PAGE FOUR "No Favor Sways Vs; No Fear Shall Awe" From Km StotesmanrMareh' 28;j&51 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Cka&les A. Spraguk - ' Editor-Manager .Sheldon F. Sackett Managing Editor Member of the Th Associated Pis t exclusively entitled to tt- use tor Jub'lc tton of alt news dispatchea credited t it or not otherwise credited la this paper. ADVERTISING Portland ReDresentative "Gordon B Bell, Kev-urliy Eastern Advertising Bryant. Griffith Brunsni. Iric, cliicatio. Boston. Atlanta Entered at the I'ostoffiee at Salenu Oregon, a Second-Clas Matter. Published every wormng except Monday. Busmen office, St5 S. Commercial Street. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Unll Subscription liatea. In Advance. VVlM.ln rfon.: .liy, ,,? Bunday. 1 Ma.6 cents; M. JI25; Mo. 2.Z.,; 1 ear J t oo. psewlKSie 50 cents per Mo. or JO 00 tor year la advance. liy City Carrier: 43 tents a month: $...00 a year In advance, tcr Coi-y 2 cents. On ir.iltu ami News Stands i cei'is. The Strike and President Roosevelt FROM1 the Oregonian: "General strike or no general strike. Portland's condition is intolerable. So Is the condition of the whole Pacific coast. The authority that tan cure the situation quickly the only power that can do it v.ith certainty is the president of the United States. It is his move." tv,,. nraffAiiion nnwi s Int of sniveling over the strike. It has been passing, the buck to Pres. Roosevelt from the first What authority does the president have to act in Port land? Is he some deity who when he opens his mouth can command the naughty strikers to put down their clubs? Does the Oregonian want him to send in federal troops ; and if so on what grounds? The mails are not being interfered with; the governor has not asked for intervention of the federal army. Mavor Carson has made an attempt to let work be re "8umed; but the city council crumpled up when some one waved a bloody shirt. The town bankers down there are the biggest cowards of the lot, running to Gov. Meier and wring ing their hands and imploring him NOT to bring in troops because some one might let off a firecracker in front of their marble banking houses. " Portland is getting the kind of government she has been voting for all these years. It's tough on the rest of the north west, and maybe the embattled farmers will have to go down and unlock the harbor so their wheat can be shipped. Now the governor is taking a hand to sustain public peace. When his power i3 exhausted (which it will not be if exercised) it will be timely to appeal to .the president. General Johnson who is on the job in San Francisco says that the interference with interstate commerce and the feed ing of the people make the strike a federal matter. The gen eral is speaking in an "individual" capacity again, as he did at Waterloo; for he is without official standing in the con troversy, merely an unofficial observer. However, suppose we accept the thesis that the strike is a federal matter which puts the question up to Pres. Roosevelt. That is precisely the dilemma which the president has been in in the previous major strikes, and which he has resolved by compromise. The question is, in the minds of labor : will the federal . government enforce the guarantees of section 7-a of NIRA? Labor interprets this as a pledge of the "closed shop" al though it is impossible to read that in the text of the stat ute. Since NRA was hailed as a charter of liberty for organ ized labor, and since the prime demand of organized labor is the closed shop, the question that has arisen" in all the strikes is recognition of the union and the closed shop. The public misses the crux of the matter when it thinks this strike is just an isolated affair, one which may be "mediated" by just splitting the difference between the contestants. In the present case the recovery act is not pertinent because no code has been formed for shipping and because the employers have agreed to recognize the union for purposes of collective bargaining. The moot point, control of the hiring hall, is how ever the question of the closed shop. The rooting of strikes in new deal legislation was dis cussed in this column a few days ago. The current issue of The Nation, New York pro-labor weekly, comments on the strike outbreaks under the title, "Can labor enforce Section 7-a?", saying: "All of these conflicts, of course, are rooted in the broken promises of the NRA. While the President talks peace and amity to the Haitians, the Colombians, and the world at large, the ra dio of the S. S. Houston is sputtering news of war all over the industrial map of America. Section 7-a was in effect a promissory note given to labor to insure Its support of the NRA and of the Administration. Industry also got its promissory note, in the form of a suspension of the anti-trust laws and the. incorporation of price-fixing provisions in the codes. Since big business, organ ised in trade associations, controlled the code authorities, in dustry was able to collect on this promissory note of the Admin istration, and continues to collect, despite the protests of the Darrow Board in, behalf of small business and the consumer. Labor, lacking equally powerful organization, has been far less successful in collecting its promissory note. The government has repeatedly defaulted on the clear obligation written into Section 7-a in the Weirton case; in the automobile settlement: last and most miserably in the case of the Harriman Mills, which cheerfully defied the screams of General Johnson's moulting Blue Eagle. "Labor's revolt is not revolution, and cannot be, in the ab sence of an effectively organized revolutionary movement, which has not yet appeared in this country. But clearly, the rapid spread of the strike wave, characterized by increasing violence and increasing willingness on the part of hitherto conservative labor elements to invoke the dangerous weapon of the general strike, means that the conflict of forces is developing. Labor Is not going to take the defaults of the New Deal lying down; it Is not going to be pot off with new promises that merely take the place of other promises already broken. If the President will not or cannot enforce Section 7-a, perhaps labor can and will. Three weeks from now Mr. Roosevelt will be back in tie White House. It will be interesting to watch the reaction of the Pres ident's celebrated political sensitivity to the new turn of events. Will he 'crack down?' And on whom?" Labor joins the Oregonian, but from a different angle, in putting the issue up to Mr. Roosevelt. Labor demands a make-good on new deal promises of union recognition and new deal implication of a closed shop. The longshore strike on the coast does not technically come under NRA, but act ually it comes tinder new deal assurances. It is a mistake to impute all the strikes to communist agitation. In Portland the leaders are not communists, but labor leaders who know their power and are using it. Rad icals like Bridges forced the general strike and hope it is the initial push to revolution ; but unionists are liquidating the general strike as discreetly as they can. So, in quite a different sense than the Oregonian sug gests, the issue, not of this strike alone, but of all strikes, goes up to the president. Though he is fishing in mid-Pacific waters, the naval radio lays the squalling brat right on his mess table. The country will watch, as The Nation says, to see if the president "cracks down" and on whom. Why scold at the Portland gypsy woman who "blessed" an As toria man's $550 by taking it away with her? She was merely doing her part to redistribute the wealth of the country; and that without running for office. Between gypsies. Wall street and the tax gath erer wealth gets circulated as fast as a patent heating stove circu lates hot air. : Pres. Roosevelt radios Ma Perkins that he thinks common sense will prevail in the dock strikes. That's Just what the country has shown least of for tea weeks. Corvallls has a riding academy and it is going to put on a sum mer horse show. Some swank town. Associated Press Building. Portland. Ore. Representatives New York. Detroit. DEATH SONG CHAPTER XX Then I thought about Lores. Be had tried to fool Mark with a pal pably false alibi, and then had of fered a my lame explanation of tt But he had photographed Lake side Cottage and with It the mur derer, about to enter Veil's room to kill him: obviouslv if he war the murderer, he could not take af pnotograpb of himself. Then why had he tried to fabricate an alibi? i "That's easy," Mark said prompt-! ty when I propounded that ques tion the next morning. "When Loren talked to me in the morning, he didnt know he had an alibi in the form of a photograph. And did you notice, be didnt offer an explanation of the lie he told me until after I bad pointed oat the gardener in che picture?" We were on Mark's porch when this conversation took place. He had been bathed that morning and his face was rosy. He looked hap pier, more himself, than he had in months. On other porches along the end of the hospital building we could see other patients enjoy ing the morning sun. which was already hot. I thought over this explanation for a moment and then asked tri umphantly. "But if he isn't the murderer, why did he want an alibi?" "Aye. there's the rub. That's what I'M like to know. Of coarse, he may merely have been afraid that he'd be involved, since he was so near the cottage, and alone." I sighed. Every new discovery seemed to beget a new possibility and further complicate the case. I told Mark my own conclusions about John Calvert and he grinned approvingly. "Excellent deduction! Between the two of as, we ought to give birth to enough theories to drive Finn out of his mind. Have you given any thought to our late friend. Vail?" "Why, no." T said. The question itartled me, for it made me realize how quickly Vail's personality had passed from my mind. "I'd forgot ten all about him aa a man. 1 mean." "So has everyone else but roe," said Mark, "and that's where every one else is making a mistake. After all, a murdered person cant be ignored. He really is of some im portance in the case. He must have done something to someone to make him a candidate for homicidal at tentions." "That's true." "I've been thinking of Vail a lot, and I'm not at all satisfied with the general estimate of him. Vail's our lead I Vail's got to be some thing more than a rubber-stamp weakling who couldn't take it when his wife died. If that's all he was, why should anyone want to kill him?" He pounded the bed in his vehemence and then winced with pain as he jarred his knees. "What's your analysis of him?" I asked. "I havent finished it yet," Mark answered. "John Calvert says they've received a message from his ister. She' coming here, and when I've talk with her, maybe lU have a dearer picture of him." Mark seized a sheet of writing paper from his table, found a pen cil and said: "I want a plan of the set of this melodrama. Give me a hand, will you? How is Lakeside Cottage laid out?" Together, after fifteen minutes, we evolved a ground plan of the cottage, with the name of each oc cupant printed neatly by Mark in his room. With Vail's room he took more pains, asking me to show him the location of the bed and the windows and doors. I pointed them out and he indicated them, remark ing as he sketched in the private entrance. "One practical door. And there's our set. He leaned back, held his head on one side and contemplated his draw ing with satisfaction. Then he went to work on another, a map of the entire sanatorium. I showed him the approximate location of the cot tages and other buildings, most of which he had seen only once, on the day he was admitted, and helped him draw in the lake and the woods He was just finishing it when the sheriff arrived. The sheriff was Ex-Sheriff Dressed in, Prison Here Gordon L. Schemerhorn, former sheriff of Jackson county, yester day was dressed into the state penitentiary to begin a three year term imposed in connection with the ballot theft cases in that county more than a year ago. His job had not yet been assigned to him. The former county official walked into the penitentiary un accompanied. He came to Salem by bus and went immediately to the penitentiary to report to War den James Lewis. Many times previously he had presented the warden with commitment papers for other prisoners. His commit ment papers were mailed. In sentencing the former sher iff, who failed to have his convic tion reversed by the state supreme court. Judge G. F.'Skipworth of Eugene recommended he be par doned after six months. Former County Judge Earl Fehl is already serving a term In connection with the same case, which was climax ed by the shooting of Constable George Prescott by L. A. Banks, newspaper e dl tor of Medford. Banks is serving a life term. Tonite Zad Saturday BOO SKATS 1 TONIGHT kDC r""? Si The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, smoking a long cigar and ha looked exceedingly complacent. "I understand yon saw two gar denera worlds outside on the lawn daring rest period on Thursday," ha said to Mark, That's right, sheriff. I ean tes tify that they were there the entire hoar and a half." "Could row Identify them, Mr. ttuiyerr "I believe I could." The sheriff crossed the room and threw open the door with the air ox a conjuror. "Bring them in." he said, and two nervous overalled gardeners catered, followed by deputy. Mark studied their faces for a minute. Then he nodded and aid, "They're the men I saw, I ean vouch for them." "All right, yon ean go," Finn said and they shambled oat word lessly behind Finn's man. The sheriff robbed hit hands. "That just about washes up this ease, Mr. Httryer. Barker's the man, all right. Only a few loose ends to tie op now. The coroner's inquest's set for Tuesday and the D. A.'s all ready to bring in an indictment." "One of the loose ends," said Mark, Is getting a confession from Joe. It wont oe easy to convict him without one." "Pll get that an right," Finn said. He clenched his big right fist and stared grimly at his knuckles. "He's going to break soon, HeU come through." "By the way " said Mark, "have yon seen Dr. Calvert this morning?" At the mention of the physician's name Finn's body stiffened. "No," he said shortly. "He was looking for yoa, sheriff. He has something to tell you." "He has?" "Yes. You know the overalls the pair the murderer wore? Wen. they arent Joe Barker's. They belong to one of the other garden ers, a fellow named Sam Archer." "They do?" Finn 'exclaimed. "How do yoa know?" "1 suggested that Dr. Calvert check up with the laundry on the laundry mark." Mark explained. Finn's face turned scarlet "Say, who's the sheriff, anyway?" he de manded. "Who gave yoa leave to huts into thia?" Mark smiled gently, "1 thought I was being helpful," he said. "I'm sorry to knock down your theory, sheriff." The veins In Finn's neck swelled. He said. "Don't worry, you ain't done that I Lf the overalls don't belong to Barker, he stole 'em, I'll soon find out about that" He strode to the door and flung It open. "Simpson, bring Archer in." "Why didnt you tell me those overalls were yours?" Finn said angrily when Archer stood before him. The tall, lanky gardener swal lowed. His large, brown, heavily veined hands began to tremble. "What overaLs?" he asked. "The overalls we found in the lake." "I didn't know they was mine, sheriff. I swear I didnt." "They got your laundry mark on them, Archer," Finn said. "They must be the old pair I lost, then," the man answered. "Somebody took 'em out cf my locker in the tool shed." "Have all the gardeners got lock ers there?" Finn asked. Archer nodded. "Yes, sir." "Where's Barker's?" "Right aside of mine." Firm cast a triumphant glance at Mark, but he was listening too intently to notice it "When did yon miss 'em?" the sheriff went on. "A month back. Honest sheriff, It never came into my head that they might be the same ones. It was an old pair that I tost, and I never bothered about 'em." Mark sat op so suddenly that one of his pillows fell to the floor. His eyes gleamed with excitement "Is the tool shed kept locked?" be asked. Archer shifted his anxious eyes. "Why. do sir." "One more question, Aicher," Mark said. He was very earnest almost desperately so. "Think care fully." he said. "1 want yoa to tell the sheriff as nearly as yoa can P 111 H SANTALY A full registration for the first week of camp, an excellent staff of assistants and a carefully worked out program contribute to expectations that the annual girls' camp at Camp Santaly, under aus pices of the Y. W. C. A., will be a thorough going success this year. Mrs. Elizabeth Gallaher, direct or of the camp, Agnes Moore, senior swimming instructor, and Miss Wallace, Lausanne hall cook who will do the same duty at Camp Santaly, will leave this aft ernoon for the grounds. The first week of camp opens Saturday, when 35 girls are scheduled to go. This registration is considerably larger than last year. A few more girls can be accommodated for the second and third weeks of camp. GIRLS GOING TODAY! Oregon, Friday Morning, July II By Joan Clayton & Malcolm Logan hen you first missed your ore alla," Thegardener answered promptly. "It was before the Fourth of Jvly. I enow, because 1 was coin to wear a when we set op the fireworks, bat they was gene then, sir." Finn had no more questions to Slr Ri A mwiA .V. J. S oat When they had gone, he d to Mark, "Well, even if they were Aimers, tt donl knock down mi case. Barker rvrald ham tnln them easy enough." -wnat was Joe's motive, sher iff?" Mark asked. "Vail tried to rot him finwl TK had a fight He hated Vail" -Ana oo you remember wnen this quarrel was?" - "Whv. no. not exartlv Firm said. ' "I do," Mark said. "It was three weeks am. Tha nTm 11, apaM stolen more than a month ago. They were stolen nexore Joe bad any conceivable motive for murdering VaiL" The sheriff said nothing. There was nothing he could say. 1 al most felt sorry for him as he stood there. Btarinv t Mark mVin ar!th one casual stroke, had demolished the elaborate circumstantial case he had built op to convict Joe Barker. i m sorry i nad to do it sher iff," Mark said, grinning. "But I know you wouldn't want to burn an Innocent man. Yoa should thank me for it Lf I hadnt done it some smart lawyer would have torn your case to pieces in court and made yon look silly." "If Joe didn't take 'era, who did?" Finn asked weakly. "A very clever murderer. Mr Finn. Someone who masqueraded as a gardener when he went out to murder VaiL Someone who was artful enough to convert a pair of hedge shears into a dagger." Beads of sweat stood out on Finn's forehead. He looked at Mark dumbly, as though for guid ance. When he spoke, all the self assurance had left his voice. "Darn it" he groaned, "how are we ever going to catch anybody as smart as that?" "Maybe if we work togethei we can." Mark said. "Catching the murderer's become my hobby, and I 'to tmt nlont"T7 rt-f mrmv tn anomf for the ride. The question is, will yoa work with me?" Finn did not reply for a minute. Then he strode over to the bed and held out his hand. "Sure I will." he said. Mark took his hand and grinned. "Swell I Now if I were you, I'd go along letting everyone believe you still suspect Joe. Let the mur derer hang himself by over-confidence." "Do you think I ought to arrest him?" "No, I wouldn't do that -ft isn't necessary. Everyone knows Dr. Calvert has interceded for Joe. You might have him tailed, though just to make it seem realistic" "IH do that Mr. Hillyer." Finn said humbly. "I'll appreciate it if yoo let me know as soon as yoo get any ideas." "I'd keep you busy if I did," Mark answered. "I've had a lot of ideas, but I don't want to shoot off my mouth too soon and get myself in trouble. As soon as I have anything good. 111 let you know." "Thanks," the sheriff said. Ht sighed deeply and left us. Mark looked at me and winked. "Well, I guess that makes me a real dick," he said. "Finn's going to play ball with roe now and let me in on everything he finds out" "It looks like a one-sided part nership," I said. "He tells you everything and you tell him noth ing "Look how he jumped at conclu sions In the case of Joe Barker, Bob. If I told him what I've told yoo, he'd have Loren and John both under arrest Finn cant be trusted with my purely intellectual specu lations. Besides, I'm not sure yet that I want to turn over the mur derer when I find him. I've yet to be convinced that killing Vail was anything more than a misde meanor." (To Be Continued) Owrrlittf. 1131. k? Jou CUrtso u4 Mlt! Lo(M DUUtbutW ki Kla i MhirM Sradlcal. lac as the combined study and outing period extends through August 11. This year Mrs. Frank Spears and Mrs. Walter L. Spauldlng will be camp mothers, these positions being innovations. Mrs. Spears will be at camp the first week and Mrs. Spaulding the second week. Their jobs will be assistants to the general director. Transportation for nine more girls is needed, and anyone who will furnish same is urged to call the Y. W. C. A. today. a Today and Saturday WHArS ALL THE , SHOOTIN' FOR? The Old Maestro, the lads ond lassies . . . . tuning . . . loving ...fast 'n furious... in show laden with tongs and romance! plus -COMEDY NEWS Starts Bandar . "DK. MONICA" 1500 nrf Good 2ijC Seais 20, 1934 - ;- --' - ,- i - 1! Bits for Breakfast ;t--B7.K. X- HENDRICKS Men in .Oregon. Indian wars who attained high commands in other wars, and rank in civil life: (Continuing from yesterday:) General Ord retired In 1880, and afterward, by special act of con gress, he was commissioned ma jor general. s s's Early In Oregon history, Ord began to be heard of above the Spanish (California) line. He was still second lieutenant, or first lieutenant, in 1848. for this news paragraph was printed in the Oregon Spectator, Oregon City, Sept 7, 1848: "Lieut. E. O. C. Ord, of the 3rd Artillery, forwarded one six pound brass gun, with 210 strap ped shot, 70 canister shot, 28 spherical shot, and other artillery service, 500 muskets, with their fixtures, and 50,000 ball, with a large amount of ammunition. Note: The invoices were dated June 27 and July 10, respectively. They arrived on the Henry Aug. 9." S S This was after the Whitman massacre, followed by the Cayuse war, and Governor Abernethy of the Oregon provisional govern ment had been calling on U. S. army officers in California for equipment for the Oregon citizen soldiers. The supplies sent by Lieut. Ord came from Monterey, California, military headquarters then. Mrs. Fuller in her "Indian Wars" said, of the same period: "After the danger had passed (af ter the Cayuse war) . . . Major A. J. Hardie, on his return to California, forwarded 100 rifles, 25,000 rifle cartridges, and 200 pounds of rifle powder, with two six-pound iron guns and car riages, and ammunition for same." (This was Major A. J. Hardie, who some eight to 10 years later was in charge of Fort Umpqua, near the present Gardiner. He also fought in the Yakima war. Hardie attained high ranks after that, in his country's wars, and will be .mentioned later in this series.) S W One of Bancroft's writers for his Oregon History, speaking of the supplies sent up from Mon terey, said: "Fortunately, for the peace of the colony (Oregon), these military stores did not ar rive while the American blood was at fever with wrongs real and fancied; but in time to give a feeling of security to that por tion of the inhabitants who re mained when the majority of the able bodied men had rushed off to the gold fields of California the same year." (It will be recalled that the Oregon citizen soldiers who fought the Cayuse war of 1847-8 furnished their own equip ment and supplies, and that soim of the guns and a good deal of the powder went from the store of Thomas Cox, first stdVe in what became Salem; given without money and without price.) S S Not on the Bancroft list was George E. Pickett, early Indian war fighter in the Puget Sound district, afterward one of the greatest of the rebel generals in the Civil war. Geo. E. Pickett, born at Rich mond, Va., Jan. 25, 1825, a cadet from Illinois, graduated from West Point in the 1846 class. U. S. army 2nd lieutenant of 2nd in fantry, his commission was dated March 3, 1847. Was in the Mexi can war; present at the siege f Vera Cruz, and in all battles up to the capture of the City of Mexi co. Transferred to the 7th and then to the 8th infantry. Brevei ted frrst lieutenant for gallantry at Contreras and Churubusco, and captain at Chapultepec. Went to 9 th infantry as captain, March 3, 1855, and his outfit was active in the Indian wars of the terri tory of Washington in 1856. Then he was stationed at Belllngham. In 1859, he was stationed on San Juan Island, where he almost caused a war with England by re fusing British naval forces to land. A dispute that was settled years and years laters by arbitra- M A rroewOvwd Theater r OLLYVVOOIV Today and Saturday Two Big Features 15c l IfYffrl 3 HOT And Second Feature with Jean Parker Robert Young Ted Healey Nat Pendleton ADDED RIN-TIN-TIN JR. in "WOLF DOG" News and Cartoon Comedy Special Saturday - fn 1:30 p.m. to 5 P-m. JLUM tlon, by Kaiser Bill ot Germany, now prisoner at Doom. The Washington legislature gave Cap tain Pickett a vote of thanks for his stand, when he had threaten ed to fire on the British tars at tempting to land on the disputed soiL June 25, 181 Capt Pickett still on the Pacific coast, resigned from the TJ. S. army. He was soon in Virginia, a colonel of state for ces. In February, 1812, he was made a brigadier general in Long street's division of J. E. John ston's army, then called the Poto mac, later the Army of Virginia His brigade, in the retreat before General McClellan in the Penin sular campaign, and in the Seven Days' battles, was Known as the i, i.,.- tj tiuiu ,wtn. ua jckvtt. ii v severely wounded in the shoulder in the baitle of Gaines' Mill. June 27. 1862, and was out of the service until after the firs; Maryland campaign, rfe was then made general of a division of na - tive Virginians. At the battle of Fredericksburg, he held the cen ter, and made his name immortal in the charge of Gettysburg, July 3, l2Jn May, 1864, he defend ed Petersburg. At Five Forks, hu division received the whole force of the Union attack. He retired to Richmond after the war, and de voted the balance of his days to life insurance. S On the list of Bancroft is the name of Casey. Silas Casey, bre vet major general, U. S. army, born at East Greenwich, R. I., Jan. 12, 1807, died at Brooklyn. N. Y., Jan. 22, 1882. He was in the 1826 class from West Point, and entered the 2nd infantry; was on garrison duty for 10 years; became first lieutenant June 28, 1836. Served under Gen. Worth in the Seminole war, 1837-42, having become captain in 183S. Was in the Mexican war; brevet ted major Aug. 20, '47, for gal lantry at Contreras and Churu busco; was at Molino del Key. While leading the assaulting col umn at Chapultepec, was severe ly wounded; brevetted lieut. col onel Sept. 13, 1847. The legisla ture of his state (R. I.) also ex tended him a vote of thanks. He became lieut. colonel of the 9th infantry March 3, 1855. In the years 1854-5, he served on the board on breech-loading arms. December 3, 1S55, his regiment was ordered to the Pacific coast, and in February, '56, he arrived at Fort Steilacoom, Wash. He was commanding officer of the Puget Sound district during the years 1856-9, with plenty of activity in fighting Indians and protecting settlers. Aug. 31, 1861, Casey was com missioned brigadier general, and assigned to the charge of organ izing volunteers near Washing ton, D. C. Subsequently given a division in General Keyes' corps, Army of the Potomac. Command ing the eastern aOvance upon Richmond, he received the first attack at Fair Oaks, May 31, 1862. For gallantry, he was bre vetted brigadier general, TJ. S. A., and major general of volunteers. From '63 to '65. he was presi dent of the board examining of ficers to command colored troops. March 13, 1865, he was brevetted THE MUTUAL LIFE Insurance Company of New York Announces the Appointment GEORGE W. HUG as Representative and Associate With the District Agency SALEM, OREGON America's Oldest Life Insurance Company offers the assistance and advice of its Agency representatives to those who wish to build up through life Insurance their financial reserves against the time when they may need them. ALMA D. KATZ Manager Corbett Bldg. Portland, Oregon We use no drags or operations. Most FKMAI.E COMPIjAIN'TR APPENDICITIS, GALLSTONES, and I7LCKRS I ' the aSSS ACH can be removed. Guaranteed remr1ls for ARthkitih PILES. SKIN DISEASES. RHEUMATISM, and ilmenis ? GLANDS, KIDNEYS, URINARY ULADDER of men ar!d nvuivit DR. CHAN LAM Chinese Medicine Company 803 H Court, corner Liberty - Salem Office Hours: 10 A. M. to 1 P. M. 8 P. M. to 7 P. M. Every Tuesday and Saturday Only Licensed N.D. Physicians 16 Tears la Business Consultation. Blood Pressure and Urine Test are .free of Charge. Sr. Ooldia cnaa GOOD FOR 25 VOTES Bathing Beauty Contest 11. NAME ma J or general, U.S. A. Jaly 8, 1868. he was retired from active service and was on the retiring board nntil April 2, 1889. He was author of a system of Infan try tactics, two volumes, and ln fantry tactics for colored troops, one volume. Col. Casey was one of the most popular of all the In dian fighters of our pioneer days. A record of his activities here would fill a very large book. Bancroft had Kautz on bis list August V. Kautx was prominent in our early Indian wars, on both sides of the Columbia river. Bom at Ispringer,, Baden, Ger many. Jan. 5, 1828, his parents settled in Brown county. Ohio, in 1S32. Young Kautz was In the Mexican war, 5th Ohio volun teers, and, being discharged, went to West Point; graduated with the 1852 class. As second lieu tenant, 4th Infantry, he came to what was then being made Wash ington territory; but. as will ap " k7. m .Tt hTri,Vm service on this side of th Colum pear later, he had his first activo ' , , j D , . . ?'6 Em , ,f 'n thQ 185n3;6 Jd a? &rs of th Pet Sf"nd '0"rf- L wounded at the bat tie of the 1 c r 8 ' aJ Wh,te. riTr' Sur: j !?UD!led..,by th6.1.'w'ho,e force ,oC the hostile, with a mere skele ton company with him, he station ed his men behind driftwood anri timber collected on the edge of the stream, sent word to Col. Silas I Cas!?' Somf mfl?? dstant' and a tiently waited attack. (Continued tomorrow.) NEW TOl R.NKYS TODAY As well as the playground championship tennis tournaments at Leslie fiejd at a.m., new ladder tourneys will start at Olingcr. field this morning. The Olinger matches starting today will be for girls 13 -to 17 years of age. Monday boys 14 years and older will begin a new toui nament. An early date will be set for play among women 17 years and older. HEALTH MEANS CHARM AND HAPPINESS spartuing eyes f""""XTPPl ana smiunr uds i f ? speak of health aod vitality. Clear kkin attracts. The healthy active girl is both happy and popular. Perhaps yoa are not really ill yet when the day's work is done yoa are too tired to enter into the good times that other women enjoy. For extra energy, try Lydis E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It tones op your general health. Gives yoa more pep more charm. Remember that 98 oat of 100 women report benefit. Let it help yoa too. of of E. C. GOODWIN District Manager Durbin-Hughes Bldg. Salem, Oregon TODAY II rniutar I ONLY I I "SKYWAY" ! Sat or day Only! "THE SPEED DEMON" I with Wm. Collier Jr. Capital Post No. 9 AMERICAN LEGION COMPLIMENTS OF 13 TFylTOcTttl ! nfll! wiaiLEVJsTT till frWT ftr.Ta'aV?, irrr i i 4f AEiER MEAL AFTER EVERY WR I G1EVS if JH PEHFECT 6UM M AFTER EVERY MCA