawrene In
th Hornet met tho British ship
Peacock, and sank bar so quickly
that she carried down part ot her
Own crew and three men from the
Hornet who had goh to th rosea.
Th Chesapeake and th Shan
non: Captain twrenc waa pro
moted to .th command of the
Chae apeak and Joined her short
ly before she waa ready to sail
treat Boston. lit bad no tin to
organise or train th crew and
many of hia men, were untrust
worthy. Tho British cruiser Shan
non lay off Boston harbor ia full
view, waiting for tho Cheeapeake
to come out.
"Captain Lawrence saUed out
oa Juno 1. ISIS. Late in tho aft
ernoon th tw ahlps met about
SO miles at sea, and the battle
opened. It lasted only IS minutes.
Lawrence tall mortally wounded.
As bo waa carried from tho deck
he gave his last order: 'Don't giro
up the ship.' Tho British boarded
th Cheeapeake with little resist
ance and wer soon in posses
sion."
S
Now, tho reader who has-fol
lowed this series knows what
Clark, author .of th old book be
ing quoted, meant in bis refer
oaeo to "that unfortunate affair
of tho Chesapeake.' and his bit
ter feeling toward unpatriotic for
eigseri carried on American naval
vessels.
Tho reader who baa followed
this column knows too, that one i
,of th crew of tho Constitution, i
when she esptured th Guerrlere,
waa .William Johnson, th first
high sheriff of Oregon, chosen for
that position Feb. 18, 1841. on
tho organisation of tho provision
al government at the old Mission
10 miles below what became Sa
lem.
V S
Ho waa also on that vessel
when ah captured the Java, and
throughout tho war of 1812 for
he told Capt. Wilkes, at his
(Johnson's) homo, then at old
Champoog, in 1841, that h de
cided to come west when tho war
of 1818 waa over, and h waa
restless for greater activity than
he could find elsewhere.
S S
Johnson, as tho careful reader
also knows, was th first settler
on the site of the city of Port
land ; erected the first dwelling
there; that Is, tho first on on
the west side of the Willamette.
There was a dwelling before hia
on tho oast aide that became
East Portland, and was later con
solidated with the greater city.
(Continued tomorrow.)
IN lit CITY CiSE
Sturdy denial f neglifenee
waa mad Friday by William W.
Allan, physician. In bis answer to
a f7,t00 damage suit recently
filed by Lucy Dawes, by Jo
Dawes, bar gnardisn ad mem.
plaintiff contended Allan waa not
present when bar child was born
through begllgonc and neglect ot
hia' duty.
Allan sets oat that ho waa nev
er retained by Mrs Dawes, bar
ing informed her when told that
sh expected a child that he did
not care to handle th ease.
Allan said nevertheless he did
arrange for a doctor near to Mm
City , where Mrs. Dawes resided,
to handle the case when he waa
notified In November. 1980. that
th woman was shortly t bav
a child.
He denies that aha suffered tn
affects 1 from : lb - hlrtk f 1 tho
child" Inasmuch aa th substitute
physician . atteaded ; her. "AHan.
said h was out ot tows on the
day In question on a legitimate
reason nd waa under n seas un
der obligation to plaintiff.
2016 Men Given
Jobs During May;
Above Year Ago
' Daring May SOlt men were put
to work through th UA-T.M.C.A.
employment bureau, most of them
oa th county relief projects. As
sistant Manager Dotson announced
yesterday. In May, 1882, only 181
men war placed.
Agricultural labor, aa far aa
calls upon the employment service
wer concerned, decreased lst
month, when 4 men were placed
on farms in contrast with 812 a
year ago. Two persons were placed
on prof easioaal job, seven women
at housework and III 1 at general
labor.
Capital Post Has
Membership Gain
Taking in C8 paid memberships
during May, Capital post, Ameri
can Legion, through the efforts of
old-time members and interest In
the coming of Louis .Johnson, na
tional commander, .boosted its
1838 membership to 328, Adju
tant Win lam Bliren reported yes
terday. Six morn veterans paid
their dues yesterday.
IWBLmig(l
rmf-' ii
, .- ft.shxfc' j-sj-p v-.- Mi f j Q
" Ii
II ' jii. .
Mickey Moose Matinee Saturday at 1
EXTRA! IN PERSON ON THE STAGE
"CALIFORNIA JACK" Western Merle Star and tie
Giant Timber Wolf Yes, It's Alive!
The Kansas escaped eonricta eommandeered a car belonging to
M. J. Woods and went oft with his wife and daughter aa hostage.
That la th habit of escapes to take to th woods.
A Great Lakes excursion steamer was wrecked on tho Rock of
Ages. An appropriate spot to die. It would seem; bat th story bss
a different ending. All lives were saved
The Hoquiam city hall has a frog that apparently Urea within
the walla and 'emits its croaks. Hoaaiam has nothing on Salem. W
bar two bull frogs in our state capitol, only they aro seldom here.
! 1933 Wallulah
. At Willamette
J Is Distributed
The Wallulah, student yearbook
at Willamette university, made a
surprise appearance Friday when
it was Issued nine days ahead ot
tho scheduled publication date. Aa
unusual feature of th book la tho
dedication to tho university, ; the
first oi its kind in tho history of
th annual. The picture need is of
tho worn stone threshhold of the
east door ot the chapel, which tra
dition says has been trod by every
student attending Willamette
sine 188? and which will prob
ably remain for years to corns am
f the historic spots on th cam-
Fas, .
The book, edited by Carl Marcy
of Salem and managed by Herbert
Hardy of Halsey, ia divided into
four main sections, tho first fea
turing th faculty, administration
and student government; the sec
ond, third and fourth carrrinr ont
the seasonal theme with each rep-
rwennng iau, winter or spring;
and the fifth including advertising
BITS for BREAKFAST
By R. J. HENDRICKS-
Chemawa Enters
Float in Parade
The Chemawa Indian school Is
making preparation to enter a
float fa th Rose Festival parade
In Portland, th float to show th
vocational work belnr A Ana hr
the Indians. ,
Diary of a seaman who
waa with Cant. Wilkes
S e b
(Continuing from yesterday:)
For the benefit ot older men and
fl-omen older than high or Jun
ior high school age tho following
excerpts are taken from Eggles-
ton's New Century History of the
United States,' which is used as a
text book In most schools of this
country:
"Th Declaration of War: Th
elections of 1310 had brought Into
congress many men who wer Is
favor of war with Great Britain
in defense ot our commerce. Th
states : wer already organising
their militia and preparing for the
struggle. Madison (president) was
anxious to avoid war, but was at
last induced to yield to the pop
ular will, and on Jun 18, 1811.
war was declared by congress.
"Plan of tho Campaign: The
Americana planned to invade Can
ada and conquer it before troops
could arrive from England. Eng
land, however, struck th first
blow, taxing Fort Mackinac, on
an island in th strait between
Lake Michigan and" Lak Huron.
(This island is now a summer re
sort place for . many Americans
and Canadians.) . -
"Hull's Surrender: William
Hull, governor ot Michigan terri-
rtory, was made a brigadier gen
eral and placed in- command of
troops- who were to invade Can
ada. H crossed into Canada on
tho morning of July 12, 1812, just
abor Detroit.' Meeting no' opposi
tion he went "Into 'camp1 and" is
sued a proclamation offering the
protection ot tho United State to
air Canadians who should take no
part in the war. On th 2 8 th news
cam that Fort Mackinac had been
takenand Hull did nothing more
except go back to Detroit. On th
16th of August tho British Gen-
oral Brock, with aa army much
smaller than Hull's, crossed Into
Micnigan, ana nau, without a
fight, surrendered tho fort, his
army, and th territory ot Michi
gan. .
Two other Invasions of Can
ada were attempted, on of thm
by way ot th Niagara river, and
the other by way ot Lak Cham-
plain. Both completely .failed.
w
"Th War by Sea: Great Brit
ain at that Urn bad mors than
1000 fighting ships, while th
United States bad only 18, with a
tew gunboats. ... At th outsat
nothing was expected of our little
nary axcept to defend th coast
while tho army should conquer
Canada.
w
"Th Capture of English Ships:
But whll th army was falling la
its first campaign, ... th gal
lant llttl nary waa doing deeds
that sUU echo in history. On July
13, three day a before Huil'a sur
render, tho American frigate Es
sex, .... disguised as a merchaat-
man, attacked and captured the
British ship Alert, which was con
voying a fleet of transports. (Off
tho Newfoundland coasL) This
was tho first war vessel taken
from tho English. . . Th capture
was a surpris to both sides.
"Four days later tiro British
ships chased th frigate Constitu
tion: ... hut th American ship
was so well sailed that sh es
caped in safety. . . On of tho ves
sels which pursued th Constitu
tion was th frlgat Guerriar. In
th next month Captain Hull put
to sea again - In th Constitution,
and on August 13th h encoun
tered the Guerrlere, and captured
her after an engagement ot only
half an hour. Two months later
th American sloop Wasp ' cap
tured th English brig. Frolic.
. "About tho same timo Decatur,
with th frigat United States, at
tacked and captured th Mace-
I donian, near th coast of Africa.
In spite ot the distance, Decatur
brought hia badly shattered prise
to port, la Connecticut. Finally.
during th same year, the Consti
tution, under Captain Bainhrldge,
captured th British frlgat Jara,
near BrasIL
w
"As.th war ha1 grown out of
England's aggressions at sea, both
officers and men of tho nary were
ready to risk everything tor vic
tory. Orders to a commander, di
recting him to STAY IS PORT.
often found him beyond reach of
1C3QIL
Tneater
ILYWOO
Today and Saturday.
rax mm
Also, Our Gang Comedy
"A LAD AND A LAMP"
News, Cartoon Comedy aad
Harry Carey and Rex in
TILS DEVIL HORSE
Sunday, Monday and Tuesday
L'
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T tf ED AIT V
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