Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1933)
Hstw' -.- a m.mv yff--.-xy - y-gjwe. "Ti .'!CfqMsa .ttywest&Msuaafe? PAGE FOUR The OREGON STATESMAN, Salen. Orej-on. Sunday Morning. September 10. 1903 Yoif ve Got to Put BigOneiAll Arodn d! 4C WALLACE THATS tvrvrRnv iyi ;i- MS, .Wo Favor Sway. Us; No Fear Shall Aire" 1 From First SUtesman, Mrch 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Charles A. ISreACcs . - - EdHtoranagerl , Sheldon P. Sacxett - - - Managing Editor Member of the Associated Press The Atnoclated Press to exclusively emitted to the dm tar public Hon of all newa dlspetcbea credited to It or not otherwise credited In tola paper. .., . j-- - - -.;,. , s. . 1 ' ADVERTISING : t Portland Representative Gordon B. Bell. Berurtty Building, Portland. Ore. r J Eastern Advertising Representatives K Bryant. Griffith Brvnaon. Inc, Chicago, Row Tort. Detroit, . . i Boston,' Atlanta. i Entered at the Potto ff ice at Salem, Oregon, at Sccond-Clas Matter. Published every morning except Monday. Buainete office, tlS S. Commercial Street. . :.' SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ' Mall Subscription Rates, fn Advance. Within Oregon : Dally and Sunday. 1 Ma 60 cents: Mo $1.25; Mo. 12.25 : 1 year 11.00. Elsewhere SB cents per Mo, or $V80 for I year In advance. "By City Carriers 45 cents a month; $5.00 a year In advance. . Par Copy B cents. On trains and News Stands S cents. -.,-4.-1 Mt. Jefferson rTlHREE lives were lost on; JL three climbers were swtDt So far as is known this is the cumtnng oi-tne mountain; Ray L. Farmer, George Pearce andiEd Qss made the first ascent about fifty years agO.iFHe party of Portland climbers who were caught in the Bude;had followed the course across Whitewater glacier on the east lace. The slide came off the summit rock spires as they.worked their way around the base of the, pinnacles. It was .'the Trails club party which made the crossing" of the more' dangerous Jefferson park, glacier, reached the summit and came down on the east route across the head of "White water glacier.1 , Mountain conditions have been bad for climbing this late summer. The unusual and prolonged heat melted the gla ciers and loosened the ice-mortar which-holds" the fractured rock, in place. On the South Sister the heavy melt of Skinner glacier broke the moraine dam and flooded the drainage creeks with red silt water. - The newspaper accounts of the fatality on Mt. Jefferson state that the climbers were caught in a blinding snow storm. This is a mistake. It was clear and warm at Mt. -Jefferson both Sunday and Monday. By ten. o'clock the two climbing parties were well up toward the base of the pinnacles. The mountain stood out clear and bold in the sunshine as the writ er's party made its way out of Jefferson park. It was three o'clock when we reached the timber; and by that time the climbing parties should have been back in the park or at least out of danger zones. Uur opinion is that as they worked their way around the east face the morningjsun loosened the overhanging rocks or ice and they were caught in the resulting slide and swept into the bergschrund at the head of Whitewater glacier. The pre ceding days on the mountain had been hot and the preceding night was quite mild ; so by noon the effect of the heat would be felt by the rocks. During; our stay in the park we could hear frequent rumblings' which we attributed to the cracking of the glaciers. It was sunshine and not snow which brought death. to the climbers. Snow fell that night, to quilt them in their death sleep. -n- . While their death was probably sudden, so that no pos sible aid would have availed, the accident emphasizes the need for better access to Mt. Jefferson. The rescue parties had to gc in from Portland to Olallie lake and then hike 9 mUes over the high ridge. A road should be built up the Breitenbush trail to the edge of the primitive areaf leaving a short and easy trail into the park on the north side. Another road should go :. from the new highway up Pamelia creek to the lake to serve the west side, including Hunts"cove, which is the usual base lor the climb. Such roads would permit quicker movement of men and supplies into the region at the base of the mountain. Tales About Wild Horses LAKEVIEW had a round-up recently. Lakeview and Burns are about the only towns left in the state which are real . ly in the cattle country. Pendleton, which puts on' the big show is really a wheat and wool town now. Frank Jenkins of the Klamath Herald, went over to Lakeview to see the na tive broncs. buck. And here is the line of yarns he brought .back with him, as he published in his column. Jenkins is vera cious; but in this case he merely poses as narrator: This year a lot of the horses came in from the high desert ' country oft to the southeast, down where Oregon, Idaho And Ne vada come together. They are real wild horses, many of them' never having seen a man before at least at close range. ,'They were captured in traps -wire fences opening ont like .a funnel and leading down to corrals at the end. . "And listen to this: The wild horses were hazed into these ' traps with AIRPLANES. - "Beat that if you can! - - . - - " . ; "They worked it like this: The traps were built, with their long fences extending out into . the- desert, an cowboys were concealed around the ends of these .fences. Then the planes . . started circling. ... ,.:, - "They circled over the sagebrush, swooping low whenever a band of horses was sighted. The roar of the planes and the amax- -Ing spectacle of these huge birds threw the wild horses into a panic and. of course.they ran for all they were worth. ."The pilots skilfully guided them into the mouth of the trap, and as soon as they entered It the cowboys closed in from behind, chivvying them into the corral. They tell this tale: One big stallion, guarding his harem - or mares, raced along behind, looking up from time to time, with '. mingled fear and hatred in his eyes; at the pursuing Diane. ; . "The pilot, wanting a good look at him, Swooped low. As he did. so, the stallion reared on his hind legs, his nostrils flaring red with anger and his teeth snaobinr. and tir t h. with his hoots. -', ..V .- " , - "There's life in the raw for you, . "And here's, another tale they tell: The elrcllna- nlanes searching the desert floor for candidate, for the S f UV e"m-olored flash, m tho sage and on towln&im sighted a stallion and his band of mares. PPng near i. Zv1r,,Il8tei1 t0 tai: Kwy member of the band. If the tale Is to be believed, was a PERFECT PALOMINO. 'wliJlESs ..PL6 1IIon tbr ay,- was clean-limbed and beautiful, with unmistakable marks of breeding, and his mares and colts showed the same clean outlines. - - - - - - w "Tell that one to the story writers." ) goverowVl bear la the flour mT;7 Z?J"Z v... . hav mail -mi: T s. taxtothtVt;:;;":::?"1"0." ? ?.our mn more anxlou. to ,g abertthin eSeT The trouble with government control Is that It Is hard to find stopping point. Control wage, then prices geT out ot hand. CoSrol Price, and complicaUon. set in which get sand T thVgw-box7Take noir. They are In a sorry pllgat. They had to pay Uucm Si ces for hay last spring under "aupply and demand- rules. NoV they are paying high prices f6r mill feed under government mandatL But the price of bntterfat Is very low. NRA as an emergency mee may d some good; but you just can't control 10.000.000 people la TaU their business relaUoaa from one swivel chair. losse? 6" V?1 kn0w tt tai" part of parl-mntnel is the Csxrmana ara flnatfne- rtt'nMn.'.j. ' - - m v wu Aaauisv dt not ilea In the C-anabe. new kind of Intoxicant, it mar be. 7 WKUa Claims Sacrifice Mt Jefferson Monday when to their death In an avalanche. first instance of fatality in the W u Profit would iww vara ne is governor be stni-tn uuoiac5S- since me Hour mllla BITS for BREAKFAST -By R. J. HENDRICKS Jason Lee wa. .. K .' not a Canadian: S V Under the headline, "The Jason Lee Centennial the Portland Oregonian of Sunday, Sept. S con tained on its editorial page an article reading: . "Celebration of the Jason Lee centennial, which will reach a climax in Oregon next year, has started already in the Rev. Mr. Lee's home town of Stanstead, Quebec, Just north of the Ver mont border, and among Meth odist organizations of New Eng land. Though Lee did not reach Oregon until 1934. it was on August 18, 1833, that he gave his farewell address in the little church at Stanstead. The follow ing day he crossed the border, and throughout the summer, au tumn and winter of 1833, he was busy in New England, . raising money by lecturing and complet ing arrangements for his mission ary party to accompany Nathanlal J. Wyeth of Boston on the trip across the country. ' "It was on January 29, 1834, that Lee left New York city for St. Louis, though he traveled circultously, lecturing as he went. "We of Oregon hare come to think of Lee as representing the American party In the Oregon controversy, and of J o h n Mc Loughlln as representing tffe Bri tish party. It is a little, difficult for the historians to remember that Lee was born and raised a Canadian, and that when he ac cepted the call to- the far north west, he was a Canadian preach er.. True, his ancestors were New Englanders, and his brief univer sity experience was in New Eng land, bnt the .fact remains that by training and nativity he' was Canadian as much so as Mc- LonghUn himself. , "It was purely , an accident of circumstance that history should make, out Lee as a hundred per cent American, and McLonghlln as his temporary opponent,' ' ."Lee was born, June 18, 1803, In a log cabin built by his fa ther, three and a half miles north of Stanstead. He was the young est of fifteen children. His fa ther died when he was three year. old. The family was poor, and for some years Jason Krni wiw j cis oldest brother, - Ellas, who was twenty-five years his eemor. une or the children of aiias was DanieL only three veara younger than Jason, and who ac companied Jason to Oregon. jason iee attended the Stan- Bea scnooi on occasion bat when uoiy imrteen was entirely self- aopporang, working principally as a farm boy. He grew to be six feet three Inches In height and in later years boasted that there was a time when he could chop a cord of sugar maple wood In two hours. In 1828, when he was 28 years old, be was converted" by Rev Richard Pope, Wesleyan missionary, who had aroused the Stanstead district to a great pitch of excitement. Of this conversion IJaniel Lee afterwards wrote: "Por several day he (Jason) continued In deep mourning, re fusing to be comforted, tilL at length, as he was one day walk- Lung highway vakme, meditating on the future conse quences of sin so dreadful did they appear, and yet so Just, that he felt willing to endure all he now suffered, and all the Lord chose to lay upon him while he UTed, If be could but at last es Ind!??l .i on can bring peace to the bituminous coal mining aTd eSeS ?pll8liment J111 3U8tI1 Ur decree the Sme tn? f !ha- rao drive. Alleviation of condition, la cos! toS 32,2 CWld Ubr ta cott0tt eonsuZltlon'S SffiK t, tie aer- ir.a ea: ff, Even with slauahtarinr th utn crat will find enough "pork" to go cape from ruin and be saved. At that moment deliverance came; the dark cloud was gone. . . . "Tor another three years, Ja son worked on farms. Then he enrolled in Wllbraham academy at Wllbraham, Mass., where his strength and will power impress ed his associates, and especially Dr. Fisk, president of Wesleyan university, ur. fisk was among those most deeply moved by the appeal of the Flathead emissaries who visited St. Louis in the an tumn of 1831, seeking 'the book ot heaven,' and it is a testimonial to Lee that he was the first per son who came into the mind of Dr. Fisk as a proper missionary to the far field. "At that time, in the spring of 1833, Lee already had promised hts services to the Canadian mis sions, but the letter lu which he made his application failed to elicit an answer, and he was free to accept the appointment to Ore gon. So it was a hundred years ago that he said farewell to his fellow, villagers of Stanstead and set southward into history." S That is a very well written ar ticle, it is rather thoroughly es tablished that only one ot the In dians seeking "the book ot heav en" was a Flathead. And these statements need ex plaining: "It Is a little difficult for the historian, to remember that Lee was born and raised a Canadian, and that when he ac cepted the call to the far north west, he was a Canadian preach er. . . . the fact remains that by training and nativity he was a Canadian as much so as Mc Longhlln himself. It was purely an accident of circumstance that history should make out Lee hundred per cent American, and McLonghlln his temporary oppon ent. 1i Jason Lee was not a Canadian. He could not hare known he was born on what was afterward found to be Canadian soil until a short time before his death likely on ly a iew weeks. When, after leav- lag Oregon late In 1843, and re porting to his home board July 1. 1844, and calling on federal offi cials at Washington and visiting ramniar scenes in New England, ne went to his old home for a few weeks of rest before returning to Oregon as agent of the Oregon In- suwte. I Willamette university), and there soon expired, a victim of tuberculosis, on March 12, IBM. ' s w v ... - The line between Canada and the united States was not defln iteiy surveyed, marked and estab- lishel until 1842. Lee- could scarcely nave learned In Oregon tnai me line thus located placed tne nouse In which he was born on the north side of it Bashford and Atwood say "a stone's throw north of it." Brosnan says three and a half miles north of it.. He aiso says the line placed the kitcnen, ot a neighbor on the Can adian side and the living room In Vermont, "a 1i V Jason Lee never regarded aim- sou as anything: but air American. Neither , did President Andrew Jackson. Neither did President Martin Van Buren. ' Nor did any member of their cabinets. And neither did Dr. John McLonrhHn himself. - That great leader of the far .M t. Vvi. round. WUBM-lt " w "" flung forces of the British concern he represented, scattered over wild empire In extent, was Instant in recognizing In Jason Lee a man of equal grasp and like human! tarian instinct, fit and destined and commissioned by the presi dent ot the United States, to take charge and hare control of Amer ican interests in the same-wide field and In sympathies and grasp "a hundred per cent Ameri can." . (Continued on Tuesday.) California Folk Buy Walnut Orchard Near Jefferson . JEFFERSON, Sept. 9. Mrs, Lottie Fruit of Holly and Mrs, Hlrtsell of Sweet Home are camp ing. In the Thelssen-Grens hop shacks during hop picking season. Mrs. -Fruit attended the regular meeting of the Rebekah lodge here Tuesday night. Mrs. Fruit will be remembered as Miss Phil lips, and is a former member ot the local Rebekah lodge. Mrs. Maysel Williamson and son of Portland are guests of her grandmother. Mrs. Marcaret Wed die and other relatives, this week. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Chester of Lynwood, Califs have purchased the four-acre walnut orchard ad- Joining Mrs. Anna Gilchrist's place in the south part of town, from Robert Bonney of Portland. rney are erecting buildings on the place; the garage Is finished and they are living In it until the house is finished. Mrs. Chester is a sister of Mrs. Georgia Rich ardson. Miss Maude Durfee and Miss Bertha Dillon, teachers of the Jef ferson schools are In Jefferson this week making arrangements to more here for the school year; They hare rented the J. T. Jones property near the Evangelical cnurca. They are guests ot Miss Aaan Libby. . Miss Icy Epley and sister Ma bel of Hood River are visiting rel atives and friends In Jefferson this week. They are daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Epley and are former residents of the Greens bridge neighborhood. They left aere about 13 years ago. MOVE TO TOWN HATES VILLE. Sent, t Mr. and Mrs. Claud Talmare. who nave resided in this neighborhood for some time, are movinr to 8s leno. ur. Long, owner of the property in which the Talmages resiaea, is moving into It Imme diately. Quit NRA Post Dudley' Catea. Assistant VSA A A. ministrator for Indnstry, whose resignation from the oficlal family of the Blue Eagle caused a sensa tkm in WaaMmrtoB. Catei resigned because of dnlerenees ' ef opinion witJ General Johasoa en policy and isterprttaUon, of NRA Jaws, , , . .-v .: " 1 , ' . 8TNOPSIS Tesasay rinrfalph. fat are feetbaD fkere, ws "aliraye dlSexmt." even as a baby; Bora la a tiay kllie West factety teem, he was the de gtt ef Us humble parents. Hoes aad Pop. The latter, a durable Democrat, wasted te name the toy Widens Jenniars Bryan, tot Uncle Louie, another indabitabla Deme-4 crat, prevailed in fcaviag Ike Infant hristesd Thosaas Jersesw Star dy Bttle Tesassr paid ae attemtioa te strastge toby carriage eglara amtll Ole Use, feared aad aged colored woaaam. peered like a witch at him om day; he amfled, amd - Mem was amssed wheat the cack Ihag crmae pat "a good V en him. . As Tommy- grew, he-was stfU Mifferemt," running away from a toy'a Job la the glaaswerks where Pop and his brother. Pete, worked. Tommy connected with the local News office aad then shocked Pep by declaring he intended going te high school where he aeon wea reneera atoat town at "the feet hair, atach to Moat's amazed plea sure;" She meets Char be Waitaey, sairaeaslre f aetary ewaer, as she is ; shopping eVwmtewa eae aftcrnoosv He greets her most cerdiaBy aad praises her athletic son while bc- 'wildered neighbors look cm. Later Tommy teQa Mem that he'a taking Dei Whitney, the millieaaira's daaghter, te a school dance. Mom recalls pleasant memories ef the august Whitney family.... - CHAPTER FIVE .Then Charlie had gone off to col lege and Mom had lost track of him until the wedding. She had been married two years and al . ready . had Pete when the papers bad all the fuss about Charlie Whit ney's getting married to some girl over east. Everybody was dying to see her and when Charlie brought - her home Mom used to make ex cuses to go by the big house just te get a look at her. She was a pretty little thing with awful fancy clothes that made her-look like one of those French dells; but aha must have been delicate be cause it wasn't long until she went into a decline and people said the place didat agree with her. She was awful nice, too, and once when Mom was pushing Tommy along in bis new buggy she stopped' Mom and excused, herself and made a big. fuss over Tommy, particular ever the way he looked back at her the same brave way he did at everybody.. Mrs. Charlie was so friendly that Mom told her about the good wish the old witch had put on the boy; and Mrs. Charlie was real inter ested and said she, wished, some body would put a good wish on her. too; aad then atojbroke right down and told Mom. sw had just come from the: doctor's; and Mom was the first one to know but she kept it to herself because Mom was not the kind to run ail over the street with something Take that. Sure enough, the poor thing bad passed away' when the baby was born. Everybody in town was sorry for poor Charlie and the motherless little girt. Mom had a cry all to herself because she knew all the poor sweet girl had had te go through; and Mom had known all along she wasn't long for . this world. It was bad enough for any- body. Mora thought, but girls like that should never be made to have babies although Mom was never one to question God's wilL Bnt she couldn't help but wonder why it was that a sweet little mother like that, with everything in the world, naa to go, while other people who didnt deserve children, had them one after the ether and paid no more attention to them titan the cats and yet they grew up big and .strong. - . , Little Dorothy had had a good bringing up because Charlie's Pear Crop Proving To be Unprofitable: Dockage is Heavy eaame-eaeememm LIBERTY. Sept. 9-Pear "nick ing Is going on at present with pear, generally of fair Quality. There is quite a lot of scab pres ent on the smallest of the fruit. which is being sorted out before hauling to the cannery. Growers are receiving $15 per ton for firsts and ?4 for culls at the cider plant. No money in pears for farmer, this falL Dockage ot as high as 48 on sorted pears was sustained here by one grower who hauled to the Paulus cannery. Four and five cents per box Is being paid pick ers and 20 and. 25c per hour to sorters. Pear acreage Is in small plots generally and not must out- siae labor employed. . Mrs. Max - Jenlenx and three sons of Seattle are visittnr her parents Mr. and ? Mrs. William Schoetthoefer in Salem and her brothers Richard - and William Schoetthoefer of this district. She will be remembered here as Ger trude Schoetthoefer who was born in Liberty and lived here until her marriage some years ago. - Other visitors In the .commun ity are Mrs. Luther ot Monmouth, guest Of Mrs. O. E. Brooks. Mrs. Shattuck Is enjoying the visit of ner sister Mrs. Love, who is here zrom wyomiag. . Jim Rains is In a Salem hosnl- tal for medical treatment. : Wbeat Growers a Pick Committee For,-' Rickreall t . . ." emmmeaaaeeaeaeek RICKREALL, Sept. 9 The sec ond series of wheat meetinra was held hero Wednesday and a com mittee of three elected to super vise this district at follows: Rob ert D. Pence, chairman: Clande Larken and Fred Auer, commit teemen. " ' ' --. ' . - v TV ; " The chairman of each eona com mittee will serve on- the county committee which will meet soon and elect officers;, , The county group will have entire 'supervi sion over the wheat sira-nn of the if I M ii r tore was Tommy, taking town's wealthiest aad most mother tod tended to that and she a rood woman but very stern and proud and bad many tunes sent Mom scooting for nothing at aU when she had been a little girl around the place. Then Old Charlie had died sudden and Charlie bad: to give so much, of bis time to the business that the little girl didn't have as much of a father, either as she should. She had everything-, of course, but she didnt mother's love and a girl needed that more than a boy. Some- said she was spoiled with this-and-that but Mom couldn't see it in tor and she wouldn't have cared if she did; there were worse thing in the world than a little spoiling for a child And whenever Mom saw Dorothy she always saw the day her Sweet little mother had stopped, to. make a fuss over Tom my. The girl had her mother's eyes. pretty and melting, like the sun on the morning dew when the fog- had not quite left the air; and there was that same Tittle bit of sadness about; them that always made Mom want to take the little girl te her and hold her real tight. Of course she never had. Now and then she met Dorothy in store or on the street but she al ways just smiled and so v did Dorothy. Mom couldn't tell Dorothy that, in her mind, she was like her; own daughter because of what the girl's mother had told her that .day; and not even Pop ever knew how much Mom bad wanted a little girl herself. .... ' r And now here, was Tommy tak ing Dorothy te a dance. Somehow Mom felt that up in heaven Dorothy's mother was nodding and smiling to her; but Mom eouldnt help but wonder what the proud old Grandmother would say. Mom gradually became tomed to being pointed out as the mother of the high school football star. She even grew to enjoy it be cause it gave her a feeling of su perionty over the other neighbor ladies which" she needed badly. Juext alone. Mom was a peaceable person; but since Tommy had be-j come so Important around town some of the other women had tried to- say things about him. and Mom needed a coat of armor te fight them back. She knew that Mrs. Farrell was Daily Hea By ROYAL S. COPELAND, M. D. By ROYAL S. COPELAND. M. D. United States senator from New-York Former CommUektmer ef BemUh, Wew York Cit GREAT STMPATHT Is aroused at the sight of a child with a club root. It is discouraging te a physician to see- this defect. Be knows that If proper - measures had been taken In early Infancy the deformity could have been corrected. Un fortunately, fa many cases mod. leal advlee is sought when, ft Is too Alate for eerreetoa or cure. " .. "Talipes to the medical name tor elub foot The. foot droops Dr. Coseload aad rewemblae a - - dub. Thin afflA. Hon ip usually traced to a birth tn- lury or to an. Injury u early child bood. It may be the result of some siaease axe Infantile Daralraia. Occasionally the affliction Involves both feet. . Such cases are usually iae result or some marked weakne muscles, unor nerves of the foot. -If early medical treatment la Dtainea the deformity can be cor. rsctea ana oftea completely cured. Eerly Attntlov E.etil -X cannot' veramphaalxe the lm PorUnce ef cechr attontloa to a de- mrmiry ec this nature,, AH cases of eonffenital club foot ahould be treated la Infancy or as early as possible. It ia-only when the affliction to cor rected before the bones become firm that complete cure to possible. la the treatment, the foot to placed tn a normal position by means of Special manipulation. ' It to kept Is this) poeitloa by. the sppttcatloa of a llaster-of -parts bandana. .The cast la kept on for several weeks, then removed and replaced with a eun portng bandage. When the condition to not treated . ' "." .' ' - " , PAIR GET LICENSE " DALLAS. Sent. t. Am airfare, licenie was issued her Friday to Dorothy Whitney, daaghter ef the powerf al citizen, te a dance. sniffing at Tom every chance she got; and Mom paid her back by saying, in Butcher Brown's shop, before three or four other ladies who would carry it, that she always' was willing to give credit te people who got ahead and wasat one to be always running down somebody; then she asked Mrs. Farrell bow hex. Joie was getting; along in school because Tommy bad said Joie was good at books. . "Indeed he is, Mrs. Farrell said positively. "He Jed his class two months hand-runnin'. "Uh-huh," Mom said sweetly, "that's nice he's good at books. Of course, everybody cant play foot balL" Mrs. Farrell bought a twe pound sack of sugar she always figured everything: down te the last penny because they said tor man had the first dollar he ever made aad said: "Of course not Anybody who happens to be big as a horse can play football; but it takes brains to be good at books." Mom was ready for that. She watched the other neighbor ladies ankkeihar behind their aprons as ttoy- poked.' at cabbage toads and picked over the tomatoes. She was , ready for them because she had heard what Mrs. Farell was going around saying. So Mont smiled, friendly-like, and said: "Give me another one of them dandy steaks. Butcher. Tommy likes wicm. iaii eoy is growing right out .from under our noses." "He's strong as a butetora ion." Butcher Brown answered. "He looks like x did when I was his age. , "Yes, Tommy must have heartv vittles. I don't know what hell do when be goes away to college.' Mom said it just like she was asking for a peek of potatoes. The other women dropped what thev were doing (all except Mrs. Farrell who pretended to be examining a tray of sausage). : - "Is Tommy going to college!" Mrs. Johnson asked. "Oh. res. he's had oflVra lots of them and he's just trying- to make up his mind. I guess that'll be all. Butcher. Ill fast take thm aU with me; although it does make a heavy load when you have a : many big,! strapping men-fo!ka b cook for." (Te B Coettaoei) e . CwruW. te9 fc. V urn until late childhood bas arrived, or when the deformity to the result of -an infection tike Infantile paralysis. It can my be cured by operation. The operaton ahould not be dreaded. Let me assure the worried mother that It to a simple procedure and ! when performed by a competent sur- geon, bas Uttle danger attached to It. ;. . ' Operatiea Simple In this operation there Is V cutting of the. tendon of the foot. This is called a "tenotomy and after It la - performed the afflicted foot to placed-, tn a plaater-efparto bandage which Is kept oa until healina takes clace. Therplaster cast to then removed. The foot to massaged and exercised until the deformity to entirely corrected. This, operation has been success.' fuMn many cases ot club toot caused by the recent epidemic ot Infantile paralysis. We are indeed grateful to the Improved methods aad akUl of modern surgery. In former, years uttle hope could be offered to vic tims .of this affliction. Today there Is great hope for them. X am often asked whether the "club foot shoe" to of benefit to a victim et club toot. The club foot shoe was used for many years as a remedy for this deformity. ; Doctors no longer approve ef this shoe and ft to rarely used. The shoe to painful and dis figuring and seldom leads to a cure. Answers to Health Qaeriee 1C C C Q What causes bad breath " v . . A. This may be due te diseased tonsils, decayed teeth, nasal catarrh. Indigestion or constipation. fc i- emmaanmaam .. j ' ' i " X T. TL : Q. Is ft possible to straighten bow legs? . v Av Consult an orthopedist tor his Opinion. r . - . . ' fc ?: Reader. Q. What would causa the toe nails to fan off 7 . A. This may be due to am In fection. It would be wen to have an examination. ; (CopyrteM. 19SS. JL T. JT feci Homer J. Ellis, je, bookkeeper, ol Dallas, and Dorothy Schadler, J J, teacher, of Lakeview. . Ith Talks