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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 1, 1935)
PAGE FOUR The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Thursday Morning, August 1, 1935 , Founded 1IS1 .' ' ' v ; "ATo Favor Sways Vsi No Fear- Shall Awe From First Statesman, March 23, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Chaklcs A- Spbaguc" Editor-Manager Sheldon V. Sackett - , Member of the Associated Press Th X wis ted PreM U iciiulveljr entitled la the use for publica tion of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited IB ibis paper. . tity Water OALEM drinks its first municipally owned water today. O The formalities of the transfer are being concluded, the iwarrant for 1,000,000 will be turned over to the Oregon "Washington Water Service company which will vacate its property and the city will enter into possession. The admin istration of the water plant will be in the hands of a commis sion of five men: Edward Rostein, chairman; I. M. Dough ton, Wm. Gahlsdorf, E. B. Gabriel and J. M. Rickman, and the, superintendent will be Cuyler Van Patten. Citizens will not observe any change in the water for the time beingSoon some reconstruction will be undertaken which will. augment service in special districts; but it will be some time before general improvements will be made ; and of course a still longer time before any alteration in source of supply will be made. It is well for the commission to defer .passing on this question until it has a good working knowl edge of its property and its possibilities. It is of prime importance to get the enterprise started right. Close business management, free from politics is the requirement. Particularly is it important for the commission to work through and with the superintendent and not try to deal directly with the problems. .petent and he should be given the degree of confidence and authority which the position requires. The initial salary roll is heavy, too heavy except for the temporary period of change. The engineering expense is -justified for a program of construction. But the commis sion will have to be careful not to pile on payroll expense. Another thing important to begin with is for the com mission to insist on no "free water". It is easy for the city council to ask for free water for fire, for parks, for the city hall, etc But the verdict of experience is that these supplies should be paid for even if it appears to be merely shifting funds from one pocket to another. On the other hand the commission should be held ac countable for the tax liability. The private company paid over $20,000 in taxes. The commission may not plan to make any direct tax payment into the public treasury, though it would be a pretty good thing if it did. But if that is done, it should devote an amount equivalent to the taxes in plant in vestment or in debt retirement. In fact with proper manage ment and with its saving in interest and taxes the debts .should, be retired faithfully and all Improvements paid for after the initial reconstruction is completed. This work may be volunteered : beware of delinquencies. The city can no more make the plant pay unless it gets its collections in than the private company. There may be a ten dency on the part of some consumers to let the bill ride and then tell the city to jump in the river. Such a policy if allowed would be costly in the extreme. The city will find it will have to be fully as firm as the private company in insisting on prompt payment of bills ; and the sooner it makes the public know that by a few shutoffs the easier its course will be. All parties concerned will need to exercise patience. The new managers will have to learn. The public must know that deficiences in service due to plant cannot be overcome imme diately. There should be team-work, a willingness to give the commission a free hand and to refrain from criticism until it becomes experienced. Above all the business must be kept out of politics, job trading the "right cooperation among ;star and the public, Salem own water system. , Finally we cannot record the tranfer without a trib ute to the Oregon Washington Water Service company. In many ways they have been rather harshly dealt with in Sa lem. In the face of many handicaps they have maintained good service and supplied the except where certain conditions arose beyond their control. They have dealt honorably with our people. Manager J. T. Delaney has' been a forceful figure in community activities and with Mrs. Delaney has won many close friends. Pres ident Elliot? in his many visits to Salem has been gracious and reasonable. He has tried to discharge faithfully his duty to his bond and stockholders and yet has been ready to negotiate with the city when its verdict came for public own ership. At times the company's procedure may have seemed obstructionist, but no more so than any individual would have been with his property at stake. So far as we have ob served the company and President Elliott have conducted their business honorably and in a straightforward manner; and those on the other side of the trading counter will testify ' to the personal charm of Mr. Elliott as well as to his ability -as a business man anu utility manager. So as we lift a tumbler of Salem water we may drink two toasts: one to the old company and its executives; the other to the new municipal water and its managers. J. K. Weatherford OREGON lost one of its finest citizens Wednesday when James K. Weatherford passed away at Albany at the age of 84 years. His career spans a large portion of the his tory of Oregon as a state and he was a -strong influence in the molding of that history. On the sound foundation laid by the men of the 40's and '50's, Mr. Weatherford and those of his generation built; and the commonwealth of today is large ly the result of the labors of these men and women. Standing as the great monument to the public labors of Mr. Weatherford is Oregon State college. He was one of the first graduates of the college, and served as a regent for ap proximately 50 years, until the board consolidation took place in 1929. He was diligent in planning for the expansion of the college and attained national recognition for his work in the field of the land grant college. : Mr. Weatherford was a member of the Albany school board for 50 years and served as Linn county school super intendent, mayor of Albany, and speaker of the house of rep resentatives. He practiced law continuously from 1876 until his 'death, and was one of the leaders of the Oregon bar. The state has lost a man distinguished for his public service, his professional attainments and his exemplary pri vate life. - - Rickreall women deserre commendation for their courage la sking the county authorities to do a little moral scrubbing in that town. If any of these crossroads towns run pretty loose. They hare -little or-ao city-government and the eonnty officers are miles away. It has been some time since Marlon county bad any raids, and doubt less the scrub-brush could be used over here. Charley West, ex-represent tire, and more recently Pres. Roose velt messenger boy to the congress, has been kicked upstairs by .being made an under-seeretary of the Interior. As liaison official he got eereral bumps and bruises. He might be assigned the Virgin lles te practice on. - Grants Pass turned down the PWA bait for a new high school by defeating a proposed bond issue. . . Though PWA boosted the dole to 45 per cent, that is not enough. Communities are "on relief" the same as individuals; and want 190 per cent or nothing. . Rex Tugwell who is busy spending tens of millions In land re aettlentent projects woke np and found he had 1S.000 employes, three times as many as NBA had at its peak. So he tired 8000 of them. Unsettlement for resettlement. - The lumber strikers in a mill at Hoquiam hare won unquali fied victory. The mill has been ordered closed permanently and be dismantled. V ..-IS Managing-Editor The superintendent is com-1 and salary dickering, etc. With the commission, the operating should succeed in managing its citizens with wholesome water The Great Game of Politics By FRANK R. KENT Copyright 1935, y The BsUioMre Sua Party-Bound Boobs Washington, July 27. THERE are signs that intelligent men and women held -within the two major parties' by theparty label are going to be far fewer next year than ever before. This does not hold true in the South so far as the State elec tions are con cerned, bat it does hold true in every section bo far as na tional elections are concerned. 1 V fraak B. Kant THE extraor dinary way In which the Demo cratic and Republican parties In tne past two years have shed their traditional doctrines and each to day is occupying positions, which Historically belong to the other or at least do not belong to it is completely obvious. For ptidi. pie, the Republicans now are far more sympathetic to the teachings Of Thomas Jefferson than tha present Democratic Administra tion, which to the Jeffersonian Democrats does not seem Demo. cratic at all. Party history be comes a Joke when Rennblicana defend the Rights of the Rrntn and inveigh against the growth of the Federal power, while a Dem ocratic Administration goes to ex tremes In sapping the one and in creasing the other. UNDER such circumstances, "par ty loyalty" would still annar nat ural in those either on the Fed eral pay roll, hoping to get on or in some form dependent nnon their local party omnizatinna For these, adherence to the party label and support of the party candidate, na matter who he may be or for uffiat he may stand, is a simple matter of self-interest mrv to understand. But for others who do not belong to these classes, such blind allegiance to a party name, now utterly meaningless, seems the height of Btupidlty. THIS, of course, has been more or less true for a number of vmt-s Tn several campaigns there has been no distinct Issue between the par ties. Particularly was this the case in 1928. There was the greatest difference in the personalities of the candidates, but the platforms offered no choice at all. In recent years it has been increasingly dif ficult for a man to give a clear reason "why I am a Democrat" or "why I am a Republican." Never, however, has the absurdity of the labels, as representing basic prin ciples and political traditions, been as complete as now. With the Roosevelt Administration hav ing almost wholly repudiated the Democratic platform of J 932 and adopted policies which Democrats for generations have been taught to abhor, and with the Republi cans urging Jeffersonian Demo cratic principles, partly because of political expediency and partly through inability to formulate other policies with such a state of affairs, this clinging of millions to party labels acquired through inheritance is too ridiculous for words. THE fact is elections in this coun try in the past have been decided by the approximately ten per cent, of the voters not held by par ty ties, but who swing between the two parties. Ninety per cent of the voters are divided between the Re publicans and Democrats, with the former under normal conditions having the larger percentage but both Drettv risridlv htd h the Inherited feeling about the party with which they are affil iated. These support their candi date for President regardless of Issues or Individuals, solely be cause he wears the party label. THIS ten per cent are the free voters the ninety ner cent ara the boobs. That has . been true of the ninety per cent in most Pres idential elections in recent vpadl If the same proportion holds It wm oe particularly boobish in the next. There are plenty of Repub licans who believe in Mr. Roose velt and there are a good many Democrats whose basic convic tions are violated by his policies. The words Democratic and Re publican, as formerly understood, have not the remotest application to eitner the New Deal or the chief New Dealer. Not a rhost of rea son for Using them in. tnnnaorfnn with either party except that of tuuTeuience can he given. WHETHER von favor Mr Hnnao. relt or not, the truth of that state ment cannot be eainsald it i n clear that the mora thnnvtitfnl politicians generally concede that m 133 6 tne number of free voters win be very greatly increased, the percentage of nartv-bound hnnh. greatly lowered. It seems inevit able, under conditions as they have developed the man who says "I am a lifelong Democrat" or "T tun a lifelong Republican' cannot t&ke the curious pride in that kind of statement so many have In the past; That is, he can't if he reas ons, at all or. has even a rudi mentary sense of humor. Business Men Slate Friday Night Movies JEFFERSON. Jnlv si. Six teen business men were present Monday night for the meetlnr at the Jefferson Better Bnaineaa rtnh at Review office. Further activi ties of the dab were discussed. Another moving older ahnw wm be held on the vacant lot north of the blacksmith shoii Friday nirht and another treasure hunt held Saturday at 3 D. m. Over EOS neo. pie attended the tree outdoor show sponsored by tbe Jefferson merchants last Friday. Bits for Breakfast ByJLJ. HENDRICKS More markers and monuments will bring more business and they will pay for themselves: a V ; It would pay the state of Ore gon to place a historic marker or monument at every point that de serves one. S H It would be good business to provide the necessary money for their conservative and legitimate cost from the funds paid for gas oline taxes. The increase they would make in those taxes would soon wipe out their cost If constructed over a period of years, the money would be provid ed by that Increase as the work proceeded. . m On account of our unsurpassed climate and our many other at tractions for outsiders, our "tour ist crop" is already a profitable one, and large, and growing. S No one thing besides will do as much to extend and perpetuate its growth as the increase of history mindedness on the part of our people, to the extent that they shall transmit the spirit to vis itors. . The best way to promote the growth of history mindedness Is to make more markers and monu ments. a The easiest way of education is with tangible, visible objects, through the eyes and the hands. The alphabet of nature is plain, and is its own teacher. V S -a This state's history is suffi ciently important and colorful to Justify a state-wide campaign ex tended throughout the years. "a "a "a Oregon Is the mother of states west of the Rockies, and the his tory made here has had vital rela tionships with the history of our nation; and important reverbera tions throughout the world. . ,. Jason Lee came in 1834. Had he not come then, and had he not been the kind of man he was, the British flag would now fly over this coast, from Behring's sea to the isthmus of Panama. He sounded the tocsin of set tlement, told the world of the dor mant potential resources here, and so the arc of the republic was extended from the snows of the Rockies to the sands of the Pa cific. The Safety Valve Letters from Statesman Readers To the Editor: Counties Need the Money I introduced In the legislature a measure known as Senate Bill 140, permitting the payment of two dollars and fifty cents or more on taxes, at any time. It passed both Houses, was signed by the governor, and is now a law. The bill also provided that It will require five years before property can be sold for taxes. which extends the time two years longer than the former law. The tax paying part is of es pecial interest to those working for. wages, farmers who sell milk, hogs, and a calf or two, and others who desire to set aside each month a certain sum to be paid on taxes, before using their money for other purposes.. It is a good law. and -should be given more publicity that all who desire to take advantage of it may do so. We know it will make more work in the tax de partment, and while some of tbe employes may object to this add ed bnrden of collecting mnnpr in small amounts and giving re ceipts for It. the general public will not object when it becomes necessary to their having suf ticient helo to carry out the provisions of this act. There are many hundreds of people in Marion County alone who do not Know this is tbe law. I would like to suggest that in every tax department in the state, signs be put np acquainting the public or mis privilege, and get them in the habit of paying often, that the tax delinquencies may be materially reduced. CHAS. K. SPAULDING. CHAI.V LETTERS To the Editor: Chain letters seem to have gone as quickly as they came. Poor mankind is grabbing at any thing which would seem to give it hope. In the desire for relief they grab at a straw as a drown ing man. The longing for happi ness and contentment causes poor mortals to seek the end of the rainbow where might be found me pot of gold. The dime chain letter scheme offered glorious rewards, but alas, how fraU it proved to be. But there is In the world to day a chain letter which Im mnra enduring and whoserewards are ure na permanent. Many are life-long recipients of its bene fits. And. because of Its existence there dwells in many hpnrta tha eternal spring of hope and joyl 'uu rpeace. To a world doomed by evil and its. results, there sage of divine love and forgive ness. This Is the chain that r.A started by sending his sob into we woria. He transmitted tbe message to a few and the in to others. It Is supposed to go to every creature. Would I break the chain? Would any of my readers? Would we cut short the only com munication which can bring satis faction to the human soul? It cost much to start this chain letter. Should any of us esteem it light ly?' : Tonrs In humble service, Franklin P. Chedlster In that westward march of set tlement came three men to the site of Salem, and they went to work for Sutter, who had passed this way. They were-. Bennett, Marshall and Staats. and they discovered gold In Sutter's mill race, Jan. 24, 184S. The news raced around the world and brought men of every color and condition from the far corners of the earth. They laid the founda tions of 11 commonwealths, "a The first gold rushers were from the Willamette valley. They took charge by right of being first comers, organized California Into a state, and broke it into the union With Oregon's supreme judge. Peter H. Burnett, for governor. and with copies of Oregon's pro visional government statutes among the first laws of the state of California, taken thither by Governor Burnett, who had been a member of the first Oregon pro v I b 1 o nal government legislative body chosen by the people at the polls; the one of 1844. "a "a When the Oregon gold rushers in California had prepared that corner of the country for state hood, and were ready to make the attempt of breaking it into the union, full fledged and panoplied, with no waiting at the gate no sitting on the mourner's bench in territorial form there was only one man in congress from the do main west of the Rockies only one person to. act as spokesman for the presumptuous fledgling south of parallel 42. Without Ore gon's voice, there would have been no clarion voice for California's claims. That man in congress was Sam uel R. Thurston, first delegate from Oregon. He made the great address that resulted in breaking California into the union, full fledged, with two United States senators, already elected and on hand to take their seats. S S Jesse Applegate, out in Oregon, arranged for the proxy that gave Horace Greeley a place in the Chi cago convention that gave Lincoln the nomination for the presidency- that influenced powerfully the course of world history. Oregon has a colorful history. A hundred sites cry for markers. Several hundred should be mark ed, for the glory of the state and the benefit of tourists coming this way annually in increasing num bers. Let's keep on keeping on arouse and perpetuate a sentiment of sane history mindedness in Oregon. Twenty Years Ago A null st 1. 101. Edith Channel of Kansas City, Mo., reached the San Francisco exposition on foot yesterday, a journey of six months. In that time, she had thrown off a threat of tuberculosis. Oregon loganberry Juice has made its home state famous at the Bay City exposition. An informal recention will greet Dr. Carl Gregg Doney and his ramuy August 4. Ten Years Ago An mist 1. iavc Great suffering prevails along the Polish border where thou sands of Germans are encamped on their way back to Germany. Poland is evicting them. Johnny Weismuller broke his own world record for the 100- yard free stvle at Seattle vester day, swimming tha distance In ou.t seconds. Improvements for the hi rh school athletic field on North 14th when completed will include three baseball diamonds, three football gridirons, handball and tennis courts. Campfire Supper Prepared for 4-H Club Joint Picnic BETHEL. July 31. The clubs. "Five Careful Canners," and "Just Us Girls" held a loint Die nic at the old covered bridge on Mill Creek. The instructor, Mrs. Carmalite .Weddle, supervised the cooking of a hot suooer over a campfire. Later the group went to the home of one of the mem bers where the even in r was nro. fitably spent on 4-H club work. Mrs. S. Hamrick, Eugene and Lois Hamrick have returned from Longview where thev visited Mm. Hamrick's daughter, Mrs. O. D. Smith and family, formerly of Salem. H. M. Heath of Cuba Buys Seifried Ranch DAYTON. July SI. A deal has been raada whtrreh M XT Heath, of Cuba, became the own er of the Arthur Seifried SO acre farm two miles north of Dayton in the Unity neirhfcor- hood, adjoining the Dayton-Portland highway. The farm has been owned and operated by Mr. Sei fried since mi. Mr.- Heath is interested Jn a hemp fiber plant In Cuba. Five Picnic Slated at SUverton Sunday slated for the Sllverton park In clude: August 4, the Pomona grange group, Rebekahs of Wood- uurn, Lttineran Sunday school of Woodbarn. HIck-Manldfnr and the S peers elan reunions: August m. i, cmin and North Dakota pic nic. Elliot Pralila community nW nic sfrKtaa aaaaa1 4mm. lam, fc 4Vieaa naiA . "THE SNOW LEOPARD" CHAPTER XIX .- Bannister was stunned. For the second time that day Karen Sire had exhibited a wholly unaccount able contempt tor him. He could have forgiven tbe first rebuff; be had thrust himself upon her at tune when she was under great stress; ahe had not sought his ad vice or assistance. But this latest performance was a flagrant affront. "Hod was right," he muttered bit-: terly. "The girt doesnt regard me as an equal. I'm just aa odd sort ox fish to her one to be hooked and thrown overboard after the catch. Tuh! I can't buy a white chip in the game these people are playing. maybe she had a throne m mmd even while I was harping about the pelt of a snow leopard. But 'who ever, or whatever this Prince" was, he's dead now. What's the next move in the game?" He took an ele vator up. Toole had an automatic in his hand when he opened the door to admit his friend. "Expecting Jeff Whipple?" Dick queried pleasantly. Toole dropped the gun into his coat pocket. "Just male in' sure," he answered shortly. "That bird has bounced his last blackjack off my dome." "We might as well fold up and get out of here," Bannister re marked. "Karen's got the stuff she wants and has skipped, leaving Jeff to hold the bag. Metaphorically, we're in the same boat." "Not exactly. The house has been instructed not to tell Jeff that she's gone. The little lady is presumed to be in her room right now. It wont be long before Jeff finds out what was none to him. Maybe hell make a call on her. "Suppose we shift to her room.1 Bannister suggested. "Ill ret Bully to bark a mtle and hell think if s the chow. We can put on the lights s they'll shine out on the loggia. Hell notice all this when he comes np- from the Base Boom and think .that Karen is is the room.'" "Would jou be willing to go into her rooms and stay there all night alone 7 Toole asked. Bannister recoiled. "Mot alone, he said. " What if she returned aod caught me ereucUax ia these? Whet would ahe think?" "That's all fixed. Too -Went be disturbed by anybody, except pos sibly Jeff himself. Take the boots alonr if you like." "What win you be doing all this time?" "Tnere's a squib in tbe papers sayin' that I'm in Bellevue with in juries sustained in a taxi collision. as IVe told you. Jeff may fall for this and he may not. He has under ground sources of information just the. same as I have. lis may even know -that I'm in this room. I'll stick right here and watch. If he enters Miss Sif e's room and mixes it with you, IH be on the job right away. "I don't get your straterr ret.1 grumbled Dick. Karen has the only evidence that would be useful ia holding Whipple and it's clear that she doesnt wish it to become public'' "Well, yon came Into this game to help her. didnt yon?" Toole re torted. "She cave me to understand that she'd rather have Whipple holding the stuff than us. Can't you At a aa a . see uax ana. am ma hipped for a xaiir Bannister could net sea this and said so. "If yon had 1st me kkk Whipple down the hallway. I could nave T-istmca tnat it. -was just a plain fight and both he and I would have been arrested. That would -give yon plenty of time to get this stuff out of his room Another thing, ron cinched him f or thetlina-np and tie slugged you to .get way. The aimpler procedure would he to arrest him again." "It would," Toole admitted, "if Hiss Sire hadn't forced me te change my plans." He looked stead ily into Bannister's eyes. ""Do art ;part?" he asked. j Camp Fire Girls are on Summer's Outing DAYTON, Jnly Ten mem bers .of the Dayton Wlntap Camp fire girls left Wednesday lor South Dakota Tells 'Em I "No!" Dick, snapped. Toole silently handed over a key to the anita- Imct varataul rnr IT awn Sire. Bannister picked up his boots. waisperea to suuy, ana tog-ether they stepped out into the corridor, leavinr Toole alone. Ctoenm the door of the darkened apartment, Dick entered and switched on a light, revealing a suite more richly Bannister drew the draperies and daintily furnished than the one he had just quitted. The Dresden dock chimed a welcome to him; a pretty figurine, perched above it, swept a bow. FTarrance Just a suggestion of it to Bannister: he saw no nowers. But Karen Sirs had been there. Bally looked us at him and whim pered. Hie master felt jaeer, almost nocuous, ut drew out a small pistoL examined it and thrust it back into his hip pocket. Its deadly accuracy was known to him; with that toy-like weapon he would have reararded himaell as a bunarler if ha missed the eye of a chicken at ten paces. Bannister next kicked off his shoes. Welkin? to a wfridaw h looked down and far out into the park. Automobiles thousands of them whirred and gleamed through the darkness. Cut even in the midst of this he caught a note of the -wild. One long drawn cry came to his ears ; only a caged wolf. pernaps, yet nad the beast la the park aoo scented the presence of a kindred spirit? Would Jeff Whipple stir at the cry and ereen ant for tha foray! The idea altered Dick's strategy h turned off the Iirfats. JP norm were -yet to pass before ear Whipple returned to his room. Bannister spent them ia tortured inactivity; What if Karen did re turn? Fleatinar Into the room, aha would find him there in sox, trou sers and shirt perhaps with a toy pistoi in us Band, ttnuy had curled np a the- bathroom mat and anna to sleep hunt before Dick heard a sound at Whipple's door. Presently a flood of light fell across the loggia -the man was inside. Five, minutes snore -oasaed. Dfek thought he heard the ramble of a muffled curse. Perhana Jeff hA opened his portfolio and found that he had been duped. Another blef oHowed bv an unmistakable thud. Tha big. fellow m doubt had thrown the bag to the floor. tfaanister weal to the window and i Patches eamp for their summer outing of fire days. Miss Claire Wagner, their leader, accompa nied them. They will return in Urn to enroll . in the weekday bi ble achool scheduled ' to open in Dayton Monday. August S. By Chris Hawthorne lifted it cautiously. New York is never still, but for one brief inter val in every twenty-four hours, something like complete repose set tles upon the city. It comes between ing milk trucks. That interval had arnvea. Thm aiio4it Thj( luuMm. WunnUae starless and murky. Bannister be- about htm and held his breath. ran to feel at home. Many a tiro and at such an hour he had squat ted tn the darkness near a water hole, -waiting for some wild beast to come within ran of his run. From far back ia the park cages another if !Vg powl came to his ears. The light in Whipple's room went out. Bannister stepped behind the heayy draperiea and waited. Through a slit between the window easement and the satin folds he commanded a -view of Jeff's only possible approach rem the outside and at the same time kept an eye on the door. He did not have Ion to wait Jeff had chosen the win dow. Dick heard a faint scraping as from the cautious raising of a sash. Soon a figure loomed through the murk, if thatTcould be said of a neb ulous thing of less seeming density than the surrounding darkness. It was a huge form, yet, in an en veloping robe and hood of pale gray, it wore the aspect of a phantom. Within a yard of Bannister the apparition ataotwwf anH ifi .v. winow Jith a pressure so carefully exerted that it seemed to rise under ? ?n force. Spectral and silent, it bent ever until the hood was fairly within. Bannister drew ti ...... v. about him antf hoi1 t,;. .v Slowly a gray leg was thrust across the si2; rjreaenuir tv J"Ja 'room. The watcher saw it move neiaalaa!w v. & v uB. aiauea ue aarkness : the array m . lamp. " T " h.Vli?ti,,5&! back cross the room like a puma, land SaZ opoa the ghostly in dertback. Instantly the illusion was srone. H am f .. man muscled and thewed like a bull. (To Be Continued. 1M. Cart BOma' ' PATIENT MOVED HOME MACLEAT, Jaly 1 Mrs. Dave Haekett, who has been very seri ously HI at the Deaconess hospi tal, has improved sufficiently to be moved to her home but is still in bed. .