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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1933)
PAGE FOUR The OREGON STATESMAN. Salem, Oregon, Tuesday Morning. Junt 13, 1923 . 1 "cnrrM'CM .1 ri?" By hazel "Within the Law" -- But What a Law! U 1 X LuS V 11 IJVINfiSTON "No Favor Sways Us; No Fear SlaU Awe" From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Charles A. Spracue Editor-Manager Sheldon F. Sackett Managing Editor Member of the Associated Press Th Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the ose (or publica tion ol all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In Hils paper.; ADVERTISING Portland Representative Gordon B Bell. Security Building, Portland. Ore. Eastern Advertising Representatives Bryant. Griffith Branson. loe Chicago. New Tors, Detroit. Boston. Atlanta. EnUred at tht Poetofftce at Salem, Oregon. as Second-Close Matter. Published every morning except Monday. Businese office. SIS S. Commercial Street. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Mull Subscription Rates. In Advance. Within Oregon: Dally and Sundae. 1 Ma 60 cents; I Ma $1.25; Ma 12.25; 1 year J 1.09. ilsewttere 0 cents per Mo. or $S.0 (or t year In advance. By City Carrier: 45 cents a monih: $5.0 a year to advance. Pel Cot i centa On trains and News Stands S cents. The Medford Mess fTIHE trial of the first of the persons accused of stealing JL ballots in Jackson county has progressed far enough that the evidence reveals a most amazing state of affairs. The leaders of the "Good Government Congress" organized i to carry out one of the most diabolical plots ever attempted in order to hold control of public offices. They planned and executed the breaking into the courthouse and stealing the ballots of the last election in order to prevent a recount Testimony of participants has shown that .L. A. Banks, County Judge Fehl and others who were leading the "revo lution" in Jackson county were m on the plot though they did not handle the ballots themselves. Here indeed is a situation which strikes at the founda tion of "law and order" which Banks was accustomed to rave about. The group had securetTthe election of a county sheriff and the xounty judge. Apparently they knew if the recount of ballots proceeded their sheriff would not be able to retain his office; possibly other skulduggery in the elec tion mieht have been uncovered. Obviously the thing, to do was to destroy the ballots and prevent the recount. This was done. ; While the trial is not concluded, enough evidence has been introduced thoroughly to discredit the whole campaign of Banks and Fehl and their cohorts. They were political schemers trying to gain control of the court house for sel fish ends. Had they succeeded the end might easily have been virtual anarchy in Jackson county. The fight of the decent elements in the county was costly and strenuous, for no one stands to gain in feudism of that sort. The fact that individuals were willing to stand up to sustain the real for ces of law and order deserves the hearty commendation of the remainder of the state. They have performed a con spicuous public service. Now is the time to purge the infection with thorough ness. The willful group who organized and fomented the trouble should be completely and permanently discredited. Until that is done the peace of partial victory won by the Banks verdict of guilty may prove only temporary. OfiNBCOSiE TAX mm mix m4 5 SeS5K f 13 Ik HEALTH v Royal S. Copeland, M.D. BITS for BREAKFAST By R, J. HENDRICKS Thomas and the Governorship AS the popularity which Gov. Meier enjoyed on taking office wanes his following is forced to cast about for someone to step out as his successor. News sleuths have al ready lighted on Charles M. Thomas, public utility commis sioner, as runner-up in case Meier, as is expected, does not make the race for reelection. Thomas is going through the usual motions a candidate makes to build up a following and a prestige. He has made anti-utility speeches at two "hot" spots m the state, Klamath Falls and Tillamook, I and tonight he is to address a mass meeting in Portland. Some 25 clubs are said to sponsor the address, though their names have not been reported. Thomas ha9 been doing a good job as utility commis sioner. His investigation of the CPS deal -as thorough. He managed the Northwestern investigation pretty well, al though his rate cut order was held up by the court; and in view of the depression it is doubtful now if he can make his new orders to stand if they repeat the reduction, simply because earnings of the utilities have fallen off. Other in vestigations are under way, on Copco, Mt. States Power company; and the omnipresent telephone case is still on the docket. Now we are going to give Thomas some advice, and give it to him out loud so that everybody can hear. That is if he is ambitious for the governorship, the best politics is to stop speechifying and keep pounding on his job. He has plenty of material to Vork on, without making stump speeches about the state. The newspapers have given him yards of publicity and will give him plenty more as he pro ceeds with his investigations. The people are already well informed of the sins of the utilities : what they want is well directed effort toward intelligent regulation. The best speeches Thomas can make will be to prose cute his work faithfully and fearlessly, as he has done here tofore. If he does that he ought not to worry about 1934. At this stage of the game it is mighty easy for a guber natorial possibility to talk himself out of the running. Naught-Eight rpHIS is the 25th reunion for the classes of 1908. On many X campuses these alumni of a quarter century are gath ering and looking out on a world they have helped to mold. One of them, at the U. of O. confessed his class had not lived up to its responsibilities and opportunities. While the graduates are hardly to be condemned for the sins of the century, still they and their predecessors of thirty, forty and fifty year classes have a lot to answer for. The Eucrene News commented as follows on the address of the 25-year grad at the alumni luncheon : "This man confessed failure for his generation. He mark ed the rise of the machine and predicted that this man-made thing would devour its creator unless idealism were returned to a high place in the working world. He argued that science and invention, the exact sciences, had outstripped the social sciences. Learning was out of balance. The- world. must look to the social sciences for relief from its troubles. That will give the general idea of his talk, though the words here are nowhere near as eloquent as the speaker's. "It was a sad thing to hear an intelligent man confess failure for hl8 generation, but the confession was courageous. On day the graduates will remember that address. Let ns hope they keep remembering; that they also act." AndCorvalUs disclaims any knowledge of someone's bright idea v "Hrau tournament from Willamette. Says Ihe G-T: u i V, . up OTer ine Prospect of losing its annual basketball tournament. Fortunately the skirts ot both CorraUU and Eugene are cleaner on the matter and still more fortunate ly Salem seems to know it. It appears that the more is being; made on the motion of the state high school association itself. W bad supposed heretofore that the tournaments were run for the purpose of encouraging basketball in high schools but ap parentlr not. We had always thought Salem had made a big success of the event".' Dr. Copeland LN MI mail the other day I had an amusing letter from a young child who was suffering from mumps. "The doctor says I have mumps and that I cannot go to school. Pleas tell him he is wrong, for I want to go to school." 1 was sorry 1 could not follow the Instructions of my young cor r e ipondtnt Mumps Is aa in fectious disease, quickly s p r ad from one child to another. For this reason It Is ad visable that dur ing the height of the disease the child be kept in bed and away from other children. "Parotitis" is the medical name for mumps, it means an innammauon and swelling of the saliva-forming gland called the "parotid gland". This is located In the tissues Just below the lobe of the ear. When the gland la Infected, the face and nock are swollen. The jaw Is stiff, so that talking, chewing and swallowing are difficult and palnfuL Contrary to a common notion, the disease may afflict young adults. It is of frequent occurrence among young men between the ages of twenty and thirty. The disease is exceedingly rare in early Infancy and beyond the age of forty. As a rule, one attack protects against fur ther attacks, but cases have been re ported of second, third and even fourth attacks. Dangerous Complications In children, the disease Is usually ot a mild nature. It is more severe when It afflicts adults. Complications are more prone to occur in adults than in children. Kidney diseases, nervous conditions, sterility. Impaired hearing and, in some cases, deafness. have resulted from sever attacks of mumps. During the Illness the mouth should be kept scrupulously clean. Use an alkaline mouth wash at least twice a day. The diet should be light and nutritious and consist mainly of fluids. The danger of com plicaUons Is greaUy lessened If the victim is kept in bed. The disease usually terminates within a week. Quarantine should be maintained for at least two weeks. Do not look upon mumps as a mild disease, and never wilfully expos a child to this affliction. Mumps, measles, chicken pox, scarlet fever and diphtheria still continue to be serious hazards to the health of our children. Let us protect them by early recognlUon of these ailments and take the necessary precautions without delay. Answers to Health Queries It beats all the characters that old man Talmadge has asso ciated with during his lifetime. That conclusion comes from rh names which he refers to In his column. Here are one day's refer ences: Tip Tupper, Tub Crlpps, Zld Perkins. Talmadge has a sense ot "rural rhythms" all right. Those names sound as thoagh they wero la&ea ou 01 uicieni noveis. ,iney weren't, sat ther afford a ciever i anonymity xor people vb If Imagined are nM ihe less - true -to me, as Talmadge sketches them. Wyeth some settler: la S Speaking of first settlers ot Oregon, Nathaniel J. Wyeth de serves consideration. s s s Schaefer's "History of the Pa cific Northwest," a reliable book. says: "Wyeth's enterprise is in a very real sense a bridge between the purely COMMERCIAL era of northwestern history and the era of actual COLONIZATION." Meany's history of the state ot Washington has a number of facts concerning Wyeth and his career that are worth printing here, and remembering. Meany wrote: S "The character of Wyeth had a fascination for James Russell Lowell, who was a boy of 12 years of age when Wyeth started on his first Journey to Oregon. Lowell, while United States minister to Spain, in 1880, wrote to Professor Max Muller at Oxford about his discussion of Jade tools, in the course oi which letter he re marked: S m " 'I remember very well the starting of an expedition from my native town of Cambridge in 1831 (18S2), for Oregon, under the head of a captain of great energy and resource. They started in wagons ingeniously contrived so as to be taken to pieces, the body forming a boat for crossing rivers They carried everything they could think of with them, and got safely to the other side of the con tinent, as hard a Job, I fancy, as our Aryan ancestors had to do "Again, in 1890, Lowell wrote to the Portland, Oregon high school on the occasion of a Low ell evening: 'I feel as If I had a kind of birthright in your Port land, for it was a townsman of mine who first led an expedition thither across the plains and tried to establish a settlement there. well remember his star tin 60 years ago, and knew him well in Yesterdays ... Of Old Salem Town Talks from The States man of Earlier Days Jane IS, 1908 Marking new era in develop ment of Salem, United States N tional bank to erect at once on corner of State and Commercial streets , five-story, steel-construc tion building. F. J. Q. What do you ad rise for gas in the system? A. Correct your diet and avoid poor elimination. Forty-one boys and girls grad nated at third annual commence ment of Salem high school; Pres ident W. J. Kerr, Oregon Agricul tural college, speaker. O. S. Q. What causes pimples In side the lower lip and smarting of the tongue? A. This may be due to add In the system, caused by a faulty diet and poor elimination. Send self -addressed. stamped envelop for further par ticulars and repeat your question. Dr. H. C. Epley, grand marshal tor parade this afternoon in which 2000 Salem school children will participate: Aides Harley White, Charles Yannke, F. N. Derby Company. N, national guard, to march. Betty S. Q.--Wbat will reduce the hips? A. You must reduce the weight in general. Send self-addressed, stamped envelop for further particulars and repeat your question. Copjriaht, t93S, K. K. 8., IncI Jane 13, 192S Southern Pacific gets interstate commerce commission approval for purchase of Central Pacific road; decision to result In con struction of Natron cutoff. alter years. He was a very re markable person whose converse' tion I rained highly. A born lead er of men, he was fitly called UAr fAi?i Nathaniel wyeth as long as he lived. It was the weakness of his companions that forced him to let go his hold on that fair possession. I hope he Is duly honored in your traditions.' S "Nathaniel Jarvls Wyeth cer talnly deserved to be honored in the traditions of the northwest even though the enterprises in themselves resulted In discomfort lng failures. He was aroused to the possibilities in the Oregon question by the writings of Hall Kelley, and in 1831 agreed to Join the first expedition sent out by that enthusiastic Boston schoolmaster's 'Oregon Coloniza tion society.' But explorers did not assemble at the society's call and Wyeth began with energy to organize an expedition of his own 'He knew men in Boston who had become wealthy in the north west fur trade by way of the sea and he knew others who desired to participate la such trade. He arranged for a cargo of goods to be shipped on the Sultana, and he, with 20 enthusiastic companions left Boston on March 11, 1832, to reach Oregon by the overland route. They sailed to Baltimore, where they took a railroad for CO miles toward Pittsburg, and marching to that place, they took a steamer to St. Louis. 'There they Joined a party of veteran fur traders who quickly persuaded them to discard those new-fangled amphibious vehicles As the Journey became irksome and dangers thickened, members of Wyeth's party deserted. One of these, a kinsman named John B. Wyeth, wrote a pessimistic ac count of the undertaking, saying: 'To my knowledge, not another member of the party ever return ed so far eastward as the New England states.' He had arrived at Boston on Jan. 2, 1833, at which very time 11 of the braver ones of the original party were at Fort Vancouver on the Columbia, where they had arrived on Octo ber 29, 1832. They were without funds, but by no means discour aged. Dr. John McLoughlln treat ed them well, and In fact he and Wyeth became warm personal friends. John Ball, a member of this party, . . . began a little school on Jan. 1, 1833 the first school in the Pacific north west. The Sultana did not arrive . . . the brig was wrecked. "Even this could not dampen the ardor of this natural leader. Some of his men SETTLED IN THE COUNTRY, while he with two others set out for Boston . He organized the Columbia River Fishing and Trading company, , . persuaded his brother Charles to help him purchase a quarter in terest In the company tor himself, Another cargo was sent out by sea in the May Dacre, which also carried supplies for the Jason Lee party. . . March, 1834. Wyeth was at Independence (Mo.) with 60 men. (The Jason Lee party and Nuttall and Townsend, the nat uralists, traveled with Wyeth.) On July 14 he picked out a place . . . for the establishment of his WHAT HAS HAPPENED SO FAR. Lovely Joan Hastings lives a se cluded life with her two stern, old aunts, Errie and Babe Van Fleet, in Saoaalito, California. She falls in lore with Bill Martin, young mechanic Learning this. Aunt Ev vie sends Joaa away to Pennsyl vania to schooL Enroots, Joan slip off the train and goes to Bill's home only to find that he left town without leaving an address. She did not know Bill had gone to see her and Ervie upbraided him, sar ins; if he loved Joan he would give her no and sot try to find her as he had nothing: to offer her. Joan set tles in San Francisco unknown to her aunts. She .boards with good- natnred Mrs. liaisie Knnmer. Bill, in the meantime, is befriended by Rollo Keres. wealthy playboy. Rollo's father, believing Bill may have a good influence on his son, gives htm a position where he learns surveying. He does not try to get in touch with Joan as be wants to be a success beiore he goes to her. Joan believes BUI no longer cares. M aisle's daughter. Franc ine do Gnitry, gives Joan a position modeling: wedding gowns in her exclusive Maisoa Francine. She is an ins tan success. Mrs. Curtis Barstow, wealthy patron of the Maison Francine, asks Joan to tea. Curtis Barstow, the son. arrive home unexpectedly and Joan's hostess is anxious to have her leave. It is obvious she does not care to have her son know Joan, but he insists upon driving her home. 1 NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. CHAPTER XXII When Curtis suggested driving home by way of the Park "for a little air," Joan just nodded. There was a strength about him, a quiet smiling determination ... no use fighting it, and besides, it didn't matter. At the door he waited, barehead ed, smiling, while she searched for the key. "And when am I going to see you again?" Joan thought of Mrs. Barstow. Hilda. Everything. "I always stay home and study at night," she said quickly. Too quickly. "Poor child I" he murmured. "Well have to out a stop to so much work. All work and no plaji! Good night hope you're better in the morning!'' He was gone, but he would come back. Joan knew that he would, and she didn't know whether she was glad or sorry. She tried to think it out. but the headache came back. She crept into bed, shiver ing. All nifht. in her dreams, she ran. stumbling, falling, crying. Trying to get away from Hilda, a Hilda who never stumbled, never grew tired of running. And when she fell exhausted, clutching at some one who seemed to be Bill he turned into Curtis Barstow, and Hilda was Mrs. Barstow, running, running . . . She woke up sobbing. The Van Fleet oride. Aunt Ev vie said Joan had none of it, but that was in the spring, when she had love instead. It came back to her now, that same fierce pride that made Aunt Ewie lie to Hilda sedg wick's mother and say. "Certainly we know Joan is in San Francisco 1" and stare her out of countenance. As the davs sliDoed br and the word she dreaded did not come. Joan tossed her tawny head and squared her supple shoulders. Let Hilda Sedgwick go and blab all she wanted to! And suddenly she wanted new slothes lots of them. Chiffon hose, tilk lingeries, one thing led to an ther. Manicures, French powder "Of course, you were always pretty, dearie," Malaie said, "but you gotta hand It to raany. She's made a beauty out of you I" And to her friend Mis Harvey she add ed. "Must be a new man on the horizon !" Was it really the "new man" that made her want so much to be beau tiful now? Was it for Curtis Bar Uow that she brushed her soft hair till it lay in big waves of burnished gold? Was it for him that she bought the smart, expensive frocks Joan hardly knew. She lived in a state of f evens energy now. one wanted to be busy every moment. There must be no time to think. Curtis gave her friendliness, and she took it gratefully. When the day's work was over, and long. empty evening stretched ahead, there be was, suggesting a Jiav. When Sunday came and staisie went out for her regular afternoon visit with Mis' Harvey, Curtis' car was ready to carry her off to the summer countryside, where the air was sweet with drying grass, and bees and butterflies blundered against the windshield in the drowsy sun. Once a baby rabbit, scampering through the park, brought the sud den happy tears to her eyes. Why? Why did it make her all glowinr and alive to see a baby cotton-tali go hopping across her path? And then she remembered. Once when she was walking with Bill, In the hills, home. Home. The green and gold hills of Marin. Bill s little house down in the hollow . . . net even the Van Fleet pride could kill the old long ing, the old hunger and desire. A dark head in the crowd ... it couldn't be, she knew it couldnt be Bill . . . but she'd follow, dashing ahead of automobiles, poshing pe destrians aside. Hope dies so hard. Perhaps Bill did write for her letters, and his letteT went astray. Perhaps, he was so sure there weren't any that he never wrote for them. Perhaps, if she went to see Mrs. Martin . . . When she couldn't fight against it any longer, she went. "When she tells me all over again that he's never even mentioned my name 111 be satisfied, maybe. Ill be able to settle down again forget " Old Captain Horner's little wool ly dog came yapping down the dusty road to meet her. Her heart melt ed. She stooped and clasped him, struggling paws, wagging tail, bark and au. in her arms. Say I Where ya eoin' with my dog?" A ragged youngster dropped his fish in g line, and glowered. "Your dog! Why, it's Captain Horner s dog!" "Oh he's dead." "Deadl" "Sure. Here Tiger, here Tigel They scampered back to the beach, the boy and the dog that had been Captain Horner's. Joan brushed the dust from her dress. wiped her cheek where his rough red tongue had kissed it. Captain Horner . . . dead . . . She hurried now. Hurried through the dust to the little house in the hollow, near the fishery and the old saloons. Beads of sweat stood out on her forehead. Her hair curled damply all over her head. When she saw it, the little sun blistered house with the red gerani ums blaxing in the parlor window she knew what she had been afraid of. That it would be gone, gone like Captain Horner. "Why it's Joan! Come right in! Mrs. Martin's wrinkled little face glowed with hospitality. "Now you take the roc kin chair in the win dow where you'll cool off, and 111 get you a nice cool drink of water " The little room where the twins had played and the clothes-lines had flapped outside the window was changed. New curtains, a new rug, even a new rocking chair. Some thing had happened here. Some change. Are you all alone?" Joan asked, and waited, waited for what Mrs. Martin would say. "Why. yes. Didnt I tell yon Eu nice is livin' over in San Rafael" "Bill is is he" "Oh. Bill's Just dofn' fine. Now let me see, what did I do with that letter?" She began rummaging in ner naming basket. "Seems uki everythinr roes right in here.' Spools of Mack and tan and brown cotton churned under her fingers. "If I could find my glasses I sruess they're in the kitchen. Ill go get them. Here's a couple of photo- grapns you could be loo kin' as. This one is the twins, but Ruby moved. An' here's one Bui sent me. I think it's real good" Joan's fingers closed on It. BUL Bill in a woolly sweater and h: laced boots. His hands in his po eta, and the wind in his dark hair. The same, darling smile. . . . "Oh, my dearest 1" She held the llttla shiny snsnshot close areinrt her cheek. "Oh. my dearest l'T The man nassed. The two hir feara that had gathered in her ryes plashed on her pale silk dress. uuess where 1 found em? Mrs. Martin came back chuckling. "In the cooler. I must have left them there when I went out to get the milk. An dont forget to write me down yoer address when you go, dearie, Jl lost that other piece of ' paper I had it on. Ill tell Bill to go and see you when he comes back." She'd tell BLIL Ask him to ro and see her. Joan's throat seemed to dose up again, choking her. Didn't he ever ask about me?" "Well. now. boys dont ever write . much in letters." the kind old voice droned on. "But I know hell be real glad to see you. She said he thought he'd stay right on in the south permanent, but I guess hell be coming home for Thanksgiving anyway. Bill always said there was nobody like Ma xor mince pie. I always made two pies on Thanks giving, a mince and a squash " Joan stood up. There was no use waiting any longer. It was just as she knew it would be. He hadn't asked. He hadn't cared. It was all over. Another girl by now meet likely ... all over ... all over. Mrs. Martin stood on tiptoe and kissed her. "Come back soon. dearie," she said. Joan smiled back bravely. "Good bye! Goodbye!" But she knew she would never come back, never come back to Sausalito again. Never stand on the high road and look across the bay to Belvedere, never see the lights twinkling on the little boats bobbing up and down in the dark water in the night. Never smell the pungent spicy smells of the tiny shrubs and weeds in the summer sun, never listen to the laD. Ian. lao of the water, and the squeak of the big ferry tied to the dock. Near Captain Horner's old boat house a woman stopped her. A dusky haired woman, with hard, dark eyes, and a drooping cupid's bow of a mouth. Dolores Gerwin, the wife of the garage man Bill used to work fori "How do you do?" she cried. Or maybe you dont remember me? You've changed a good deal your self. I'm Mrs. Gerwin. I under stand we had a mutual friend " A a what?" A mutual friend. Bill Martin you know. He sure did my husband a bum turn. Quit without a min ute's notice. After all he did for him. I used to see hira up around your place at night " Joan paled. "Yes, I'd see hhn as I'd go by for my evening walk. I alwars thought, 'It's none of my business. but if I was her, I sure wouldn't waste my time'." "I'm afraid I havent the time to waste talking about it now," Joan said coldly. "I have to catch a boat." He was a chaser, if ever there was one. I never trusted him never. He used to try to make up to me, but I wouldn't look at him I" "I'm so sorry, but I cant miss mv boat, Mrs. Gerwin." Not even Aunt Eww could have been more frig idly final than Joan. Dolores watched her o. Her plump figure shook under its ruf&ee. and bows and flounces of red dotted swisa. "Stuck up snob I hate her I hate her" Mrs. Martin, "clearing un" har- piry after her caller, dropped the gilt darning basket, and sent the spools and balls rattling over the floor. As she picked up Bill's pic ture she thought, "Now ain't that a shame I She forgot to give me that address after all" At the ferry building San Francisco Joan was telephoning. "Mr. Barstow. Yes, 111 wait for hira . . , Curtis . . . I'm so lonely tonight. Weuld you would you like to take me out somewhere?' Curtis Barstow's smile lingered after he had hung up the receiver and turned to his stenographer again. He fingered the sheaf of papers on his desk, struggling to collect his thoughts. It was the first time Joan had asked anything of him. "In reply would state " His eyes traveled upward to the dock. Five minutes past five. An other hour and he'd see her, this lovely golden girl he was why not face the fact? falling in love with. (To Be Continued Tomorrow) Interior post. He called it Fort Hall. . . Wyetn pushed on to the Columbia river, arriving at Fort Vancouver on Sept. 16, a short time before the arrival of the May Dacre, . . . crossed the Columbia to Wapato (now Sauve) island and constructed Fert William. For lack of experience or packing facilities, the salmon fishing fail ed. The Hudson's Bsy company was adroit enough to cut oft the American's efforts at the Indian fur trade. "Wyeth earnestly tried, but he failed. Later events showed that he pioneered the way for other Americans. He struggled on un til 1831, when he sold out (to the Hudson's Bay company) and re turned to Boston. There he gained fame and fortune in the ice bus iness." ' Wyeth at his Fort William had "pigs, chickens, goats and sheep." besides dairy cows. That place, (Turn to page 7) DflNMOORS mm Flood damage running into mil lions of dollars reported from TAKES APPEAL JOB northern Oklahoma, southern HAZEL GREEN, June 12. Kansas; hundreds homeless, rail Miss Helen Davis, recent grad- service disrupted; Jess Wlllard uate of Sllverton high has ac- rescues many women and children cepted position on Sllverton Ap- at 101 ranch. peaL Miss Davis will be missed . by the group of young folks, as George C. Brown, Salem, elect she will make her home in Sll- ed grand high, priest ot Royal verton with Editor Mr. Haberly Arch Masons -of Oregon at -annual ana lamlly. I convocation In Portland. FP3 Don't Neglect Your Eyes To Do So May Mean Trouble We win test your eyes and fit the proper prescription Into smart looking frames for an extremely moderate cost. Con sult sjtUa us today It wfll pay you. This should be your Choice of Hotels Because: Tto Nv Low rstas nek tfcs DAMMOOaJI ta bum seosv . eMeal rood sotst tl. Sl.SO. s5. uw BpKMl laauay i KisttysTScy rooam kss a prt- WysBea traEas airpe lea recent evsty eawWay. -JJoCTtowa Iseetiaav des I Daa I. Moore, fomariv ef ke Maore Hasal 1st Wisiifs. evas l the DAMMOOU AAA; Onto Opaestt Hetat Opooeks Temisil falsi BaiUing TwTLFTH AND MORRISON PORTLAND HOT SUMMER DAYS ARE COMING Time to see that all your gar den accessories are in order. Sharpen the lawn mower. Test the hose for leaks. Check hydrants and sprinklers. Re member that lush green lawns and flourishing gardens de pend on proper watering not too much, not too little. Get Ready for Summer OREGON - WASHINGTON WATER SERVICE COMPANY J. T. Delaney, Manager.