'PAGE 'FOUR-rr. - .V -i-v. -.i.,wJ.iUfA The OREGON STATESMAN, J Salem. Orejroru Sundar 3Iora.nsr. Dectxabcr .S0.a934 Wo Faror Sways Us; No Fear Shall Awe' From First Statesman, March 23, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Chasles A. SntACUS - - Editor-Manager - Sheldon F. Sackett - . - - a . Managing Editor ' " Member of the Associated Press The Associated tv ts e.ciustvely entitled to the oas for publica tion of all news dispatch emitted to It or not other tse credited la this pnpr ' ' - : - ; ' - '1 I i ADVERTISING Portland Representative - . Gordon B Bolt, bo wit j Building. Portland. Or. Eastern Advertising RepresentatiTes Bryant. Griffith a Brunsun. Irvc Chicago, New Tor a, Detroit, v - Hntft. Atlanta - Entered- at the Poetufftce at Satem, Origan, a Second-Close Matter. Published every morning except Monday. Bueineee office, SIS S. Commercial Street. ' , SUBSCRIPTION RATES j Man Subscription Rates, In Advance, Within Oregon : Dally and Sunday. 1 Mo. CO cent. J Mo. $I..S; Mo. IJ.25; 1 year 1 4.00. Elsewhere SO cents txsr Mo, or 15.00 for 1 yaar ta advance. For Copy I cents. News Stands cents. - By City Carrier: 4S rents a month; $5.00 a year In advance. INDIAN WONDERMENT T-.,..ii.. ,1... i . i. . j ...i t j .. .1 owUeigh, or end of the world." - Alexander Ross, Adventuret on the Oregon :; New. Whipping Boy ; THE new yendetta of the Washington administration's Hirxtprl P.o-inf the- Mnnwr tmet" -Tnr offor Vi?a irYr " , ........ . ..... l" " -A WV . W.W.a Ua W i ed "truce" with business interests Roosevelt made a tour of the Tennessee valley and there bluntly said what he was do ing there would be duplicated in every state, which sent cold shivers up the spines of private investors in utility bonds and stocks. Returning to Washington Mr. Roosevelt took offense when the president of the Edison institute proposed a test of. the constitutionality of TV A, Then the president offered to lend New York money to build a municipal plant if the ex isting utilities did not cut their rates; and made a blanket extension of the same offer to other cities over the country. JThe consequence is seen in the slump in values of utility securities on the stock exchanges. The drop was some $275,000,000 in the firjjt 20 days of November. The sagging has continued since then ; and these declines, it must be re membered are on top of several years of declining quotations. If recovery is one of the gqals of this administration, this is a very singular way in which to bring it about, by washing away through executive denouncement the accumulated sav ings oi thousands of thrifty citizen's. If the government de sires to encourage owners of capital to make fresh invest ments and thus start anew, the wheels of industry this is a strange method of inducing them to invest in enterprises, for surely none is so essential as electricity, water, gas, tele phone, etc. The president has expressed the view that power rates are 50 per cent too high. Yet in practically every state these rates are determined by regulatory bodies. In this state , a diligent utility commissioner has not succeeded in securing rate reductions save by negotiation. John Taxpayer m&yMy with equal point that taxes are 50 per cent too high ; but the 'new deal" has merely succeeded in increasing them for the present and for unknown years to come. Utility companies have sinned; but the wounds of these new bludgeonings are falling not so much on the few who have committed the offenses as on the tens of thousands of ordinary citizens who thought it was both safe and honorable to invest their savings in bonds and preferred stocks and Rnm rnmmnn stvlre nf iit-iliv nmnanioa -Vuf: Vr ma-m raal which seeks to ease mortgage burdens of land and home own ers even to the extent of bankrupting some creditors who may be equally needy, does not hesitate to pauperize those who were investors in utility enterprises. The New York Herald-Tribune comments pointedly on the issue in a recent editorial entitled "Government by Threat":' . "There are various ways of governing. One Is by setting up Impartial agencies, first to find the facts and then to make rales Just to all concerned. That is the system which the leadership of Charles Evans Hughes created in this State in the Public Service Commissions. It is government by laws, not men; it is the American way of order and fairness. "Another way is that being pursued by the Mayor and the President with respect to the local utilities. Nobody in Washing ton or at the City Hall takes seriously the threat of building a city plant and distribution system. The cost is so enormous and the delay so great as to make the loud talk something les3 than impressive. Very likely the President and the Mayor would go through with the plan if they were clear as to the political ad- ft -.w wan,- ay v a-aj. waj jrava.. w w LUU UUiyaUiCS yield a price concession in response to the threat and call the blueprints oft. - ' "But what a vicious and un-American way of governing! X Without a hearing, wlthoutsany proper consideration by any' one, these powerful executiresswing a club over the head of the uuuuw i uireaien 10 ruin xaem unless tney surrender what they regard as their right. And they da this summary Job of con viction and execution at the very- moment that a duly appointed : body, the Public Service-Commission, has the Issue of rates be fore It for investigation, hearing and decision. "We have before expressed the opinion that the President had selected the utilities as his whipping boy for 13 4. Having fin ished off the bankers, he yearned for a new victim. He is for getting one point, however. When he cracks the whip over the Consolidated Gas he Is welting also some 120,000 stockholders. Ills Whole fimnilrn arafnst t)i. ntflftfoa tv. T a- a o - w .... wuu w icuucun Valley Authority, and so on, is melting away the values of util ity obligations and destroying the savings of millions of Amer- -. leans. -... " t'The life Insurance companies, the colleges, the charitable organizations all have great holdings in these companies. To get a few cheers from the mob Mr. LaGuardia and Mr. Roosevelt are willing to wipe out hard-earned savings of father, mothers, widows and children without a hearing, without a pretense of fairs ess. "Such a wanton and wasteful duplication of plant and dis tributing system as is proposed here could not happen in the most unplanned system la the world. And it Is seriously pro posed, or. at least noisily threatened, in the name of a planned economy'! A more deflationary proceeding it would be difficult to conceive.-If the President really intends to continue such dis - turblng and destructive shocks to business and savings generally, he might as well abandon all thought of recovery and turn the nation over to the Tugwells and the Soviets." The New Three R's fnHE new CnnOTPQCt Will ennn aaamM ' 1 - A from the Great Schoolmaster will be the new "Three Jt-s . iney are iwiiei, .Revenue and Recovery. They might be designated the three horsemen of -the poltico-economic crisis. Congress and the country are awaiting the syllabus on the new courses which the White House is preparing, waiting with interest some with fear, finrruk wffft finna - Relief. A big issue itself. to noia oown costs ana aoie Tirovide more suhsistPTnv fn work projects and give employment at going wages, which runs we cost, up enormously, is a hard lesson to teach, and congress and the country follow prepares i ., -..- . :;.t ; : , - i "Rpventie" How much mrVnev vnrlll ha ...... - " - "V VA V CkAAl will it come from? Shall we keep on borrowing, loading the banks up with government bonds, running up the national debt at rapid rate? Shall we raise taxes or levy new ones? Shall we soak thcrich some more and confiscate incomes in the highest brackets? The good spenders give no thought to rlivta Via mnriPV IVMTlinff from; but thpr ri pntiofirvoTi'iffl and honest souls still left in congress who have grave doubts ana icars. j.iks iciiici when done on a big scale with tll la IIWIII Doles or Work Relief? Whether out the money or the goods to fAllr mat is tne question. This "R harrl nn fn !9rn 'in the text which the president AUd.ujr iu yi. uumy many ciphers after the first Ring in Thousand Years Peace' Yet Unrealized but Grand Dream By D. H. Talmadge, Sage of Salem Another year! Ring out, wild bens, to the wild Ring out the ' thousand wars of old, . Ring la the thousand years of peace! Lord Alfred's poetic dream of almost a century ago Is still a dream. But It was, and la, a grand Idea. I have noticed this about men those who talk long and loud of how much easier, life Is for the wife than It Is for the hus band are usually pretty poor ex cuses for what they should be. The December number of Mur ray Wade's Oregon Magasine con tains a sketch by Ella McMann, illustrated Yj Mr. Wade. Miss McMann's literary contributions are always Interesting. The best that" can be "said for the "A Wicked Woman" picture, among recent offerings at the El sinore, is that it introduces to the American public a hew and vibrant personality. Continental Europe hs sent to us many can didates for stardom. Few of them have manifested 'greater brillancy than Mady Christians, the central iigure or -a wicked Woman," who comes from Austria. Well, that's over as Aunt Pan said when Aunt Tvih.H Tin Mo sy Hezekiah'a sister, and her three children went home. "On the tnnr holnv 1& dun the doctor taklnar h c wjma vva a w with that spurious cheerfulness wnicn aecelres no one." From Mary. Roberta Rinehart's latest story. Mrs. Rlnehart knows doc tors. There is a behavior mnm im. porUnt than etiquette. A person may roiiow Emily Post's instruc tions to the letter and still U a less courteous dinner companion man one who violates them. "And in the end ha wan strlnnut of most of his fortune which he thought was his to enjoy in his later years." From an editorial In the Statesman on Dr. John McLoughlin. The scale which weigneth the weak. The visits of noma fnlVa sa overshort. But it is a good fault. "The world will make a heat- en path to your door if you can make more and better claptrap." From the Northwest Ponitrr Journal. Revised rersion of the time-honored mousetrap axiom. uooa. Although Wallace Berrv mar not entirely qualify as Phlneaa i. .uarnum to a native of southern New England, who saw the big show and-the great showman in the 70's. the Fox picture, "The Mighty Barnum," which opened on Christmas day at the Grand, has been In no sense a disappoint ment., something not unlike the good Old Circus snlrit has nrnlL ed during the week at this house every hody smiling and the Cash ier busy. Shirley Temple in "Bright Eyes" comes on New Year's day, which indicates an other week of big- business. If wishes were horses, beggars might ride, A Jolly old saw, time-tested, fire- tnea But geewhiz. if all the wishes that were uttered durinr the naat week were horses what a circus we should be having! The man who asserts that world peace will soon be a reality is entitled to high rating as a prophet of good cheer, but I'll bet jthat when he was a young ster he rehung his stocking on New Year's eve and expected to find something in it the next morning. Which he did not. I have seen Clanrtetta. Cntyrt in many and all kinds of pictures. ft ever nave I known her to turn In what I would call a poor per formance. I think "Imitation of Life," the picture made from Fan ny Hurst's mother-love story of that title, which opened the week ai tne aasinore, a more than or dinarily good picture. But the stellar honors of the picture are divided between Miss Colbert and Louise Beavers, the colored act ress, who gives a remarkable per formance as "the . other mother." "To believe in Immortality Is one thing, but it is first neces sary to believe la life." Robert Louis Stevenson. .. We remember a heap of thiags about some folks and not much about others. I reckon If Bill Bar ton had not said one thing to me 40 years ago I would have for gotten him completely. He aald, "Half the fnn of hAin irv t. in keepin' certain folks from findin' oui aoout it." i have never heard the particulars of Bill's final m. Hess," hut I" suspect somebody caugui aim in the act of having digits,, the jsimple rules of addition and subtraction go out the window. . .. - ; . . ; , - . . . Recovery. How much recovery have we registered? Is it durable? How much farther do we have to go? What will im pede and what stimulate recovery? What to do with NRA and AAA and other alphabetical assortments? Should Reform be mixed in with recovery against the advice of Keynes, British economist or should this team be driven tandem? Has gov ernment spending primed the pump, or has the country mere ly been dipping over and over again on this government cre dit constantly augmented? Given the correct lesson in this R then the other two "RVf would be easy problems to work. v ; These are the new three R's; Will congress helpor hin der m mastering them? Will it be lavish with relief and bonuses? Will it authorize more and bigger borrowings and vaster public works? There Is little preliminary revelation of congressional purposes. Even the keyholers are hazarding no long guess on government policy either from the White House or from congress. But this week will see the congres sional school assemble, and see the president offer his ideas on these stubborn fRVV And the country will see, what it will see. ......... . - 7 x D. H. TALMADGE one of his attacks of stomlck trouble, and. he died from acute disgust. "The Gospel is not merely a book it is a living power a hnnlr Burrtacaf n r alt Atdm V omit to read it, and every day with the sama nleannre Ki.'in. oleon at St. Helena. The years surely fly around! Here it is New, Year's day again and only 60 per cent of last year's, good resolutions busted for lack of time. Discouraging. Historical note for future gen erations of Willamette valley folks Christmas 1934, the day of the big wind. Showman Barnum's most pro fitable Venture was the Jenny Lind engagement. He paid the Swedish nlghtlneale SI 000 a night for 150 nights, and netted lor himself $350,000. This on authority of the Encyclopedia Britannica. which is .as reliable as the average town clock. Downtown sidewalks have had a comparitively easy time of it tnis week. Good old sidewalks, giving freely or understanding to those in need of understanding, bearing their burdens with never a complaint. However, who wants to oe a sidewalk? There are indications observed in many quarters by folks whose digestive forces are working nor maUy that the people, as a whole. nave come through the depression of the past several years with a more active interest In abstract problems, such as fair play la business, efficient government, civic responsibility, economic, se curity as a human right, protec tion or tne aged, helpless and un fortunate and a multitude of such Six weeks near Astoria to near Salem and return: e "e (Continuing from yesterday:) Quoting: "We succeeded in reaching the residence of Brother Leslie and O'Neal in the after noon, happy to meet with Chris tian friends again." (This meant the house o! James II. O'Neal, across the Wil lamette river from the Lee mis sion, where Rev. David Leslie and family made their home after their house was burned at the mission, which happened Dec 19. 1838. O'Neal was a member of te second Wyeth party. In 1834. and was an important historical character of early Oregon.) ..V Quoting again: "As our busi ness was urgent, we set about preparing for our return as soon as possible. I purchased 10 head of horned cattle and one horse from Br. O'Neal; and two horses and a mare and colt from other Individuals. Br. Smith collected his horses and cattle, and Mr. Tlbbets concluded to send his cat tle and horses down, he himself having engaged to go to Califor nia with a party of the exploring expedition which was then en camped on the bank of the Wil lamette, and here Br. Kone met us, having come up in a canoe, and engaged men to take his horses and cattle down. So that, when we were ready to return, we had a band of horses and cat tle amounting to 65 head." , (The Wilkes exploring expedi tion was the one mentioned. Part ot it. under Lieut. Geo. T. Em mons, went overland to Califor nia.) j Reading on: "Our party on our way back consisted of Br. Smith, Lewis, Wallace, a black man era ployed by Mr. Tibbita, Cooper, the man who had been through to the Tillamook country the year before Bits for Breakfast ' By R. J. HENDRICKS J decencies, long neglected. Heaven send that the signs art not mis leading! . . .-' ' , , : ' Salem business men generally report the biggest holiday trade In five years . . The two-cent tax on bank checks will not be re quired after January 1 ... 21 degrees below zero at Minneapolis on Christmas day ... So dry one doesn't feel it yes. I know ... Every community has one or more Scrooges equeesing, . wrenching, grasping, scraping, covetous old sinners, hard and as sharp as flint from which no steel has ever struck out generous fire. This la the Scroore of Dickens, end IlVa most of the Dickens characters' somewhat exaggerated. The only man I ever knew who seemed to me to be in full keeping with the Scrooge characterization dropped around one day when a depres sion was upon the land and the banks were curtly refusing to make loans and prevented a cer tain man's business- from toppling over the brink by placing a roll of currency on the man's desk. "Sign a note without Interest." he growled." and don't talk. I'll be damned if I'll let you or anybody else Impose on me. When there's any imposing to be done on me IH do It myself." This Is a true story, and the moral is whatever yon wish to mate It. . . It Is not a matter of exact record, but It is safe to assert that never in the history of Salem have so many people aald "Merry Christmas" and "Happy New Year" as have said It this season . . . Biff Cramp says this Is because there are more people here than ever before . . . Bnt that tnna tia .ntlr.lv wkn hfor it . . . The biggest laugh in the "Anne of Green Gables" play follows Anne's bedtime prayer, which she closes with "yours respectfully." . . The dining table under which I was privileged to put my feet on Christmas day was graced with a centerpiece of chrysanthemums outdoor chry santhemums, as beautiful as if there were no such thing in the world as frost. A family gather ing at Mrs. Jennie Woolery's on 25th street Mrs. Woolery has the magic touch in chrysanthemum culture . . . I know a feller who has begun to keep a diary every year since 1880. He has what is perhaps as complete a record of each January from the 1st until about the 15th as there is in ex istence. . . I miss Dick Carlson. I miss others also. But were Dick here he would be able to tell us what Phineas Barnum said in Swedish to Jennie Lind when he thought he was teUing her she was the loveliest woman In the world. It-must have been some thing pretty terible that Oie, the rubdown artist, taught him to say, because it completely busted up the banquet . . . Here Is hoping that 1935 will be well, what you would like it to be. We have dif ferent ideas, but most of us are reasonable, and those who are un happy without real reason will do moEt of the year's suffering as usual. . . Tick Tump Is growling because he does not like to make the figure 6. But he Just loves to make the figure S, so he has some thing to look focward to some thing to revive his drooping spir its through the twelvemonth to come . . . Life isn't so tough. and whose trail we had' followed, and Hopeo, a Hawaiian, the last two being now employed by Mr. Kone; and Wakllkll and Chano and myself, in all consisting of eight men. We bid our friends farewell and set out again fox Clatsop expecting that we would lose a number of our cattle and horses before we would reach the Clatsop plain." . Is The party was Joined by Wa wanahpah, the Indian on the Yamhill river who helped them find their way to the mission the friend of Colomon Smith. Reading on: "Our party now con sisted of nine men. We took the trail leading to Na-Cbeesno lay ing on the coast to the south of Nea-Stocka; this way to the coast being, according to description, much the best." (That probably. means that tney took what la now known as the Salmon river route; landing them on the coast south ot the Nes tucca.) . W . They crossed around the point at Barview, the northern ent rance of Tillamok bay, and, the next day, having gotten across the Nehalem river, were at the foot of Neahkahnle mountain, where they rested and camped for the night, anticipating the hard task before them. But they got themselves and their atoek over that mountain with an ease that surprised them. They profited by their experience of a few weeks before. Pioneers found the fear ot crossing Neah kahnie one of the greatest hind rances to a safe crossing. The writer had the experience, twice, on horseback only he did not ride but led the horse, and crawled parts of the way. V V-V'-.Though Frost's party, with the stock, got over without a slip, be wrote a final Una about It la his Journal: . "We descended thla mountain, and. bade it, I hope, an everlasting, adieu." The going after that was not bad even over Tillamook Head for hey now knew the way. Some ot the concluding words about the Journey In the diary of Frost read: ---r. , ' "Having been nearly six weeks from home, X was very happy and thankful to meet with my family again, and to find them ta health. And notwithstanding the many difficulties in our way we had see ceeded la reaching our plain with 60 head ot horses and cattle out ot the 55 with which we left the Willamette." (Most of the five were lost on the east side of the Coast Range.) . V e Copying: "if it be asked why I undertook .this Journey to the Willamette (he spells it Walam ette) after cattle and horses, I answer: t The Willamette, the only place to which we can look for supplies, is 160 miles from ACM CHAPTER XL Say took Ms arm suddenly. "Oh Pete," aha said. "I must be aw fuir - "No, you're not. No, you're net Please, darling. Dont get started feeling" sorry for me. I do that too well myself. Just do whatever seems right to you and be honest witn yourself." " Kay rare a little start. The same thing Harrow had told her in other words: "Be true to yourself." "What's the matter?" Pete asked. "Nothing, Kay said, but she could see he was puzzled. There was no dealing with Pete; nor would there be any with Harrow, if thrors -kept on. 'Life just continued to get more complicated and someone al ways had to suffer. Somehow, some time, this whole business would come to a climax, and then whatf Well, she was prepared to suffer in her turn. But so far aha was safe. Cold and selfish as it seemed, the career was the thing. -And a if the interview with Pete weren't enough, Boris Warren re turned that afternoon and wanted to talk to her again in his shy, fu tile WIT. . Boris said: "When this play is over and that mar be very soon, you know there is something' I want to ask you.? ' Kay tried to pass it off lightly. "Oh, don't be cynical about the play. . Boris. You know it s going to be good, and itH run for atleast a year faikj u ine leading woman isut a nre " "Remember." Boris repeated, as if he had not heard her "there will be something I want to ask you." That evening they all stayed home and played bridge. Boris Warren was staying the night, but took no-part in the game. He lay down, his full six feet four, by the fireplace, smoking his clay pipe and reading some huge eld book, bound in stained calf, that he had selected from Harrow's library. -Except when she happened to look in that direction, Kay would not have known he was in the room. When they finally stopped the Kme and sat back to sip a little er and eat hard-toasted crackers spread with cheese. Spike sat down with Kay, apart from the rest. "I'd better "start putting you straight on some of the plana," he said. "Now, the main thing is you arent sunoosed to be anybody yet. Fact is, 4've talked Earl into not dragging you around town so mucn until we're ready to shoot. Some one of these columnists or somebody is liable to shoot the works.- You can.'t trust them all, you know; gos sip is what they're after and you cant blame them." "I like that," Kay observed with mock anger, "putting a stop to my good times!? Spike grinned, a little sourly. Kay thought, and continued: "You may not realize it, baby, but your good times are over for a long- time. It's hard work from now on. a few ftmiwt- a bis? front, lots of bally hoo and push, and you've got to have plenty ei poise ana seii-reiiance until this frame-up is popped on the public Get itt" "Of course." Kay said. "And thafs what I'm here for to work.' Snika rrinned at her more warmly. "You slay me, Kay; hon estly, you do. Jtstn l m xor you ana dont forget It. Now, one of the first things we're going to have to do is spring a little romance wnen the time comes, that is." "Romance? Really nowl" Kay said. "How so?" "The public's got to see you as Eerl'a new bia thnlL But we're not coiner . to nosh it at them. They've got to start wagging their tongues, and you and Earl have got to make can eyes at eacn otner. But not till the time comes. Get it'" "But. wont that be a little I dont know a little too much?" she asked. She could imagine how Pete would like that. "It's part of the job, sister. And Harrows going to hate it. Oh, how he's going to hate itt Am I right or am I right?" Spike smiled at her slyly. And it isnt going to be any hardship for you, he accused. e ' e It was on the next day that Kay began work with Ben Leschin, the director. Because Leschin was a busy man, so he insisted, Kay had to run in to the city for her appoint ments with him. For all her ama teur experience, the first day was an ordeal. She rode with Pete in one of Harrow's cars with a Har row driver and a Harrow "watch dog" in the front seat and reported (o Harrow's Manhattan theater. It waa the first time she ever had en tered a real theater by the stage door and theexperience waa among the thrills she knew she never would forget. It waa aa if in that simple this place, consequently all our provisions must be transported from that place-to this at great expense. The missionary moat leave his family, take an Indian canoe and go after any supplies he may want, as a general thing. And In a trip of this kind he is exposed to everything which is ruinous to health. Ho must not uafreqaently brave the storm by day and camp on the bank ot the river by Bight: and at times have his frail bark broken or wrecked on the passage. Five or six In diana must be paid and fed. whose aid is necessary to work the can oe. The missionary family must suffer, it may be, very much in body, and certainly very much In mind, during the absence of the person upon whom they are, ai der God, dependent tor all things of an earthly nature. The trans-: portation ot the supplies for the subsistence ot the family ot the missionary mounts to more than they are worth; and the best sea son of the year is spent ln secur ing these supplies by the mission ary himself; ... his bodily strength Is thus exhausted and his health imbalred which nmt disqualify him for future useful ness. ... wen, bow, bread stuffs and sauce, etc., cannot be grown without a team, "Milk, butter, beef and pork cannot be made without cattle. And cattle and hbrses could sot bo brought to this place without driving them overland, except by paying more than the worth of them to get them here by water, besides losing nearly the same length of time in accomplishing the same object. And no one would move tn this matter unless Br. Smith, and myself would un dertake. Therefore, believing it to be necessary for the existence and prosperity ot this missionary station through the blessing oi act of walking beneath fire escapes, down dusty passageway and tVM..Ii m MitniiM lift 1a Anetr intn a dingy a all she had bridged the great enssm pnweca ba w.vis make-believe and the theater of re ality. Once inside, with Harrow s man At r A w. V alia Iwnil tA m A Jw..il TV.. S. OT-V. .tit upon a bare stage amid the mechan ical zurnisiungs ox ui .neater switchboards, scenery, properties, that she only half saw as she hur ried along and there they found T V: ' ' UCKBUL Yet hours later, Kay reflected Chat the backstage at the famous Ifantiatai tkatar in N York waa essentially much the same as KalrfaaM im td. 1 MAn. ami vaudeville house in Daytona Beach during preparations zor sucn iom- m unity r layers . snows mm were riven there. She told Harrow ahont it jokingly and his answer waa, am .1 . . i . ins ueaier is ui uieaicr any where. Show business is show bus- Inea A ilii ta a chaw. The Anhr difference is in the amount of money to oe gambled, in uaytona Beach Yen KaimvI tA mslra Ttni.t t nt for the makeup, the royalties on the piay, u posters tub naa prnitea or uiB cwaisei yea Teniea; u sxocx in fhihnffrfca. Inia thai nanaM i i a. avnaa ajj ! hopea to cover all that overhead, plus more advertising and some salaries, none of them very high as the business e-oee and ha hfl-noa in addition to make a tidy little profit ior nunseix. uere tn Mew xora it'a the unut Wi amrV aritV. -fKa same tools, only on a larger scale. TV m n a v mnw. uuu mir am imam bat it all MHnM iIabd (a tiannla speasang written pieces to each Other in front n mm. iMMn rvnen you get tnat feeling; Kay, I MS a a a . . . . mayoe you u nave 10s. a litue oi tne romanea vnn'n a)t fn, a)ina kn.L ness with you. I doubt if you'll lose mucn ana you il look upon your work as a grand job to do as well aa von kiuw how. tint nrrk thing bordering on magic and mys- icry. But that fnornino ITav tiaf had this talk with Karl TTarrnw mnA she was a very timid, though out- waxuiy seix-possessed, nineteen-rear-old e4rl whn waa Mmin f hang on the words of a famous di rector. Ben Iaaehfn waa hnrw raTVfwa. , a man in avwralta- Nm,Kw tali, dark man with a long dark cigar ana a aeroy net anchored squarely on his head at an even keel, and three ether men arut im miii Kay, In her excitement, caught only oojck riimpses ox turn, out she saw that both the women were dressed for the street amt hmA tfcia, k.fa and coats on, and that one of the uiree men was a pert, self-assured looking chap turned out immacu lately in the sort of clothes Broad way actors always seemed to wear in Hollywood films. Leschin wore hi a VnM rimmed spectacles and his tight-fit- A. 1 a.a.a a WW a a ira- irtue ncrec. lie naa en a rough, brown tweed suit and a tan sweater and his amaJl ft war Im i;tla brown buckskin shoes with Cuban neeis calculated to make him ap nea r an inch or en talU .When he saw Kay he said, "Hello," and went on talking to the man la oreraus. men. when the man wandered off and joined some other itanhn(U. Taat,im n.4 again to Kay and said, "Grab a cnair. Kit ?Anni an .mnf. Vi ! mw,A ft down a little apart from the group ana narrow -watendog" eat down near ner. iescnin went on with his rehearsal f nr that waa vh. v.j been In progress. Kay was sur- pnsea ax ine casuainess of the af fair. It waa verr mrvh li'Va a r munitr PlaTera raharaat tV,. tors reading their parts from nunay paper ooouets, only being much more bnaintHulik-a mniti la.. inspired, it seemed, than the ami- leurs ox mytona Ueacb, It was all ousiness, sne taooght, all painful accuracy. When the wrtmn aumaJ a. L. through the actors rose and wan dered away and Leschin came over io ner. 'I'm toine tn kin nn little and walk a little," he said, "just so we can get the feel of things. Try this," He handed her a part from some play, which - one she had no idea. "Look it over a minnt. flirt - .-- wu. awu . your are. Naive, hot Mt; ni cue you." Kay puzzled throurh the typed sheets, then said. "I guess I'm ready." . "All right. Reading- from a simi lar booklet, Leschin said, 'And you arent going: to tell me?' " , Kay replied in the lines before her: "No, mother. It's nothinr. It doesn't matter . . .' " " Bnt I thinlr Vrvn a, a. . . , - - wine- thing.' Leschia shot back. "I'm sorrr. math Vu ataa derstand..." God, we did undertake, and we ac complished what we did." (Continued on Tuesday.) PARKERSVILLE. Dec 2. . The school children gave an In teresting Christmas program at the schoolhouse to a- number .ot parents and friends. Numbers od the program wwe: . "Welcome" - by " Oien" Large: "Christmas Songs" primary room, "Santa Sons" by Dennis Manning. Tommy Harrison, Olen Large. Paul Pfau, Carlo Ireland and Clyde Mulllcan; play "How the nouse Was Cleaned" by Betty Manning. James Ireland. Lloyd Duaa and Margie Large; harmon ica numbers by Chandler Large; play "A Christmas Jinx" by pri MAI PARENTS AT HOLIDAY PROGRAM Experienced We Insurance Salesman ai District Manager lor Salem Agency. One of leading Parlfle Coast life insurance compaale seeks aa experienced tiro Tne era nee salesman as District Manager for Salem and vidalty. Mast be pcrsoaal pro ducer with a desire to baild bis owa agency. Prefer soar lied man. age 28-40, with resilience la this territory. Salary pins overwriting pins good first year and renewal commissions.' Glre fall infomatioa la reply wlikw will be confidential. Address: Saperiatendeat of Agencies. 912 Failing Bldg Port land. Oregon. By ARTHUR SHUMWAY The reading went on, Leechm feeding her cues in a curt, matter, of-fact voice, and Kay reading her speeches with what seemed to be the proper emphasis and attitude. "All right," Leschin said. "Now try this. Here's a long speech. Look it over. Then read it for me." Kay studied the speech, the sheets of paper trembling a little in her hands, and then began to read. Leschin listened noncommittally. ln fart" lAlHna rm mux lTaa .. - edtve wasnt listening at alL Hewss a V. aa a - - .V:. J ... . m imi I. llaaif UI aj!VW aUS ttaTK lltue dirertof with tha - f,M a. . ' w auiue swarthy, predatory bird. -"Now," Leschen ordered, "go over there and make an ntr.iv. v just playing yourself. You're coming- into a pleasant room in a pleas ant house and your mother and your sweetheart are sitting waiting for you. a mi ww just uressea in some thinr Brettv niee end Wm .. of it. Youre anxious to see your iwtrinuri. nww, come wauanr in." With all thla Hi tnitut P.-, the sUge, stood by some stacked- rp aceaery, vnen started toward Iarhtn MrarlT immi1. aj . ;.v a slight step of simple happiness. urernin noaaea. xmow just walk around a little and ait down once or twice." She did aa she waa told. "AM firht" ha mm I A T-i... -n - -a. , . . auai.a aUi we're gywz to do this moraine. uw tarn m uum iuea aoouc you, you know. Well start on- r.i a..u tomorrow. And ia a little while Warren will have the play ready for us." ' "AD right, Mr. Leschin," Kay said. She turned aa if to go, then stopped.' -Yesl- he asked crisply. "Wall"' mrA aha kM a. w.au w O Q nyly "I cant help wondering, you know, if I'm too terrible." "Is that what ve thinVr ha asked. , - . "I dont know. I dont know what you expect of me." "Then dont worry about what I emeet nf von" It was like asking questions of a oarK,narp-eagea stone. From uimvlim Ant ( fat . the stage came the sound of bump- "Ki7 Tojcr. xvay and Iwliiii turned and lnoV-wt , the theater. "w "Take your hands off me!" It was the 'immaetilatal'- frc.ai actor who a few minutes before had been sitting on the stage during the rehearsal. Someone had him by his two arms in a painfully rigid grip. "What's going on down there?" Leschin demanded. It was then that Kay saw who the other bum was. There were others, too. and the-r had hn 4k v. ' but now as the group separate, Kar mt a. aaaa Dala Ta a a eve, l. waa ne wno had the actor by the arms shaking him. Leschin scrambled down into the pit and te the scene of the quarrel l0 ,an 'StT that surprised Kay. Sullen)-. Pt la hl The man drew back proudly and Tt e.iaiign(enin4r nis coat Sleeves. And. mr t.n4..1. v. touched one side of his face with the ups oi nis nngers. "WeD?" Leschin demanded. "This half. wit hit an. ,V. . : ---- mic Kvor said areneredly, "and climbed onto me like a limati- TV a.;.. . v . - - a tvui( HI ua v a hmt taken la for assault and bat- "What Tima ara-a T 1. asked Pete. . Pete shrugged, stm rlarirgr an aruy. at the actor, and mumbled something Kay didnt hear. " ell.-wh4t xcue have you got to offer?" Leschin insisted. "What excuse do you want?" Pete asked with strained patience. Kar waa arraut ha v.-. Leschin. too. "Well, break rt up, all of you," Leschin said. "And I wouldn't .A. a auuiua a SO- Vs9 y.oa.lV ny more actors o-..11:, r-L he warned " x mt. Harrow listen CO TOO. I hirvnt tha - j . w - - -a ar miq II ITJ SJ rjfj a can think of better things to de any- - j- n jci aiong. Aa Boon aa aha nM w . Pete alone. 'jJ l . vWult tht matter?" she asked, anxiously. "Nothing." he said. "What did he do?" "A W mJm ana la a -1- a ... . ill mats "About whom? About me?" "Maybe so," Pete admitted. , But. Pete: he caa ,. v. i portant. Dont you know you're rettmr Tonntalf . i.. a jj M " aaaw m IV, Ui. Wvu "I cant haln it sr.. T . -- --i -a, a m svrrr Jr as you're concerned." Pete turned to walk away, re marking aa he left: "I told yen that yon belonged up here in this racket and I didnt." She Waa evtinm. ta. ,.11 v: to try to reason with him. but she bit tier Im il -t.j n... r uvnu lUli. rtw walked on toward the front of the iue lex. (To Be Continued) isicaiat mary room; piano duet by Patri cia and Warren Brown; play "Rip Van Winkle" by tipper grades In cluding Betty Manning, Marjorie Manning. Davids Pfau, Estber Pfau. Margie Large.- Pfares Cook. Lloyd Duan, Edward Dunn, Ed ward Roosa. James Ireland and Earl Ireland: i song by entire school. At the close ot the program Santa arrived with treats for the children. Teachers . and pupil had aa exchange of presents. "a AIRLIE FOLKS ENTERTAIN' ' AIRLIE. Dee. 29 Christmas holiday guests at various homes were: Mr. and Mrs. Lather Ray at Loren Cooper's; Mr. and Mr.-. Borons, Dolph Bevens and Mar jorie, Ellis Campbell at Storey's: Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hastings with their daughter. Mrs.- Lawren e Davis and family In TamMIL Mr. and Mrs. George Williamson and sons Gilbert and Wayne went to Astoria.'