PAGE FOUK The OREGON BTATES3IAN. Salem, Oregon, Thnriday Mornta. Jnn 16V 1S33 town' un i. Wo Favor Sways Us; No Fear Satt Awe' From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 i THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. CHARLES A. SPRACVE - - - - Editor-Manager SilfXOON F. Sackett Managing Editor Member of the Associated Press The Associated Pre la exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion ot all news dispauMws credited to it or not otherwise credited In , this paper. ADVERTISING Portland Representative Oordon B Bell. Security Building. Portland. Ore. Eastern Advertising Representatives Bryant. Griffith ft Brunson. Inc., Chicaga. Nrw Tore, Detrott. Boston. Atlanta. Entered at the Poatuffice ot Salem, Oregon, a$ 3econd-Cla$ Matter. Published every morning except Monday. Buines$ office, 215 S. Cnintnrrrial Street. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Mai; Subscription Rates. In Advance. Within Oregon: Daily and Sunday. I Ma SO cents; I Mo 1 .23; S Mo. 12 15; t year $1.00. Elsewhere SO cents per Mo., or IS no for 1 year In advance. By City Carrier: 45 rents a moiUi ; J5.00 a year In advance. Pet Co(.j 3 cents. On trains and News Stands t cents. "cnri cm t r c " bv hazel J 1 LuJ V 1L, LIVINGSTON WHAT HAS HAPPENED SO FAR. "I wasnt train to haln her. I Ma. donl fuse around. I eras enre Merely enjoying her company." He I fooling. I'm not hungry. Had a biar Lovely Joan Hastings Urea a ae-1 was getting that set look about the I breakfast on the tram. Gee. but eluded life with her two stern, old I mouui uiat always meant trouBie.it a gooa ". you r a picxea aunts. Ervie and Babe Van Fleet, "Tea, dear, but la it quite fair to I "f P na nuggea ner again. in Sansalito, Calitornia. sne xausiuie cnuai it wui oe misinterpret-1 'And tea there waa on tarn in lore with Bill Martin, young led. of course, and In your position, I special X wanted to ask about. Haa mechanic Learning this. Aunt Ev-1 can yon afford" I anyone heard where Joan Hasting vie sends Joan away to Pennsyl- Then Curtis answered. In all the! 1 thought I d take a run over to vania to schooL Enroute, Joan I years of his life he had never svoken I trate, Gerwin might have slips off the train and goes to Bill s I to her like that. It wasn't that he I heard the aunts mention it or at home only to find that he left town forgot the deference and gentleness I P omce onId they tea me, without leaving an address. She that she had always taken as herd To think!" did not know Bill had gone to see I right. He was as gentle and smll-l "Why I have it " ner ana jswie oporaiaea mm, s?y-llngly affectionate as ever. But be I "Yon have It! Mat Ton have it. ing if ho loved Joan ne wouia give i utterly, completely, disregarded her I and yon never sent it to met" His ner up ana noi tj 10 nau mm wrsnes. tie nopea sne wouia over-1 jaw dropped, had nothing to offer her. Joan set-1 come her prejudice against Joanl mMt, ties in san rrancisco nnanown ra because it wasnt worthy of her. It her aunts. She boards with good-1 would grieve him very much to feel natured Mrs. Maisie Knnmer. Bill, I that she didnt also love the girl he in a ocinuaw, i vuuuiwo i was gving vo many, xi e zuiiy in Rollo Keyes. wealthy playboy. I tended to marrv Joan. She waa his Rollo's father, believing Bill may I ideal of dean, unspoiled American have a good Influence on bis son, womanhood. She waa beautiful, she Exposing Huey Long fTlHE country at large first took Huey Long as a buffoon, X another of the political clowns who appear above the horizon and do their ;antics for a very brief period before their shallowness is discovered, and then settle into per manent obscurity. But when Long got back to the U. S. senate and started in to jam the legislative machinery and give Carter Glass and other elder statesmen the jitters, the country came to fear hhn as a menace. Then came the re volt in Louisiana against the political tyranny of the king- fish, and his foes in the senate had a club which they could use to keep Long in his place. That club is the senatorial investigation, but it has been kept in cold storage all through the special session. Now Colliers weekly is giving nation-wide publicity to the scandals of Longism. Walter Davenport, assembling the charges against the Louisiana senator, has given a formid able indictment of his reign in Louisiana. The attack on Long is carried on not merely by political enemies of his in his home state, but by many who are conspicuous for their political integrity, men like John M. Parker, once governor of the state and running-mate with Theodore Roosevelt on the Progressive ticket. Parker's complaint was lodged with the senate in a plea to free Louisiana from the blight of Long's misrule. Long is charged with most everything on the calendar of political crimes. The state treasury has been wrecked un der his power, and many banks are loaded up with unmar ketable state bonds which Long forced on them. Long him self seems to have "gotten his", a magnificent home in New Orleans, a hundred-thousand-dollar insurance policy, etc. Tales of graft of his regime are common talk in his home state. So great is the power of his political machine however, he has been able to wjn popular elections for him self and his henchmen. The revolt is growing, and Daven port concludes his latest article with the observation: "It is going to take all the influence, actual or alleged, that Huey can muster to stave off a resumption of the investi gation. Mr. Parker's charges are not those of a political as pirant; he seeks nothing but an even break for Louisiana, a complete investigation of conditions in a state that Huey has made his private skating rink. A nasty spot for Huey Long, who is seeking cover these days in spite of his doughty words. When he backed out of his invitation to General Ansell to sue him for slander when he called the general a "thief, a rascal and a crook", taking advantage of senatorial immunity when the general filed libel proceedings, Huey lost considerable re spect at home, where they still believed his boasts of fearlessness". rives mm a position wnere ne learns surveying. He does not try to get in touch with Joan as He wants to be a success before he goes to her. Joan believes Bill no longer cares.. Malsie's daughter, Francine de Guitry. gives Joan a position modeling wedding gowns tn her exclusive Maison Francine. She is an instant success. Mrs. Curtis Barstow, wealthy patron of the Maison Francine, asks Joan to tea. Curtis. Barstow, the son, arrives noma unez oectedlv and Joan's hostess is anxious to have her leave. It is ob vious she does not care to have her son know Joan, but he insists upon driving her home. Curtis enter, tains Joan lavishly in the days that follow, but her heart is still with Bill. Unable to stand it any longer. sha visits Bill's mother. Mrs. Mar . a r n :ii w . w ..... tin nearo irnm dim out u uw nui. j. j u.m n v t a v. am. a I iikwB Kill uiw uu am u uuu mention Joan. Joan returns nome, i . r was intelligent, sha was charming and sweet-tempered. His mind was fully made up. And that was that. For the first time in fifteen years. I Mrs. Barstow cried herself to sleep. e e Bill Martin threw down his book. Amen." murmured the young man with his feet on the table. "Let s turn in. It's almost morn ing. He yawned and stretched 1 didnt know yon wanted It Ton nerer asked. Why. Billle. yon didnt even send ma your address till long arter I sent ner back au taem let ters" "Letters I Ma for heaven's sake tell me ckat letters. Sha wrote from Philadelphia!" Billie. dont ret all excited, now please. Joan's right in San Fran cisco. 8he cam to see me just the outer day. Mow yon just sis right still till I get lunch, and then ' ,He grabbed his hat. "Where eh yon dont know how where where!" She besran to scramble in the darning basket, her round little face all bewildered and red. "I wish yon wouldn't ret so excited," sha sleepily. "You should have been complained mildly. 'Seems like with the gang tonight. Ruth was when yon just cot off the train you Great litUe girl. She's might . . . laud sakes ... I just re membered she forgot to give it to rael" He went no on the hill to think. Here he once sat with Joan. Here they sat, dangling their legs over going good. nna be Mrs. Kollo Keyes. What her last hooe gone, and pnones Curtis to take her out. Joan tries to convince herself that Curtis' in terest is just friendship. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. CHAPTER XXTV ave you got to say to that, yon old scoffer I Does 6he know what your dad saldT" "About the allowance! Huh! Too know dad. When I bring that In his horns.' the cliff, looking down at the green water, under the clear blue sky. ha Happy then . . . happy . . . Tve bungled it again." I at. sa. mm JT . Bill threw op his hands and "nLVTr?17- .'?T yawned. "Have on I'm going to bed. Got to be at the works at seven." 'Listen I haven't finished. I wanted to tell yon what she said when I told her how we'd have to I take a chance on Dad nnnrlins? nn. Lvla Barstow lingered over her I Listen, when I nut the rinsr on her toilet, added a toucn oi rouge to ner i nnger cially lovely, for her son. Curtis "Sure. Dont you think my cred- P40?' hd JLeidt.b5ltafi r Listen, when I put the l"JzTJ'zi Zz r"Vr ter after letter, and ma not know ing not thinking" "And what shall I tell her!" he wondered. "How shall I make her understand!" He thought of her soft, rold hair. her warm, red month, her arms that had been open for him. Brave, gen exous Joan, she'd understand some- BITS for BREAKFAST By R. J. HENDRICKS had always been sweetheart to her. I It'a good? Listen. as well as son. She had Kept young I ring on her finger" . "r r7. for his sake. "You're my girll" he "Rollo, for Pete's sake I've got fi?. . !aV" f.v to meet her. to take her into his used to say, laughing, bringing her to get soma sleep." iVhfiV Jl7vZ fiowers or bonbons. "Go to sleep then X wish to ifamlr wait for me Joan Lately he had forgotten that. He I heaven you'd fall in lova once. Then I " 7, . mmm . . . .. sve v am UWWU MsVff fill l over Drum, jumping bom be used to do. Then ha thought of the Van Fleets. If Joaa was so near they'd knew. The Lately be bad lorgotten taat. xie neaven you'd zau m love once. Tnen Tr" . was neglecting her. And she knew you wouldn't get so darned supe why. rioT. Ruth's said the saw thing 51 "If it were someone else I more than one. You're all right, re ?I . Plucking the Goose fflHE basic idea of the industrial recovery bill which pass- JL, ed congress finally is that of self-government for indus trial groups with the government sitting in to approve the codes: Lines of industry like farm machinery makers can get together, fix prices, draw up regulations for the control of the industry, agree on wages, etc., and the code if ap proved, will have legal effect. If any plow maker violates the code or cuts prices, then he is fined. There is the licens- ing provision also by which the president can withhold a li cense and force out of business any concern which doesn't play ball. This looks very much to us like turning the goose of the public over to corporate industry to pluck, and putting a slip-knot around its neck so the bird can't squawk. In the case of raw material industries like lumber, coal, oil, etc., there is need for regulation to conserve resources. But in the case of manufacturing and distributing enterprises the in evitable tendency will be to hoist prices where everyone in the industry can "get theirs". So far as the government is concerned it cannot begin to regulate the details of all industries successfully. During the war the industries which had government licenses made enormous profits. They can always present cost figures which can prove that prices should be raised. The administration, in our humble judgment, is going at things backwards. It is lifting prices in hopes that em ployment will follow. The past method of getting out of de pressions was the return of confidence and increase of de mand for consumption of goods which started factories go ing, gave jobs, and later on justified price and wage in creases. If the government undertakes to police every ham burger stand in the country, all the "agents pro vacateur" of prohibition days may just shift to another bureau and resume snooping on an even wider and lower scale. Bus Transportation THE last legislature passed the buck of deciding the bit terly disputed question of bus transportation for high school students residing in non-high school territory to the residents of that area themselves. Since the people who live there are the ones whose children are affected and the ones chiefly who have to foot the bill, that seems a fair way of settling the matter. There is much to be said on both sides of the question; and the arguments are being develop ed fully in the country now. There is the matter of cost on the one hand and of safety of children and their educational opportunities oa the other. The town districts may well stand aside and let the country people make their own deci sion on the matter. The voters do not vote "yes" or "no" on transnorta. tion alone. Instead they elect a board to decide this ques tion and to handle other matters respecting high school tui tion which is paid b; outside territory. In Marion county the candidates for this board have declared themselves, and the line-up is as follows: For Bus Transportation Zone 1 .W. P. Collard Zone 2 J. S. Coomler Zone 3 Willis R. Dallas Zone 4 Connel V. Murray Zone 5 F. A. Doerfler The voting will be done in the reeular school diafrirt elections held next Monday. The voter votes for five, the one receiving the highest number of votes getting the long est term. wouldnt care," she thought. "Some- sne from our own set. Kathleen Hughes. No, she'a such a selfish thing but someone. Not a girl out of de Guitrrs soon She was rolnr to sneak of it af ter dinner. Diplomatically. Just a few words, to show him that a young attorney, a rising young at torney of good family and impec cable social connections really couldn't afford to see too much of a dressmaker's model. It didn't look well. Curtis was stubborn, but reasonable. At least, he was nearly always reasonable. She sighed, and sat down to wait. It was hard to find Just the right opening. Curtis waa restless, un communicative. "I was in Francine de Gnitry's shop today, she said guardedly. And instantly he waa alert, in terested. "See Joan?" "No. I talked to Francin His nose went back in the news- Daier. She eame and sat on the arm of his chair, drew his smooth head back against her bosom. "Curtis " "M mm "Curtis, on the one night you're home won't you talk to mother! We so seldom see each other any more. Of course, I'm getting to be an old woman "Now you're fishing." he smiled. "You know you put all the young ems in the shade. She looked down at her slender ankle in its cobwebby gray stock ing, to hide the small, gratified smile she couldn't suppress. She began again, "Curtis, you won't mind if I speak very frankly about Joan!" She felt him stiffen, but she went on. "I do admire her, tremendous ly. She is making a brave stand, and for her own sake, as well as pours . . . my dear, don't yon see you can't help her by taking her out to much BUL but yea arent human" Bill didnt answer. Ha stooped down and tightened the straps on a worn leather suitcase, and set it carefully behind the door. "Going to leave us! Little trip soma place!" Rollo had to repeat his Question before Bill heard him. "On the wouldn't want to telL but he set his Jaw, they would. Ho ha went back to the road. Al- moat ran into Dolores, red and round aa a peony in her flounced dotted swiss. She kept on holding ll.lllii 1 BUBQfSCI XX VW swell you look. New suit and alL I " HVlifoTcoutldlwher. '?P ? . I WiU 11ICUU9 WJ W to!" "San Franekee." "How long!" "Two weeks." "What for!" Bill smiled. A smile that had in it bitterness, and triumph and pain. "Because I can't stay away any longer that s why." She babbled on. "I saw Joan Hastings the other dsy." I bear she's working in Ban Francisco." he said, and he crum pled the leaves of the hazel bush that he had absently gathered on the trail. Mylle Lawyer. Indian princess, honor W U sttdentf S (Continuing from yesterday:) "The governor waa advised tore turn to Olympla by way ot New York and the Isthmus, but he eon- eluded to again rely on the friend liness of the Nes Perces. (The commission had returned from making treaties with the Flat- heads and the Kootenay aad up per Pend d'Oreille Indians.) 'When he reached their (the Nes Perce) campa and explained his needs, a force ot warriors was quickly summoned and began to march along the Snake river to ward the Walla Walla valley. When they arrived at that valley, it waa found that the little war was over. "The governor of Oregon (George L. Curry) bed sent 400 volunteers against the hostiles, who were thoroughly defeated, their chief, Peopeomoxmox. be ing among the slain." The 400 volunteers were mostly from Sa lem and the Willamette valley.. Capt. Chas. Bennett trom Salem was killed just before that treach erous old ehief fell. Bennett had gone from Salem to Sutter's Fort and was one ot the three men from this town who discovered gold at 8utter's Fort. He returned from the California mines and erected the Bennett House, fa mous old time hotel, that stood on the present site ot the Masonic temple, State and High streets.) The writer of the news article in The Statesman, quoted in the first paragraph of this series, was mistaken about the great grand father of Mylle Lawyer rescuing the survivors of the Whitman massacre. But he and his people had been friends of the Whitman and Spalding mission forces from the time of their first arrival in 1835: as Indeed they had be friended the whites always, be ginning with the Lewis and Clark party in 1805 and 1806, as will appear later in this series. S We begin to hear of Chief Law yer with the arrival of the Amer lean Board missionaries west of the Rockies. Rev. Samuel Parker met him In 183S. when he came ooking for locations for those missions, w. H. Gray, who came the next year with the Whitmans and Spaldings, called him Ishhol holhoatshoats, or more frequently Lawyer, a sobriquet "applied to him by the mountain men on ac count of his argumentative pow ers and general shrewdness, by which he obtained great Influence both with his people and with white men." S Bancroft says: "He was the son whistle. "It is.' At the Maison Francine. She'a Rollo whistled, along, drawn out i istle. "Sound, like girl." JATL e mvs vhw usi'- pii vYCr A. W- 1 S I 1 .2 a I iow a. .veryooay a laufi-nms: their Old Mrs. Martin cried when she "!r"i5L PT WP.M saw him. yrr . . r. t fc4, r.M Ka JUAC on inose iwo oia mummies up ..WW mm. w.vw&ut u oi.v- kill. IT. L n.i 111 1 glad, to see me -otherwise I i'Zl v j : '1 yet Si InA .."Maison Francine-wh.tever the uiuic a in ou k tau x jca taxi . help from crym 'What have you got to eat around here! Any pie! Cake! Doughnuts!" He was poking around in the little pantry already, mshtng things around over the ace-paper shelves. Peeking into the bread box, looking in the soup tureen where she used to hide the ginger-bread. "Now ain't that a shame I T'think I never even whipped up a cake. Oh, you bad one, not even sayin' you were comin'. If that ain't a shame," she mourned. "You might of known I wouldn't cook just for mytelfl" "Shame I" the parrot mimicked. "Now ain't that a . . . awk . . . awk . . . Billee! Billee awk " "Still got the old bird. Aw say. The ferry was just churning into the slip. He tore down the hilL With a little luck he'd make it. As he ran he heard Dolores laughing. "Run all you like youll still be too late!" He turned back for an instant, chilled by her crazy, hysterical laugher. Higher and higher her voice rose, above the wind, and the sound of the waves. "She's got another sweetheart, you fool I Comeback come back I" The turn of the road shut her off from sight, but he thought he could hear her eerie laughter, a quarter of a mile away. "Poor old Gerwin, I pity hhn," he thought. "The girl's gone crazy . . . poor Gerwin, poor devil, she's stark, raving mad " (To Be Continued Tomorrow) Yesterdays ... Of Old Salem Town Talks rroos The Statea man of Earlier Days June 15, 1908 Minto brothers donate their ferry to Marion and Polk counties and Salem for use on Willamette river while intercounty bridge un der repair. "Nell Gwynne," English his torical comedy drama, to be pre sented at Grand opera house here with Georgia Harper as leading lady; other plays for troup's four day engagement here "CamlUe." "Sapho," and "The Little Minister." W. B. Millard. Joseph Baum gartner and C. M. Eppley candi dates tor election to Salem school board at vote June IS. June 15. 1023. SHANGAI Six of eight for eign captives released by Chin ese bandits after being held since May ; Chinese government pays $85,000 ransom. Against Michael Weinacht Ellis Stevens C. A. Ratcliff Ernest Werner Eugene Finlay The Oregon City Enterprise is reconciled to the discharge of one Chlcagoan from the C. C. C. on the ground of "homesickness". observes that some people are unhappy, "even in heaven". Every adult entering Tallman's piano store June 19th will receive a gift. No strings, no obligations. See the Ad In Sunday's Btatesman Page S sr Senior scholarships at Willam ette university announced for year 192J-24: Ella K. St. Pierre, biol ogy; Edna Jennlson, Latin; Mrs. Marie von Eschen, Robert Not- son. history; Mary Wells, French; Alice Sykes. Spanish; Ruth Hill English; Kathleen LaRaut. voice, and Byron Arnold, organ, in mus ic department; Phyllis Palmer, home economics; Albert Logan, mathematics; Lolo Ellis, sociology. of the chief who took charge of the horses ot Lewis and Clark while those explorers visited the lower Columbia, and was about 3C years of age." This would make him about six when be first saw the Lewis and Clark party in 1105, near Oct. S. The historians dispute as to the name ot the Nes Perce chief who waa Lawyer's fa ther; the chief whe took charge of the Lewis and Clark horses. and returned them, to the last horse, the next spring or one of the chiefs. Some writers think he waa "The Twisted Hair." men tioned In the Lewis and Clark di aries. The Bits man does not pre sume to decide the point. Mylle Lawyer says the tradition is that "The Twisted Hair." the chief named in the journals ot the ex plorers, was the father ot Chief Looking glass of the Nes Perces. a contemporary of Lawyer, bat not of the same family. Perhaps some thing more about the name ot the chief who kept or became respon sible for the horses, and who was perhaps the father of Chief Law yer, will appear further along in this series. S "Lawyer became a great favor ite with the missionaries," wrote one of the editors of Bancroft's History. Further along, one finds In the Bancroft History: "While A. B. Smith was at the Kamiah mission (among the Net Perces not far from the Spalding mission at Lapwal; Smith having been transferred from the American Board mission In the Sandwich Is lands), he reduced the Nes Perce dialect to grammatical rules. In the summer of 1839 the Lapwal mission received a visit from the printer of the Honolulu mission. E. O. Hall, who brought as a pres ent from the first native church of Honolulu a small printing press and some type. (First such outfit west of the Rockies; the crude press now la the museum of the Oregon Historical society in Port land.) He remained long enough to teach the printer's art to Spald ing and Rogers (Rogers after ward married 8atira, daughter of uana Lue ana they were drowned at Oregon City), and on this press were printed primers in the native language for the use of the pupils, a collection of hymns. and some chapters from St. Mat thew. By the aid of these books in their own tongue, a number of the Nes Perces were taught to read, and also to reproduce their lessons, by printing with the pen. for the benefit of less advanced pupils. S S "In the labor of translation. Smith was assisted by Lawyer. . . The mission at Lapwal after a few years consisted of a large and commodious dwelling with 11. fireplaces, an Indian reception room, weaving and spinning room. eating and sleeping rooms tor the children, rooms for the family, and a school house, all under one roof. There were, besides, a church, sawmill, blacksmith shop, granary, storehouse and all nec essary farm buildinzs." The church Is there yet. Its or sanitation dating back to the be ginnings in 1836-7. now in a dif ferent church building and jt j, an Indian church, in membership and pastor, and has always been S S Rev. Corbett B. Lawyer, son of Chief Lawyer, and grandfather of Mylle Lawyer, was pastor of that Lapwal church, as well as otbr churches, too. the members of which were all whites. His on. Archie B. Lawyer, father of Myli Lawyer, has for many years be-n In the Indian service of the V. s government. He has long served as clerk of the Lapwai Indian agency. Mylie's mother as al.o in the Indian service of the rov ernment. Her ancestory Is S;otn. but she Is three-quarter? white. Mylle expects to return to Pa lem for pot graduate preparation the better to fit herself for hr life work, after spending vaeatk n time with her borne folks in Idaho. June 9. 1930. a handsome mon ument was unvAild on the cam pus of Whitman college at Wal'a Walla, to commemorate the act of Chief Lawyer that heln? 75th anniversary of the event of the saving of the lire of Gover nor Stevens and the other mem bers of the peace commission in 1855. Mylie Lawyer was present at the dedicatory ceremonfe.. anl her part was the unveiling of tn monument to her great grandfa ther. From the treaty dispute out of which grew the arrae.1 conflict of 1877. between the U. S. Indian a:i thoritiee and young Chief Joe; h and his followers, there arose a feud between two factions of t!i Nez Perce tribe, one branch ihf adherents of Joseph and the oth r the followers of the ideal c.' Chief Lawyer. How deadly and bitter wa.-. t'.: feeling may be gathered by th fact that when the time for tt: dedication of the monument ap proached, those In charge of the program deemed It neeeary to furnish Mylie Lawyer with a guard, fearing her life might in danger. So, even when she went about the streets of Walla Walla on a shopping errand, arm ed guardsmen accompanied her. (Continued tomorrow.) HOME FROM XAVY TURNER. Jane 14 EWr Webb, youngest son ot Mr. snd Mrs. J. L. Webb has returned home after spending fonr years ia the U. S. navy. 22 Years Ago BRYAN HOLDS BIBLE RESULT OF DIVINE INSPIRATION From the Nation's News Files Chicago, Jane 15 William Jennings Bryan, at the ter-centennlal celebration of the King James translation ot the Bible, declared it the result ot divine inspiration and defied the materialists to produce a book superior to it. Complete satisfaction is the certain result ot a service conducted by well-trained experienced Rigdon directors. 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