PAGE YOVtt ' .t,.,r., .'a , 'ThY OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon? Saf nrday Morning, April 21, 1931
IK
It
II
it
I
I
ft
5I
ft
1.'
t -
i
I
4
i
II
"No Favor Sways Us: No Fear Shall Atce"
From First Statesman, March 23, 1851
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
Charles A. Spragux - - - Editor-Manager
Sheldon F. SUckett - - - - - Managing Editor
Member of the Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for public
ttoa of all news dispatches credited te It or not otherwise credited la
this paper.
ADVERTISING
Portland Representative
Gordon B. Bell. Security Building. Portland. Or.
Eastern Advertising Representatives
Bryant. Griffith Branson. Inc, Chicago. New Tors. Detroit.
BM,,, . , P?!rt'VlllMl?'l'5l I III I ll II II I
Entered at the Potto ffiet at Salem, Oregon, at Second-Class
Matter Published every morning except Monday. Business
ffice, SIS S. Commercial Street.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
Matt Subscription Rates, In Advance. Within Oregon: Dally and
Sunday. 1 Ma CO cents; S Mo $1.25: Mo. $2.25; 1 year $4.00.
Elsewhere 50 cents per Ha, or $5.00 for 1 year In advance.
By City Carrier: 45 cents a month; $5.66 a year In advance. Per
' Copy 1 cents. On trains and News Stands i cents.
True Farm Relief
SPAIN, the papers say, is preparing to expand its acreage
of cotton. It is a warm country; perhaps it can grow a
great deal of cotton, enough to supply its own needs with
some for export. Take this in conjunction with America's
program of enforced curtailment of cotton production and
what may be the outcome? The United States may lose its
great export market for cotton. How can a country any more
than an individual grow wealthy by losing its markets, by
dropping its customers? For some other country will step in
and get the business. This was demonstrated when Cuba cur
tailed her sugar production, and Java got the business;
: when Britain reduced rubber production in the far east ; and
the Dutch East Indies picked up the business; when Brazil
-adopted a valorization plan for coffee, and Colombia and
Central America answered by increasing production.
There is one formula for farm relief which has not been
tried : that is the expansion of our export markets. How may
.we expand our export markets? By increasing our purchases
abroad. This may not be done simply by slashing the tariff,
although that is an essential ; but through the efforts at rec
iprocity such as Pres. Roosevelt and Secretary Hull are pro
posing. ' But, it is replied, the increase of imports will put our
own manufacturers out of business. Not, if the matter is
handled intelligently. For the increased domestic demand
would be vastly greater than the amount of the imports. We
wish to quote in this connection from the statement of Dr.
Benjamin M. Anderson, jr., economist of Chase National
bank, to the commission of inquiry on our national policy in
international economic relations.
"Manufacturing activity is low. while agricultural produc
tion and raw material production, apart from mining, goes on on
a large scale. The low prices received by farmers and producers
of raw materials do not, however, enable them to buy even the
relatively scant output of the factories at prevailing prices in
adequate volume, and are far from being enough to enable them
to consume the output of which the factories are capable. Equi
librium could be quickly restored by a restoration of the foreign
market for our excess farm products, our excess raw materials,
giving the farmers and other producers of raw materials good
prices once more which would enable them to buy vastly greater
quantities of manufactured goods which, in turn, would permit
a great expansion of manufacturing.
"There are many who recognize this but who, none the less,
fear that the imports of manufactured goods which are needed to
make possible the exports of agricultural products would force
apon the factories themselves a painful readjustment. There are
many men who, fearing this, none the less propose to go on with
the restoration of the export trade for agriculture by the accept
ance of imports of manufactures, feeling that it is a matter of
Justice to farmers to do it, and feeling that in the long run it will
be good for the country, but who still fear that what is gained for
the farmers will, for a time at least, be taken away from the
manufacturers.
"I do not share these fears. I believe that both farmers and
manufacturers would gain enormously by the immense expansion
of total production in the United States, by the immense growth
in employment and the immense increase in the utilization of
plant and equipment in manufacturing which the restoration of
equilibrium would Involve.
- "This does not mean that all trade barriers should be swept
away. We should not go so far in our tariff reduction as to swing
the pendulum to an opposite extreme, in which American manu
facturing might be the overdone thing and agriculture be set to
expanding once more. But we should swing the pendulum from
the extreme left adequately and vigorously to dead center, so
that we are receiving sufficient volume of widely diversified
manufacturers to make a really adequate foreign market for the
10 of our cotton, 40 of our lard and the numerous other
high percentages of agricultural and other export commodities
which we need to get out. Such a reduction would still leave us
the protective tariff. What is called for Is not free trade but
moderate protection."
Americans and Books
WRITING in the New Republic Malcolm Cowley is en
deavoring to stimulate public interest in reading of
books, with particular reference to neglected books, those
off the list of the "six best sellers" and not included in offer
ings of "book-of-the-month club" or .the "literary guild".
Among recent publications Mr. Cowley lists several which
merit more general reading than they have received ; among
them: "Miss Lonely Hearts" by Nathaniel West; "Collected
Poems" by Hart Crane ; and Katherine Anne Porter's "Flow
erini? Judas". We must confess ourselves to not having heard
of them.
Americans are too much given to rushing to do much
book-reading. True, statistics of library withdrawals offer
amazing totals; but when the totals are divided among the
number of literates the per capita "consumption" is small.
Americans are not the book-buyers that other people are.
London papers for example publish many pages of book
news accompanied by large display advertisements of book
sellers and publishers. Here few books are advertised in
daily papers. Magazines, a few of the more select, run book
notices and ads ; but book sales are small in proportion to the
. literacy of the population and the intellectual level of the
people under our system of free schools.
Our people do their reading more in capsules. They read
the newspapers. Magazines have a big circulation. With other
appeals of motoring, movies, bridge, sports, we simply do
not take time to enjoy the treasures of literature, past or
present. Occasionally there is a work which will receive in
stant acclaim and prove a "best seller"; for in reading as in
voting, our people are swayed by the mass mind, and word of
a popular book starts a traffic jam in its direction, while
others, perhaps more worthy, are neglected because they fail
ed to get just the right cliche when first brought out.
Tastes change of course ; and under the system of great
er leisure perhaps the reading of books may come into its
own in this country. And there is no doubt, from the fig
ures given by the libraries, of the increased demand for
books for reading during the years of business stalemate.
Some low bids were submitted tor carrying: airmail yesterday.
Bat they ought to be lower than 1930 for aviation has made tremend
ous -strides since then and costs are very much lower. Under the old
lav nd contracts there was provision for readjustment of price. A
numfcer of companies are taking to court Farley's cancellation order.
This will give the postmaster general a chance to prove his stuff,
if ie can.
Washington will remember Mrs. William H. Taft as long as her
husband who was a one-term president, Mrs, Taft is the one who had
the-Japinese cherry trees set out along the tidal basin In Washington.
They have been blooming in recent days. Last Sunday 150,000 people
visited the basin to view the trees. It took 40 traffic cops to direct
.traffit ea the boulevards in the vicinity.
; -- . Wheat prices break when
Wallace talks". Imitating Hoover?
Trying
Health
By Royal S. Copeland, MJ.
ABDOMINAL PAIN is a symptom
too frequently disregarded. Yet. this
is a sign that doctors consider sig
nificant. They always inquire about
it when examln-
i n g a patient
Most of us are
inclined to dis
miss this symp
tom, regarding it
merely as the re
sult of gas or
some trifling di
gestive disturb
ance. 'A perfect ly
healthy Individ
ual does not com
plain of abdom
inalpain. It
should be regard
ed as a definite
warning that
Dr. Copeland
something Is wrong. It should never
be disregarded. Negligence may
lead to disaster.
Don't Rely on Home Remedies
Abdominal pain accompanies ap
pendicitis, gall stone colic, kidney
stone, and ulcer of the stomach, aa
welt as inflammation of the gall blad
der, liver, stomach or Intestine. In
most instances, the pain la of a
chronic nature acd appears at more
or less regular Intervals. At first. It
may appear as something lnsig-nifi-cant
But when it Is neglected. Its
true meaning will be made clear but
often only after serious damage has
been done.
I want to warn you against neglect
of abdominal pain. Thousands of
lives are lost every year because of
carelessness In determining Its real
cause. Too often the sufferer resorts
to home remedies, or is advised by a
well meaning friend that what be
needs Is a good doe of castor oil or
calomel.
In their place these may be excel
lent remedies. But they should never
be used for the cure of abdominal
pain unless prescribed by a physi
cian. No doubt you will be surprised
to learn that many fatalities result
from the use of castor oil when taken
for the relief of abdominal pain
caused by acute appendicitis. It is
positively dangerous to take a strong
cathartic when the appendix or in
testine Is inflamed. This unwise pro
cedure aggravates the trouble and
may even lead to a rapture of the
appendix.
Heed Nature's Warning
In what I have said, 1 do not mean
to imply, of course, that In every
instance abdominal pain ts a sign of
some serious disturbance. But It is
nature's way of warning you that
something la wrong. Its presence
should send you to your physician to
determine the cause.
It majf be due to nothing worse
than a dietary indiscretion, or im
proper eating, habits. Faulty bowel
elimination or some other equally
simple disorder may cause It but in
that case the trouble Is quickly rem
edied. Do not trust to luck or blindly re
sort to treatment. The cause can
only be determined by a complete
physical examination. It may be
necessary to resort to special testa
and the X-ray. You will be well re
paid for this trouble and expense and
be assured of the true state of your
health. To neglect this precaution
may be a grave oversight.
Answers to Health Queries
Mrs. H. M. Q. What do you ad
vise for sugar diabetes?
A. You should be under the care
of your doctor who will outline spe
cific treatment and diet.
f Copyright, I33i. K. F. 8., Incf
Spanking Worth
$2500, Verdict
TOPEKA. April 19.-;P)-Mlss
Georgia Hill, Sllvu? III., was
awarded $2500 by a federal court
jury here Thursday for injuries
which she contended resulted
from a spanking administered by
10 feminine school mates when
she was a student in the Good
land. Kaa.,-high school.
to Get at the Bottom
Bits for Breakfast
By R. J. HENDRICKS
Many letters come to
desk of the Bits man:
Many, and a constantly increas
ing number, of letters come to the
desk of the Bits man. An attempt
is made to answer most of them,
in one way or another. Three sam
ples are cited in what follows:
m . S
Lucy E. Doughty of Bay City,
Oregon, R. F. D. 1, wrote to the
secretary of Willamette univer
sity, and her letter was relayed
to this desk. It reads in Dart:
"We are planning here to have
a little anniversary meeting in
our church. Our first minister was
named John Howard. He came in
1866 and remained three years. I
wrote the editor of the Pacific
Christian Advocate for a sketch of
the life of this man, but nothing
was known there, so I could get
nothing but remembrances from
one of his surviving converts.
However, today I learned bv
chance that there was a John
Howard in the party that came
with Hall J. Kelley to Oregon, and
also that a man of the same name
was one of the Americans at the
Champoeg 'wolf meetine.' Can
you inform me if these three John
Howards are one and the same
man?
"Our minister has written in
the old record book that he was
'taken into the conference' dur
ing his pastorate here, so he could
not have been sent as a mission
ary from the east, h lit ha TTllirht
have been converted here, and en
tered upon the life of a Methodist
minister in the wilderness."
s
In part, the answer tn thia ntms.
tion follows:
"The John Howard with th
Hall J. Kelley Ewin Younr
Webley Hauxhurst nartv rnnM
not have been the John Howard of
whom you are inquiring. But he
was the John Howard who was at
the Champoeg meeting of May 2,
1843, and his name is (properly)
on the monument at Champoeg
state park. The official record of
that meeting has this paragraph:
mr. jonn nowara was chosen as
major.' It was an empty honor, as
no military organixation was pro
vided for. There is no record that
John Howard was at the 'wolf
meeting,' whlchwas at the Jospnh
Gervais house, the first Monday
iu marca, lais. no one has made
any further record of that John
Howard. There was no John How-
i . . . ..
aru among ine early missionaries.
uui mere was a Rev. John
Howard in the 1846 covered wa
gon immigration and he is evi-
aentiy the man you have in mind.
The Pacific Christian Advocate
printed the two following para-
grapns :
" 'Mrs. Cynthia Howard was
born in Kentucky Oct. 9, 1810, re
moved early in life to Illinois, and
was married In 1828 to R. R.
Howard, and with him crossed the
plains and settled in Oregon City,
where she resided the remainder
of her life. She was the mother of
10 children, two of whom were
Methodist ministers. She died
Aug. 20. 1877.'
" 'Rev. John Howard, son of
K. K. and Cynthia Howard, mar
ried Miss Jane E. Wingfield.
daughter of J. T. Wingfield, in
November, 1854. She was born in
Missouri July 19, 1840, and died
Jan. l, 1876, leaving four chil
dren.' "
s
The Bits man has a faint recol
lection of traditions concerning a
Rev. John Howard preaching in
the sixties in Polk and Yamhill
counties. The Bits man's mother
was Mary Jane Sherwood, pioneer
of those counties,' and she had a
sister named Cynthia Sherwood,
who married a Harvey. It is pos
sible that she was named for Cyn-'
thia Howard, mother of Rev. John
Howard. But this is only tradi
tional, and faintly so. Perhaps.
of It
reve ft ftmiiw ipssfcr Gsw 'm
some reader can give to the Bits
man the additional facts Mrs.
Doughty is seeking, to be relayed
to ner.
s s
Another letter, lust received
comes from a man in Illinois who
nas been readmg what the Bits
man hag written lately about our
nax inausiry. He wants more par
ticulars. Especially, he wants to
know if there is an oneninc for a
good, honest organizer who may
am in pushing our flax and linen
industries forward ranldlv.
A third letter, only a few dam
old, wants from the Bits man
some articles on early Oregon his
tory.
The answers:
There is opportunity for an or
ganlzer of our flax and linen in
austnes. But he would need ona
lifications like these: He would
have to be able to convince' our
people of his knowledge, his abil
ity and his honesty, and he would
have to be a wizard. No ordinary
stranger could come up to these
specifications. He would have to
be extraordinary.
There is a letter dated April 4
on the Bits man's desk from our
Congressman James W. Mott. in
which he expresses the belief that
the earmarked money for our flax
and linen industries will be avail
able when the next P. W. A. ap
propriation is made, which will
be soon. News of the same kind
from Vancouver, Wash., and Ore
gon City, Oregon, has been filter
ing through, in press dispatches.
S S V
If this earmarked money is
made available, and through the
P. W. A., projects will no doubt
be invited and, the writer an
ticipates, they will have to hold
water.
As has been said and repeated
in this column, there will not be
flax seed available for much more
than 10,000 extra acres of flax in
1935, and this would not supply
more than two extra plants as
large as the one at the Oregon
state prison; and smaller ones
would not be sound. By 1936, seed
to produce flax to supply five of
six more such plants might be
available. And plants should be
owned and operated cooperatively,
by the growers.
Thus, a sound set-up, with the
earmarked federal funds, could
not be completed before two
years; not, in fact, fully operative
before the summer of 1937. The
explanation is too long for this ar
ticle. It has been repeatedly made
in this column.
S S
As to the third letter: The Bits
man cannot take the time for such
special articles. This column is
constantly filled with them has
been for five years. The Bits man
has only a 24 hour day, and one
life to live. Every hour is crowd
ed, and will be. The inquirer, or
any other person, is welcome to
use anything printed in this col
umn. Any question on a specific point
of history wiU be answered in thia
column, if of sufficient general in
terest to justify the space.
Let this be repeated: Salem is
certain to become the central
point of the greatest flax rrowinr
and linen manufacturing district
in the world, in good time. This
might come about in a very short
time, under proper federal back
ing, and not a cent of principal or
interest be lost, nor its use need
ed for a great number of years.
The good and sufficient rea
sons: There is not another spot on
the globe surrounded by anything
like SOO.OOO acres of available
fiber flax land, capable of produc
ing the best that can be grown,
all within trucking distance and
almost within eyeshot of the fac
tories. And there is not a single
-othexdistriet on earth that has
"The Lone
CHAPTER XXVII
"AD very bright and sarcastic,"
Isqnith agreed. "Bat why, may one
ask, if your son wanted to speak
to you, why did he stop at the door
oat there why, when he knew ns
ail, didnt he walk right in to see
you?"
"Imagine, if yon ean, that Mau
rice might possibly have had some
thing private to say to me."
"I'm imagining it without a
struggle."
"He was pressed for time as it
happened, and probably thought te
avoid being delayed by farewells
and explanations."
-Farewells'?" Tess Boyce with
this echo made her voice heard for
the first tim9 since the ring had
turned up missing; and something
throaty in its timber, a hnskiness of
newly excited emoiiea, struck Lan
yard s ear as curious. "What d you
mean, farewells'? Where's he go
ing, for a swua or something"
"My son, madame, decided at the
last minute to anticipate our arrival
in America
-How anticipate it?"
Listen."
A lifted hand enjoined attention ;
and upon the hush that answered ft,
an instant of speechless suspense
stressed by the muffled rumor of en
gines choked down to half -speed or
less, and by a complete cessation of
the slough of water down the side,
the drone of an airplane fell like
long-drawn thunder.
"The mail-plane!" Tesa Boyce
started to her feet. "You mean he's
flying? What came over him all of a
sudden?"
"Does it matter, madame?"
"Why I suppose it doesn't" She
seemed to rrasp for the first time
that her excitement might give rise
to wonder. I was surprised, that s
all: it seemed so sudden
"I don't imagine Maurice would
mind my telling you what yon must
surmise for yourself as soon as you
know the name of the other air-passenger."
Lanyard kept close though
covert watch for an inkling of the
woman's ill-dissembled emotion, but
found it quite beyond his fathoming.
What the devil, the man mused. It
couldnt be that she was distressed
by any sentimental feeling. What
then in the name of reason?
"Mademoiselle Crosier, so Maurice
told me, wheedled her mother into
consenting to the adventure; and he
was enterprising enough to decide,
on the spar of the moment, to go
with her.
The thunder rolled till it became
sustained thick bellow, struck
new, less impatient note, and went
into a swift dwindle as a cheer from
the decks attested a successful take
off.
"Well anyway," Isquith observed
with a dry chuckle, "there. Tour
Highness or my guess is a bad
miss there troes your ruby."
But the Rajah made no articulate
answer. Exasperation had him by
the throat and was visibly shaking
him. He stuttered and thrashed the
air in an attempt to express the un
speakable. And before he could re
find his tongue, one of his suite was
announcing:
"The Captain Sahib."
The tedious time that Lanyard
subsequently spent in limbo was re
lieved by nothing except the atten
tions of a taciturn steward till the
Navarre had made halt at Quaran
tine and gathered way for the short
last lap to her dock. Then, n earing
one end of his new quarters, whose
length he had taken to prowling for
want of a better way to work off
the ferment of pent temper, the man
heard a small noise behind him and
came smartly about, to discover
SPITTLE BUG NOT
II IT MI VIEW
SILVERTON HILLS, April Z0.
Silverton Hills strawberry
growers, particularly in the Mt.
View district are reporting that
as yet the spittle bug is not as
numerous as it was a year ago.
Growers have been dusting for the
control of spittle bug tor some
time.
Growers also report that there
was seemingly no damage from
the frost when the berries were
in bloom and that promises are
for a very good berry crop. Prac
tically all the berry growers of
this region market under the as
sociation formed here two years
ago.
Farmers throughout this dis
trict are taking advantage of the
sunny weather to get their sum
mer fallowing done and to pre
pare their corn ground. Each year
more silos have been built In this
community until now a large per
centage of the farmers have silos
and corn has become one of the
important crops of the Silverton
Hills district.
Sliding Lumber
Rates Approved
TACOMA. April 19. --Lumbermen
and loggers of the Doug
lar fir region of Washington and
Oregon, meeting here Thursday,
in a general industry session, ap
proved the recommendations of a
West Coast lumber code commit
tee for the application of price
differentials for the- benefit of
small mills cutting sappy timber
or mills operating with inefficient
equipment or sales organization;
also approved the rules for for
est practice in the west coast di
vision which will be submitted to
the national code authority.
Raymond Culver
Visits Campus Y.
Raymond B. Culver of McMinn
ville. executive secretary for the
student division of the Y. M. C. A.
in the northwest visited Willam
ette university Thursday, confer
ALL the natural qualities and ad
vantages for growing, processing,
spinning, weaving and making in
to specialties the "yarn;" the spun
fiber. And. besides all this, the
same things apply to hemp, the
fibers of which are. supplemental
to flax fiber in turning out numer
out articles of commerce. In no
other section on earth are these
duplicate advantages found. . . .
Wolfs Son" wvnce
that the door had been softly opened
and an Bnaanoaneed caller admit
ted: Crane, whom Lanyard had not
seen since the American detective s
friendly warning of inimical influ
ences, stood observing- him quuxi
eaU . .. .
"Well, you're eigni "J"
V tA m the Lone Wolf in the
hoosegow! It took rne quite a while
to dope ont what had become of yon.
but once I knew, I just had to shill
in for a stare at the exmwu 1 vc
got to hand it to friend Plon: he
aint no ordinary dkk. Far be it
from him to advertise he'd just
palled the showiest pinch -of the sea
son ; for all that ns passengers knew
about it, yon might simply have
done a nose-dive into the wake.
"But Madame Boyce knew ana
the Rajah, and Isqnith 1"
neneve ii or now uh w.
never let out a peep. I had to do a
i
'Well, you're a sight I never looked to see he Lone Wolf In the
hoosegow I" exclaimed Crane.
good piece of snoopin' before I got
the low-down."
"Your success there doesnT sur
prise me so much as that you con
trived by any means to persuade
Plon to let you visit me.
"Yeah? I'd be a eay dick.
wouldn't I, if I told you all my girl
ish secrets? I wangled it and that's
all you re eoin to know about it
just at present Whaf s more to the
point is to find out how you got-l
framed luce this, and what I can do
to spring you before this good ship
sails back with you to that dear
France."
"You are a good fellow, my
friend," Lanyard protested, as
Crane made himself at home in a
chair: "but I am afraid there is
nothing. . . . Let me tell you.
He succinctly related the tale of
his afternoon at cards and its up
shot:
"Plon, I must confess, surprised
me by showing some disposition to
give me a chance. It was the Cap
tain who wouldn't listen to reason:
a mean creature, that one, all in a
fever to truckle to His Honey-col
ored Highness. Not that our good
Plon was noticeably downcast by
the ultimatum that brought me to
this pass.
ring with Y. M. C. A. officers.
Culver does part time teaching at
Lintield and devotes the remain
der of his time to student Y. M.
C. A. work. He went from here
to Eugene to visit the university.
JTEFFKRSOX DELEGATES
JEFFERSON, April 20. At the
business meeting of the Evangeli
cal Christian Endeavor held re
cently at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Garl Kihs, delegates ap
pointed to attend the state con
vention at Salem were Beulah
Wilson, Geraldine Jones and Ger
aldine Davis. Quite a number are
expecting to attend the sessions.
BOY TO ROBERT FRANKS
SILVERTON, April 20. A boy
was born to Mr. and Mrs. Rob
ert Frank at the Silverton hos
pital Thursday afternoon. This is
the first child and Mrs. Frank
was. before her marriage. Miss
'Irene Morley, well known in the
Willamette valley as a violinist.
The boy has been named Robert
Frank, Jr. He weighed nine
pounds, five ounces.
CWA Picket
r
saa
mm
SAf 1
Bearing placard! demanding rein
statement former CWA worker
are pictured aa they formed a picket
line in front of CWA headquarters,
New York. Similar scenes are re-
enacted in many localities, but not
all are aa orderly aa thia. CWA
paraders noted in Minneapolis.
"No! No kiddin'? Still and aH. I
shouldn't wonder if you're right, at
that: tf the Cap's! that's the pole
cat Mua to'smr h XiS1F
yon any break at nil? Wouldn't
even frisk the others for the ruby?
Looks like there most be something
besides plain enssednesa behind the
way he'i ectin'."
"I assure you he took Isauith
kind conjecture aa if it might have
been inspiration from on high, took
it for granted that nobody else could
possibly have made away with the
ruby and I had passed it on to Man
rice even went so far as to prom
ise he would arrange by wireless to
have Maurice searched to the skin
upon landing. And there is another
matter that perplexes me beyond
measure."
"What?"
Lanyard. handed the detective a
sheet of creased paper.
"A radio from my son announc
ing his safe arrival. Observe, if you
please, that it was written in high
spirits : the boy was delighted with
his adventure and enchanted with
America it conveys not a hint of
any unpleasantness encountered on
landing."
"I dont see any reason why it
should have. Chances are he took
his reception as pretty much what
any pesky foreigner had to expect
of our customs officials. And seein'
as he didn't have any rubies on him.
the experience couldnt have turned
out unpleasantly."
"It depends. I dare say. on what
the Captain actually wirelessed in
comparison with what he promised.
The impression he plainly gave was
that he meant to have Maurice held
under arrest even if the ruby were
not found on him, pending our ar
rival." "Maybe he had an attack of second-thought.
You know how these
frogs are when they're all excited
the; will promise most anything, but
they generally calm down and think
things over before they let them
selves in for anything that might
have serious consequences.
(To Be Continued)
SILVERTON, April 20. New
entertainment committee mem
bers appointed by Miss Billie
Johnson, president of the Ameri
can Legion Auxiliary, to serve
for three months are Mrs. Lewis
Hall, Mrs. C. E. Higinbotham,
Mrs. T. P. Heldeostrom and Mrs.
Carl Haugen.
May 2, the auxiliary members
will meet in the evening at the
armory and complete the prepar
ation of popples for the sale the
latter nalt of May.
MrsrHeldehstrom was appoint
ed by the president as chairman
of a committee to report at the
next regular meeting on the cost
of 10 dozen pieces of silverware.
The auxiliary lost its entire stock
of silverware some time ago by
theft
At the May 7 session, the group
will sponsor a whit elephant
sale with each member bringing
a bundle.
Drunken Driving
Brings $100 Fine
And 30 Days Jail
Antone Rasmussen w sen.
tenced to 30 days in Jail and.
fined 3100 for drunken driving
when Judge Harden nasseri ann.
tence Thursday. The case was
tried Wednesday before a Jury,
and the sentence levied follows
recommendation or the Jurors.
Custer Ross, attornev fnr nm.
mussen. appealed the case.
Rasmussen was arrested at the
side of his car, which had gone
into me aiicn while he was driv
ina from a beer nnin
town to Woodburn, according to
wDuiuuny ai me xnai.
Jumps to Avoid
Falling Hay, is
. Killed by Truck
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., April
J0-ff)-Jessie Han, 30, was run
over and killed last night by a
truck from which she Jumped to
avoid being crushed by Its shift
ing cargo.
She was riding between the
truck's cab and a load of baled
hay. The driver alowed down sud
denly, causing the bales to lurch
forward. She leaped free from the
hay but fell in the pathway of the
Wheels and he? head, was crushed
HI PLANS
FOB POPPY SHIES
WBmmmMMmmnE
iiiw'f