PAGE FOUR The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem; Oregon, Friday Morning April 26, 1935 Let's Keep Ourselves Out of the Next One! "The Cold I . 1 e finger lurse Byf e raiesmnn "No Favor Sway Us; Wo Fear Shall AW From First Statesman. March 2S, 1851 ' Tlld STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Chakles A. Sprague - - - . - Editor-Manager Sheujon P. Sackxit - - - - - Managing -Editor Member or the Associated Press The Associated Press Is axcluaivaiy entitled to lbs use for publics tlon e-f si! naws dispatches creditad to It or not otherwise credited is tltla paper. j ADVERTISING Portland Representative Gordon a Beit. Security Eastern Advertising 4 Bryant. Uitif fiUr Uruoaun. loc. Mosion. . Entered at the Postoffice at Matter. lubliked office tl5 S. Commercial Street. SUBSCRIPTION UATES: tun Subscription Sunday. 1 Mo. u cents; 2 Mo. $1.25; wuera 5ti vi-nts r Me., or I5.ee X cents. New Viands S centa. By City Cartier Incipient TTARIOUS measures are under consideration in Washing- V ton having p do wit&Jtaking profits out of war, stopping war profiteering, and providing for conscription of men and materials, in tinie of war. With legislation to put a "ceiling" on profits in wartime we are not now so much concerned; but the gist of pending legislation is to put the whole coun try in the grip of the war department when war does break -out. Even if thi& purpose is far removed from the minds of sponsors of the legislation, the effect might result if some of the pending billd are enacted. In the last jwar the government extended its authority far beyond what was necessary to meet the emergency. That was only a starter. When another war comes we may see the whole country gfoose-stepping; to the commands of the mili tary machine. Inj such a situation there will be no freedom of conduct or of opinion, there was little of 'he latter in the last war. j All that woiild be necessary to shift our political gears into fascism woyld be a war, because the military would move into full cdmmand, issue orders in council under these laws approving Conscription of the economic machinery for the rigid control! of the whole economic life. The transition would be easy if jthe minds of the people were "conditioned" previously for such a regime. All of these j increases in the war establishment are not solely for purposes of defense against possible foreign en emiesThey are,! in our opinion, in considerable degree for maintaining the Internal peace. Worthy as the purpose may be against civil disorder, it still sets a stage for fascism. The Statesman rarely turns up bogies with which to af fright itself or the people; but it is alarmed at the growing power of the militarist mind in national affairs. The Amer ican people are In no mood now for a "man on horseback" ; but what about i "man on the radio? Let power drift into the hands of a schemer, then with a powerful army support ed by laws permitting conscription where would liberty be secure? ft The Washington policy could avoid this by directing it self toward avoidance of war. Talking about what will be done when the next war comes conditions the public mind to accept war as a jcertainty ; and with it the most drastic con trols ever conceived of. A wiser course is to foster a policy pf staying out of troubles both in Europe and Asia with a wise expenditure of funds for protection of continental America and Haiwaii. Such a course will not require grants of power to thewar department to strip the people of the lib erties and lay a 'groundwork for the fascist state here. - ; Go Slow on Session GOV. MARTIN is wise in going slow on the matter of a special session. Congress is a long way from adjourn ing; and the text of its social security legislation is by no means clear. Very few states have enacted any "match" leg islation and evidently expect to wait until 1937 to meet. A special session would open the door for all the griev ances, real and fancied, for ameliatory legislation. In that terrific pressure there is always the danger of special in terest legislation. Those who take offense at some of the policies of Gov. "Martin would use the legislature as a sound ing board for the 1936 campaign or as a medium for irri tating bills. Sen. McNary said a while ago the congress should ad journ by mid-June and give the country some degree of com - posure. It will not, but the admonition was pertinent. Gov. Martin might find a special session a Pandora's box of troubles. j Milk Price Unsettlement TI7ASHINGTON seems to be having trouble with its state if T AAA. Seattle milk distributors cut prices a centbut the director of agriculture raised them again. Then the case was' taken to court and the law was Jheld unconstitutional. Now the distributors have renewed their price cut. However the 1935 state AAA law has not.been passed on. It is reliably reported that price conditions in Port land weretgetting into a bad tangle when Gov. Martin ousted the old. board and installed a new one. Secret rebates, price thiseling were indulged in, until there was threat of a wide open break. The new Oregon board has organized but so ar has not named ri administrator. It will have the price prob lem on its hands right from the state. The Oregoaian performs a service -when it berates Commis sioner Bannett lor denying proper heat ia the rooms of the Oregon Historical society in the auditorium. Thin writer visited the quarters recently and found them socold it vtt necessary to keep an overcoat ra to hare any comfort. Workers at times -ha Ye been forced to.go lLt U tao cold 40 remain and they hare stayed TfJw e",tth temperatures of 80 or below. If Portland does not , appreciate-the society encash to provide -heat for the rooms the Mate should proride adequate and comfortable quarters for it in ivf thTfrlf G,ralj?K cororatlon, whose failure caused closing gesVg?afn he2a? ' t7' ta ne 01 owe mud Sde f th J? the business. It sot caught on the wrong ? the market whan the drouth made the price of wheat to f?TVl77?y nd 'tatV e hazardous: and eren ILd 81 Jlcktf V U- d Arthur Cutten were two E?JJ?V"i.aWa,i mak keP fortune; and Cutten still has time to lose hie, although Juri, under trading ban at present. iaaV19 CfCny,iWll, tlte,1a t0 tight the dust storms in-the "SliSTS1 Wi" it rainw make the wind atop Wowing WUt,ly &19Btj belt which isn't pUnted yet? Portland was touch -exdted this week when an aUered class A gangster was lound domicUed tare. uegea class A DALUSSUHS HJIOI06 COiDIST ' DALLAS, April 25,two typ , fng teams and.: one shorthaad team. will be entered by the Dal , las high school in the state wide contest to be held s at Corrallis, Saturday, AprU 27.1 jf 'The typing 'teams will be the Huil.Iing. Portland. Or. RepresentfUvea Chicago. ew York. Detroit. Atlanta Salem, Oregon, at Second-Close ivery- morning except klonaay. e urines Kates. In Advance. Within Oregon: Dally and Ma 12.15; 1 year -VU. Elsw- for I yaar la adrance. rr copy cents a month ; $5.99 a year In advance. Fascism same as successfully competed is the Polk county contest, last Sat urday at Honmouth. with Helen Elle and Dorothy Palmer la the aorlce dlTisioa and Bernle Elle and Howard Campbell in the am ateur division. The typing teams are coached by Miss Betty Jelinek of the commercial department, ' Th shorthand team coached by Miss Veroka Wampler wIU be Ruth Plammer, Arlene Voth. Gladys Mig and Mildred Schnei der, they are second year students. Editorial Comment From Other Papers O PROMISE MK The Townsendites hare taken a leaf from the political hand book of the new dealers and are making effective use ot it. Show us something better," they aay, "before condemning our plan." That is the .sophistry through which millions of rotes were har vested tor the democratic party in 1934, and sow those- who are more radical are using it to bring support to their organizations. The successful political tTick in these- days is to wait and see what others promise and then double any and every such pledge, multiply the result by three and hold out the product as a plan for recovery. Yakima Republic. ORDERED TO NORTH STAYTON, AprU 25. Rev. Daniel F. X. O'Connor who has for several weeks been in charge of Immaculate conception par ish here has been ordered to re port to Point Townsend, Wash. A priest from the Benedictine Abbey at ML Angel will take his place here until Rev. Joseph Scherbring returns from Iowa about May 1. Daily Health Talks By ROYAL S. COPELAND, M. D. United States senator from New Tork Former CerrmUsioner of Health, New Tork City , "TYPHUS. WITH Us brothars and sisters plague, cholera, typhold and dysentery has decided mors cam .patgaa than Caesar, Ucnaital, Na poleon and ail the other gea-fi eral of history. T ha epidemics get the blame for defeat; the vanarata tha credit tor vie-II teryv nought ts ba the other way round." So writes Doctor Haas : Zinsser -et t"h e Harvard Medical aehooV In his new 'book about typhus fever. Typhus fever Dr.Copelaitd has always .been ? a menace to mankind. It te a dlt aaa of Hthaad earclessaeaa. It can be prevented by SMrdslax .proper hygienic measures. Sanitary equip ment and facilities may be destroyed by unexpected calawdties, such as floods, toraadoes and " earthquakes. Then, unfortunately. epMemica of typhus fever often follow. Devastating: Disease Few -persons realize how devastat ing this dlseas can be. . During the Wetid war more than twenty -five mutton Raastana were -stricken with the disease and almost three.aeHUoa ed. It hnraded aU aectiona of the European continent where unhy gienic conditions -prevailed. The disease Is still prevalent in artala. part t the wertd. In tads country it is faoad In sefa ef xhe - southern border states. If . It were not for the vlgttnsee ef tbe- federal and state authorities the disease would be quickly spread to other sec tkma. Fortunately, these ver alert health MthartUes are ea guard against typhus and other similar In fection. Cersa Found In Rats Typhus fever is caused by a germ found in rata The germ is carried from one rat to another by rat ike and fleaa, It Is transmitted to hu mans by fleaa, and from one person to another by lice. Obviously the :disease can only exist, where .there are filth and neglect of hygiene. Dark, crowded and unsanitary places f , : 1 i s, Jf. .if: I , Bits for Breakfast By R. J. HENDRICKS Address at dedication of tablet to the Dorlon woman: (Concluding from yesterday:) , Her sight recovered; she plod ded n. Morsels of food were re duced to none at all. She wrap ped her boys in blankets, broke some twigs to mark the spot where she left them, in- the tor por of starvation, and herself hur ried on. Peering ahead, she had caught sight of a curling faint wisp of the smoke of an Indian camp far below. Spurred to exert to the utmost the last ounce of her waning strength, like a tigress fighting for her young, she fran tically pressed on, first forcing one foot ahead of the other and then crawling. Followed a full day of this last struggle, and an in tervening dreadful, cold and sleepless night, the morning of which found the iron willed wo man again grimly going on. At noon this second day, a Walla Walla squaw espied a sister squaw crawling down the moun tain toward the camp, and gave the loud alarm. Help was instant in being on the way. Soon mother and children were with warmly welcoming friends, gained while of living are favorable to the prog ress of typhus fever. The disease la characterized by high fever, severe headache, chills and prostration. In its early stages it Is often confused with typhoid fever, but is distinguished from it by a peculiar mottling of the skin. The skin rash of typhus fever appears about the third to fifth day of the disease. At first, it is reddish in col or, but soon changes to a purpnsb hue. It covers .the entire body, with tha exception of the face. The sufferer from typhus fever re quires expert medical attention and careful nursing. Of course, complete Isolation Is most Important in pre venting the spread of the disease. Danger of Complteationa . The danger of serious complica tions, aucb as broncho-pnaamoaiaV. must not be overlooked. Whenever ' possible H is best to transfer the vic tim of typhus fever to a hospital, where adequate cart and protection are sure to be .obtained. Beceatly a special vaccine has been perfected , by the United States pub lic health service. But this vaccine only protects against a certain form of typhus fever. r Until a more per- feet vaccine is developed, we can only guard against the disease by en forcement of hygienic measures. There should be -rigid' santtatloa . regulations te ah cities, towns, vil lages, amd ba-mlsta' throughout the country Amwots to Health Queries c 8ee. Q; What can 1 do to put on weight? X jteetn to be la xood -health' but wish to add about ten pounds to my weight A. Take a good tonic and bunder. Best and relax whenever possBue. For further particulars .send a self- . Laddrejaed. stamped envelope and re- , peat your question. , J. C 8. Q. Will you please .tell me hew to gala weight and strength. ; A. Make every effort 1 to Improve the general health, For full parttru-' Lars restate .your, question and send ' a stamped, self -addressed envelope. Mrs. B. XI Can a bunion be cured? '; A. It the trouble Is of long stand tag. an operation . may be necessary to effect a cure. ' For full particu lara restate year question and send a stamped, self-addressed envelope. fCbpTW,IS3J."a:. FTbX, tncj going that way two winters be fore. Wrote Def enback In his book: "The woman had come down from her Golgotha. Consider this Dorion woman, and name, if you can, any female character in his tory whose story outshine in pluck, grim determination, fierce reso lution and motherly self sacrifice the record this red heroine wrote in letters ot blood. No monuments rise to her memory; no tablets of bronze are inscribed in her honor; no high mountains or noble streams bear her name. It is to the discredit of the great north west that they do not." (Since that time an eastern Oregon bridge and a Pendleton hotel have been named for her, and to day marks another step of many that will no doubt be taken to redeem the credit f our state, our section and our country.) Wrote Franchere of the pro gress of the 90 Astorians in their 10 canoes, five of bark and five of cedar wood, nine men to a canoe, on their homeward way up the Columbia river on April 17, 1814, having left Astoria April 4: "We heard a child's voice cry out in French 'arrestez done, arres tez done' (stop! stop!) We put ashore, and the canoes having joined us we perceived in one of them the wife and children of . . . Pierre Dorion." (Walla Walla In dian rowers in three swift canoes had set out and struggled to over take the Astorians, after the Do rion woman had seen them pass tfie Indian camp where she had been for two weeks, and of course recognized them.) "Well might we with Virgil say, 'Who can relate such woes without a tear?" wrote Alexan der Ross, after telling in his book the story the Astorians heard from the lips of the woman, that April 17 on the Colombia, 121 .years, less 10 days ago today. Whose was the child's voice cry ing to. the, departing fleet of the Astoriang? There seems now no doubt that the younger of the two LDerlon children with whom their mother escaped from the Dogrib murderers was Baptiste Dorion, and that. the on? who with a child's voice hailt the 10 fleet ing caravels was the boy called by most historians Paul, but whose name was not likely Paul. Also, the older brother of the one called Paul by historians, who by them has been called -Baptiste, was probably not Baptiste, but per he pa Pierre, a favorite name in the Dorion -clan. Neither-ot the two .Dorion boys who canre with the land party of the Astorians is accounted tor; that Is, it is not known where they lived or when they died. It -seems evident that the older one was dead before the massacre by the Dogrib Indians. It seems certain that, as Tar as their mother Jmew, only one Do rion boy was living in 1841, when the marriage of Marie Iowa to JohnToupin- was performed, and all her children legitimized. None but Baptiste of the Dorton chil dren, waa named in that ceremony, and all her . living: children, were -evidently intended to be named, the record in addition to Baptists Dorion showing' Marguerite Verne and Francis and 'Marianne Tou pin. That made- -seven children bora to Madame Dorion; four then living, one certainly dead, and -perhaps 'three. Cox wrote- in his book that in January. 1814. she had two children, one of four years and the o t hr tfour months. This gives September 1813, as the month of Baptiste's birth. Baptiste- (Jean- Baptiste) Dorion died in 1849 in Marlon county, and his half h"ther Fran- 1 CHAPTER XX j "Did Merriam, also, have the op portunity , to participate in the crime t queried Montigny. "Was he known to have been upstairs er away from the others at the party T" "That's where we're trp agamst It," growled McEninr. "Everybody was half -abet, lota of hullabaloo and musk and Zulu drumming, the regu lar lights were not even on in the library-ballroom they were .using a spot and colored floodlights. No body seems to know exactly where anybody else was. Why, lew of 'em knew Mrs. Elderbank was out of the room, even. Merriam admits he left the lights he was tending to go out and see if this dancer was ready. He says he saw Mrs. Elder bank going up to answer the phone about then, and he says a little later he was hi the kitchen and butler's pantry checking up the liquor sup ply with -the butler'' "Thus cleartegr'' said Montigny, smiling faintly, -the butler 7 "Oh, yes, Copples is -all right. We're having bun watched. But i n not wot lying about him.' 'Mr. Elderbank, seated at -a eoTBer of MeEairy's desk, had been Test ins jus head wearily ia his hands, his eyes dosed. He rose abruptly. "I cant stand any more tf this, -Inspector he said bitterly. "I'm go ing to leave the rest to you and Cap tain Moxttigny. I am going to my hotel." "All right, Mr. Xlderbank, I think you'd better. The thing is too dose to you. I thousrht perhaps. though, that while yea were here" you'd like to see this Merriam chap." Elderbank stiffened. He was -a stern, commanding figure when ha drew himself to full height. . "Yes, I should like to see the blackguard," he declared vehement ly. "I shall not go until I have seen him." McEniry with a quizzical smile on his lips spoke a message into t'ie telephone summoning Merriam. Sergeant Darden was in the outer office and desired to speak to him, the Inspector was told. - A new line on this pencil busi ness," said Darden. "We have traced it." "Already? Good! Shoot!" "It's a newspaper man's pencil, extra-soft copy i eader's pencil, the kind they use at the Amalgamated Press offices. There was another just like it in Tburber's pocket when he was searched last night. He admits it is his pencil 1" "His pencil, eh? muttered Mc Eniry into the receiver. How does he account for it being on that roof?" "Says he doesn't know he might hare dropped it when he was up there putting up his radio aerial, er it might have fallen eat of his pocket last night when he was in the Elderbank roof garden. Then he remembered that -his lawyer had told hfm not to talk, and he wouldn't My-anything more." "All right, Darden. Good work." The Inspector hung up his re ceiver as Price Merriam entered. .Price was 'debonairly dressed, as usual, handsome as a screen star, not a doubt lurking in his clean; frank eyes too dear and frank to be perfectly true, one felt. His brown hair was faultlessly brushed. His hand, as he extended it4o Mr. Elderbank, exhibited the glistening pink finger nails of s monungrinani enre. Elderbank ignored tha out stretched hand. "Don't pretend any intimacy with me, sir," said the old man coldly. 1 don't want to shake hands with you. I want an explanation of this ghastly outrage." Merriam seemed astounded. "Why, what's the matter, Mr. El derbank?" he exclaimed. "Imf rrghs fnlly done in with aU that has happened, bat surely curdy, sir, you don't blame me!" "Blame you?!' cried Elderbank. "Blame yon! I'll send you to the electric chair, that's what 111 do, you miserable bounder!" Merriam paled. He glanced ap preaeasivety at Inspector McEniry and Montigny. His lip trembled. cis Toupin administered his es tate, as shown of record. We have good words concern ing the intelligence and charac ter of the unlettered heroine ot Washington living's Astoria. Ja son Lee met her in 1S38, on his way east after the Lausanne par ty; met her with Factor Pierre C. Pambrun's wife near the Whit man station, where she was a' favorite with Nardssa Whitman and was-under the especial .pro tection of the mistress of old Fort Waila Walla. Lee was Teputedly favorably impressed with her. "It is aatd that, in the Willamette valley, she was a frequent visitor at the Jason Lee mission from 1841 on, and that she learned to apeak fair English. Dr. Elijah White spoke highly of her, hav ing become well acquainted with her after his second arrival in 1842. Lee called her a very old wo man, in 1838. She could not then have been far from 47. Father Delorme wrote in the record ef her burial "do cent ans" as her age. Meaning. I take, it, within or around 100 years. She must have appeared old 12 years before,, to Lee. Her body In death must have appeared much older,; to Father Delorme. He was a scholarly man. Ho became vicar general. You may have your guess. My guess is that she had so endured, la her twenties, as to make her In her forties look like eighty,., and in her fifties Ilka a hundred. Barry say Marie and . Baptists Dorion were the first independent settlers In Oregon; eitixena and net connected with any trapping company. Saeagawe jAd -the he roine of the Astorianswere fitting forerunners of a. feast of pioneer women who tok tble mparts Lu biasing the-trails to -and f the ultimate and wastermost west. It has been written that whlle many men grew chicken hearted, weak ened and turned back, after start ing in the covered wagon days, no woman ever voluntarily turned back. That meant a multitude.' The first Conestoga. covered wa gon camo west with the Whit mans . in 183. From then until 1869, fuDy 350,000 Americans took those long trails, until 'the driving of tha last spike at Pro montory Point at the north :end of the Great Salt Lake, "joining together the Union and Central P a e 1 f 1 e railroads. It was . the greatest trek of all history, trans- "Why. Mr. Elderbank, I did the very oast that i eonid to to protect her. I was opposed to certain features of last night's party and X told her so. Why, we scarcely knew half the people -who were present some peculiar so-called artist folk from 'next door, far instance. But I didn't r thrnV that amy of them " - jsidttroansr interrupted in a voice that rose to a roar: "Yon were a party to this dastardly outrage, and don't you deny it ! Ton set the brutal scoundrels on her you told them how to go about it, how to trick her into answering Tier telephone the police have the proof of it, and by heaven " The old man's anger choked him. "What what proof?" stammered Merriam. "I haven't done anything wrong. I knew nouxng about this terrible plot you ought to realize that, .Mr. Elderbank. Ton have no right to turn on me this way. I have served your interests faith fully." "Faithfully? Yea lying dog! You unconscionable beast! You -were en trusted with the protection of this poor woman. Yon bad every reason to be grateful to her, and to me. rou were paid: twice for everything you did emeerby my wfe and once by ma. Bat you -were not satisfied with that yon thief, yon mur-1 aerer!" Elderbank 's nttffv f aee had grown purple. Inspector McEniry gently urged him into a chair. 44 AH -right, air, try not to get ex cited, sir," cautioned the Inspector. "We're going to handle this chap for you." i "Yon haven't got a thing on me," babbled Merriam in sudden terror. "Yon can't pis this horrible crime on me. I didnt have a thing to do with it, I tell you" "Except the long cord leading to your window," put in the Inspector coolly; "you tied the bag on that, didn't you the bag that contained Mrs. Elierbank's jewelry after you had kiSed her!" "Good heavens. Inspector, what are you saying? I " Merriam looked around helplessly. Sweat had popped out on his forehead, and he mopped it with a spotless cambric handkerchief. He caught the hostile glare of Elderbank's eyes and it seemed to give him resolution. "Oh, edl sight," said bitterly, his lip curling. "I seem to be the general goat for everything, dont I? All right, Inspector, IH tdl you this and it is gospel truth I know nothing whatsoever about the cord somebody tied atside my window. It's a plant, v a dirty frame-up. I never saw or heard about this 'Gar vice' they're asking me about. I didnt know there was such a person in the house with me. They could have got into my rooms all right.! They could lrae stolen my key somebody did. .a a matter of fact or they could have sneaked in while the -maid was deaninr, and bid-j -yea. tier 'could have est in. bellowed EJdexbank, "with youraid. and consent. Merriaaa faced the -eld man squarely. ""New, let me tell yew something, yon xtagratefnl old croak." Merriam pointed his finger st him. I wanted to play fair with you, yon hypocritical old heel, but yoa ve chosen to slam the dirt at me, and by heaven, IH tell what know!" Elderbank rose ia renewed rage. "Get him oat of here, get him out of here," he shouted, "before he pro vokes me to violence." "Ah. cut she melodrama." sneesed Merriam. "Nobody's afraid of you, yoa puffed-np bag of wind. Dont think you can bully me. I dont care whether yoetve got fifteen million dollars or fifteen cents. Play me in the feg and 111 coma back at yen. I know all about yon. yen darned old fraud, and. I'm. going to teU-all I know." "Stop him! Ston him!" stormed Elderbaek. "Ill kill him if he keeps on with these insults!" "Let him go on." growled In spector McEiury, who had taken a new interest ia Merriam in view of this show of spirit. "If he knows anything that's true it wont hurt to let it come out." The Safety Valve Letters from Statesman .Headers WHEN MEN WERE MEN To the Editor: Perhaps once or tvTca. In a year, the newspapers will delineate the; story ot an apostate minister of the gospel, who has defaulted from the dignity of his high call ing In "Christ Jesus, scrapped the sacred rows of his ordination to preach, and gooe morally berserk. Such instances, I believe, are rare, but when it does Happen, no mat ter where, the sun is immediately turned into- darkness and the moon into blood. The newspapers play it up with a bold front page- bead lines, the scoffers and under world purveyors of carrion, grab it for a bludgeon to . belabor tire church, and hell decrees a. Roman holiday to celebrate the sordid episode with prolonged conclaves of unsophisticated dee. I have been informed upon good authority, that every metro politan newspaper from Portland to JBaffalo, has carried a sensa tional story of the Salem clergy man, who swapped, umsighi un seen, the big over-staffed chairs of his Unitarian pulpit for a hard bottom seat at a Tiajuaaa poker table; wrote $00 1n bogus check to finance his peculations and pre cipitately landed in jalL It any planting a whole cross aoctloa of civilisation, mostly by slow mov ing ox teams, more than 2000 miles through plains and desert spaces with -no built roads, over high mountains and -across bridge less and terryless streams, and all along the way lurked wild savage tribes, many of them resentful of tha encroachment upon what they believed their property and their rights,' So the covered wagon was the. ship of the desert or the river by day .and the house and fortress by-nlgbt. for these .our Oregon Argonauts. Our pioneer women endured trials and braved dangers beyond - those ot the so called sterner sex. We who enjoy the fruits of their labors and sacri fices and the benefits of the clear ness of their prophetic visions (Turn to Page 23) "I know something- that's true you're- dead right X do," said Mer riam triumphantly. "I know this mangy old scoundrel threatened his wife threatened to kill her. Now make the most of that, if you're looking for suspects ! Dont pick on somebody because a eheap crook has pulled a plant on him. He threat ened her. Arrest him!" "He is lying," shouted Elderbank. "It is not true, not a miserable word of it." "It's true if your wife spoke the truth about it," said Merriam coolly. "It isnt hearsay, either, I've got it fat black and white. She wrote me about it. You can put that letter in evidence. Inspector, along with your fishing cord." "Where is it?" demanded Mc Eniry. "It's in ray box at the bank Pre saved it for just such a time aa this." "I defy yoa to produce it, you in fernal scoundrel!" challenged El derbank. "If you have any such letter it is a forgery." "Well let the authorities judge as to that. She wrote me from Mon treal that yon had threatened her life, because she wouldn't give yoa a divorce. Oh, I know all about your love nest' on Sherbrooke Street, yoa tricky old hypocrite. Don't stand there and make faces at me, you cant scare me. I know you've got a girl in Montreal. And your wife knew about it. Yon weren't fooling anybody. Did you want the jewels for her for your sweet thing in Canada? Is that why you stole tn em hired gunmen to kill your wife?" "Stop him! Stop hfan!" shrieked Elderbank, ill-restrained by the commanding bulk of McEniry, who stood between him and the dapper young man who was taunting him. "Turn against me, call me a cheap crook, will you!" Merriam went on. "Ill give you something to worry, aBout Yon had the jew els insured in year name, didnt you eight hundred and fifty thousand dollars didnt you? You'd get a cheap divorce and you'd get paid twice tor the stones, wouldnt you one? by the insurance company, once by the fence who took them in I Or did .you intend giving them to this dame in Montreal " " You're a dirty, low unprincipled thief and bck " '-"Oh. cut tha theatricals. You cant bully fire as yoa did this poor woman who was your wife. Bnt yon couldn't make her give you a divorce, for all your bullying, eoald yoa? Yoa coaldnt get the gf OUBOSL could you? That's why yea hired me, really, wasnt it yoa hoped there would be grounds, didnt yoa? Yoa had us watched. But I didnt fall into the trap, yoa nasty old scheming knave.4 "Nix on the personalities!" com manded McEniry. "You can tell what you've got to tell without this rough staff. Yoa dont have to in sult this, old gentleman.' -"He insulted mes" said Merriam coldly. "He accused me of breach ing a trust, of denbie-dealtng, ef theft and nsurder. I'm a sqpssre sheoter, Inspector, whatever else you may say f me. I neer picked a defenseless woman to double cross.' Why wouldnt she c4t him a divorce?" interrogated McEniry Nunuy. "Because it wasnt na ta her. thafa why. She had done nothing to be divorced for. She had kept her end of the contract1 By nmnirtr around to DeanviTle. New York. Palm Beach " "He forced her into it. He made life unbearable for her. She told me the whole truth. She said I was the only real friend she had." And you hoped te marrv her yourself -some day, eh? Merriam shrugged. "It Is a mat ter of no consequence what I lieped.' At anyTate I played square with her, and I'm just as anxious to find the fiends who killed her. In spector, as you are." Elderbank had subsided Into a. broken heap. He sat humped up fat nis cnair. saying notmng. (To Be Continued) emW. 1W4. kr Srta . Tarfaraa MiBSoWif KheTlma Sjaaif. Iaa, other professional man onder the sun, had done the Same evil, I doubt if any thing would have been said of it outside of the local community. The moral lapses of modern ministers are much like the sins of King David, they not only stick, but give great occasion for the enemies of God to blas phemy. The scandal aide however, not always justifiable, is but one ex treme of aa illustrative ease. There Is yet another extreme of a group of rose-water sentimen talists, sob-sisters and spinel. ss jelly-fishes in haman form, who blink at immorality, defy crimin als, and shed buckets full of croc odile tears ever tha XXickmaas, the Hauptmann's, the Dillinger's the Sankeys, "machine gun" Kel ly's, and last but not least, the ministers, who deliberately turn their backs on decency, and trek to a tar country to associate with swlae. X have noticed that two or three contributors 40 the "Safety Valve". Indulged ia considerable palaver about forgiveness, .practicing the Golden Rule, by string tha erring minister another chance, all of which-is just so much piffle to me. I am ot the opinion, that if there was ever a miscarriage of justice in the state of Oregon, the case to which this article refers is one of the rawest. Where, may I ask. ts the mas culinfty or justice to be seen ia turning loose a crooked preacher, who was caught red-handed In crime, while dozens of other men are serving long terms in the pen itentiary for offences ot half the turpitude of his? Who cares for a two year sentence to the state pri son with a parole pasted on tha commitment papers? If other men out there behind the grey walls of the Oregon. basUla were net gives a chaneo to ake right the wrongs they perpetuated, why should Oris preacher "be made the exception?" Not so long ago. tight here In Salem, when men were men, snd magistrates ate something but mash, a protestant minister went morally haywire.. Tha conference to which he belonged forgave him his sins, but threw him -- bodily over the moon In ministers! dis card, -whlla the federal " govern ment took up the trail and sent him to McNeil prison for a term of -eight long years, t repeat here that .those were the days when men were men, and the women were made of something mora substantial that Lydia E. Pink ham's "prnk pills for pale people". ALLEN O. HESS :