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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 19, 1935)
PAGE FOUtt The OREGON STATES3IAN, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday Morning:, November 19, 1933 Founded "Aro Furor Stray M Fear SAaW Aic" Prom First Statesman. March 28. 1151 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. . Chaklcs A. Spkacue - - - - - Editor-Manager . Sheldon K. Sackett : - - - Managing-Editor . ; Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the ose tor publica tion of all news dispatches credited to It w not otherwise credited ta ' UUs paper. . ' The Hoover Speech THE Capital Journal hails Herbert Hoover's speech of Sat urday night before the Ohio society in New York as his platform for election as an "old deal" candidate. If that is the case; then he runs oh a strong platform. It is as staunch as the moral law and .as reliable as the multiplication table. In our opinion Mr. Hoover is not making these addresses as a candidate or as a potential candidate, but as a public man with a great following in this nation, who sees national perils of magnitude in the policies now being followed in Washing ton under the head of the "new deal." In his address in Oakland some weeks ago the former president laid bare the spendthrift policies of the adminis tration, which are increasing the burdens on taxpayers by some fourteen billions of dollars. In his speech in New York Saturday night Mr. Hoover dissected the .parade of follies known as "National Planning", which is the new name for "Planned Economy". The trouble with Planned Economy was that it turned out to be neither Planned nor Economy. There are two classes of opponents of National Plan ning, say the ex-president. One group feels it is simply a different name for the same disease which has overrun Eu rope: "They feel these catch-words cloak that incarnate pas sion for power, the insidious end of which is the destruction of liberty and the rise of the regimented state." The other group regard it as "an attempt of a collegiate oligarchy to sanctify by a phrase a muddle of un-coordinated reckless ad ventures in government, flavored with unctuou3 claims to monopoly in devotion to their fellow men." Mr. Hoover however attacks National Planning on its threat of inflation. He attacks in particular the buying of foreign silver by which we have "joyfully subsidized every foreign speculator in silver" and every foreign silver mine; but at the same time we have wrecked economic life in China. He condemns the vast increase in the federal bureaucracy, resulting "not only in stupendous waste but in the creation of.'k great group of permanent dependents." "And we are destroying the self-respect and the responsibility of self-government by turning the treasury into a national grab bag." - The National Planning of taxes, currency, credit, etc. has raised the cost of living, and "it is a deduction from ec onomic and social security of the poor it is not a more abun dant life. It erodes the purchasing power of wages." Man aged currency, devaluation of the dollar by 41 per cent, the expansion of our credit base are all an invitation to an era of inflation far more deadly than that of 1927-1929. To quote Mr. Hoover : "Despite that bitter experience the new National Planners to finance their huge spending andother purposes, have desper ately resorted to the same inflation of bank credits. They, how ever, a'pparently do not believe in homeopathic doses. The dose of that same poison now injected into our national blood-stream by the New Deal is already three or four times as great as that of 1927." How can there be stability and an "honest dollar" and social security in a financial system resting on so precarious a foundation?. What assurance does the country have that once the infection of inflation getsgoing that the "controls" of politicians will be effective? The stage is set for insecurity, for the harvest of specu lators: "And National Planning was supposed to shake us free from vicious speculation and money changers. Of this you can be sure. Instability of currencies and Inflation of credit are the green pastures upon which the speculator grows fat. He is the sole beneficiary front instabilityThe costs of that instability do not appear in the povernment budget, yet they appear in every hon est business. They add to the price of every commodity. "And Jiere the National Planning collides with itself. Of . what value are the old age pensions, or unemployment insurance, savings for old age, or any other beneficent effort under the scourge of devaluation and Inflation?" The address of Mr. Hoover is not only devastating in its review of the financial policies of the government, it is couched in phrases that are arrow tipped, piercing sharply into the very marrow of the issue. He refers to the "starry eyed young men in Washington". Speaking of the mounting deficits he says : "If they have a cash register it certainly has an astronomical keyboard." Referring to the fact that only four letters of the alphabet appear unused, but if the "Quick Loans Corporation for Xylophones, Yachts and Zith ers" is formed, the alphabet will be exhausted, he remarks with bitter irony : "But of course the new Russian alphabet has 34 letters." Speaking of stock market booming of recent weeks as a parcel of inflation, he says: "The stock market is already poking into that Bluebeard's cave." What means the mounting tide of dissent to the New Deal? It means that the American people are becoming alarm ed over the extravagant spending, over the unbalanced bud get, over the increasing tax burden now and in sight, over the host of new bureaus, over the discord and lack of har mony, over the shifts and changes which justify the public in believing there is no plan whatever except to squander money. . If Hoover is not a candidate he is performing a fine piece of public service in emphasizing these dangers which loom on the political horizon. If he is a candidate, he is setting up a standard to which the wise and thoughtful and patriotic may speedily repair. Quiet Salem Anevrs story in the Oregonian says that construction of two capitol buildings will be urged by "a group of Salem cit izens." Such a blind reference might be correct, because people here may be found to urge most every idea that has been suggested about the capitol. So far as we know, how ever, there is no responsible group of citizens, and no organ ization which is urging anything now respecting the state capitol. Even the governor seems disposed merely to do his duty, appoint three members: on the commission and let the commission tackle the problem. The Salem capitol committee has wound up its business and the chamber of commerce is not active in further negotiations about the capitol. Salem people very wisely are waiting for the commission to be named. Advance intimations, which may be worthless, are" that Salem will have small voice on the commission; in spite of the fact that Salem's counsel during the legislative session was wise and its interest in the correct solution of the problem is by no means wholly selfish. When the commis sion is announced it will then hear suggestions, study needs, and form conclusions. - Before people talk about two or three buildings on the tract it might be well to look at its size. It has'nt grown any since the legislature adjourned. It is still 330 by 660 feet. . How it would be possible to erect a dignified state capitol on . the block and then stick on one or two additional build ings isealpxcJtileminometry. Necessities both of ground . space and of money may permit inildins: only one large building. The legislature passed Jt bill allowing the board of control to . construct a central heating and power plant at the prison to serve etate institutions in Salem. "The hoard should examine this gift horse Terycloaely before spending money on the project, If Bonneville pw er la te he available at low cost steam generation wo aid appear to ; bo uneconomical. At least the hoard should wait nntil hydro coats may be compared -with local generating coats. kiJS---"' ItSI The Great Game I of Politics ; By FRANK R. KENT jf Copyright ItiS. by The Baltiaere Baa Some Pay-Roll Figures I WASHINGTON, Not. IS ONE of the interesting things about the Federal payroll Is the difficulty of setting accurate ln- lnformt tion about It. To some extent this has always been the case. It Is very much more so In this Administration. For one thing, new jobs are created so ; fast and the num bers multiply so rapidly that no figures are Frank B. Kent final for more than a few months. For example, theii latest Civil Service Com mission figures those for July snow 770,128 persons on the pay roll. Comparable figures for thef' Hoover and Coolidge regimes arefias follows: tjoolidge-June 30, 1928 . 540,867 Hoover-June 30, 1932.... 583,196 Thus it seems on the surface that in the two and a half years of ithe Roosevelt New Deal Ad ministration 186,932 persons have been added t o the Feder al pay roll. THAT, however, is nothing like the' whole story. Those were meirely the figures op to the close of the last session of Con gress. At that session an immense Administration legislative pro gram, every item of which meant new Jobs was enacted.- Many new boards and commissions all salaried were created. Chief among these are the Wagner La bor Board, the Social Security Commission, the Coal Control Commission and various others. These boards and commissions, in I addition to- their members, of I course, are provided with paid secretaries, press agents, stenographers, clerks and office force. AND then there is the new Works Progress Administration, equipped with four billions of dollars. There is no way of estimating th number it will ultimately put on! the pay roll, but it is already very large. For example, one sec tion of it, to which is allocated $20,000,000 for. the year, is the Rifral Rehabitation Administra tion. Another section is the so called National Youth Adminis tration. These are new agencies which are not yet fully organized. Their pay roll is not included in thi July figures because they did not then exist. The effort to man them is being- rapidly pushed. In a short while, it has been author itatively stated, the RRA will haye a force in the field of more than 12,000 and a headquarters staff of 2,000. How many the NYA will employ is a mere guess. HOWEVER, it seems conserva tive to state that when the various agencies authorized at the last session are fully organized, the total number of Federal employes dipectly paid out of the Treasury will exceed 800,000 well over 20:0,000 more than there were on March 4, 1933 an increase, in fact, of more than thirty-five per cent. Nor does this include the 110,500 County Control commit teemen created under the AAA, and who are in every essential Federal office holders, though no counted as such for the sole reason that they are paid their 4 and $5 per diem not out of the Treasury but out of the pro cessing tax on food which in the last analysis is a tax on the copsumer'of food to wit, every body. TO the average citizen these would seem to be stunning facts. When , and if, they throughly sofrk into the public mind it may be rather difficult for a President seeking reelection on his record adequately to explain particu larly a President so solemnly pledged to cut expenses of the government, wipe out the Feder al .boards and commissions, which he; had denounced, and avert the great danger of a swollen pay roll and an enlarged Federal bureau cracy, to which he had pointed. I Twenty Years Ago J i November 10. 1915 tAn investigation into the mor als of Chicago high school stu dents has vindicated the students entirely. Captain R. P. Hobson of the anti-saloon league spoke in favor of national prohibition before a packed armory here last night. iDr. Carl Gregg Doney, presi dent of Willamette university, wjll talk on Nietzsche, the German thinker, tonight in the public li brary. I Ten Years . Ago p .K-aa w fa ftme 3 wit.iuwcr a. f ivaa An Interview with the former German kaiser at Doom reveals that he still dresses In costly uni forms and entertains regally. iColonel Coolidge, father of the president, is seriously ill at Plym outh, Vt. Three hundred firty passengers wire safely landed from a burn ing liner off the Delaware coast last night. Refuses Beer Permits ULBA3TT, Kov. 18. -The coun cil refused to grant package II qanr licenses to William Eagles. Bulord Rollins and William .and G4 Baer. Eagles is front Albany and the other parties are from ShevUn and Bend. They proposed opening an establishment en West Fir street, ' r it- i A , " - . . . ri - - - - - ml Bits for By R. J. Salem U. 8. Indian training school at Chemawa is in a setting ' that lis highly historical: I S T (Continuing from Sunday:) Madame Dorion was an Iowa Sioux. Her first husband was Pierre Dorion. His father was Pierre Dorion the elder, French Canadian, and his mother was a member of the Yankton Sioux tribe; The elder Dorion was Interpre ter for the Lewis and Clark ex pedition from the present Glas gow,; Mo., to the James river, where he was authorized to gather a delegation of Sioux chiefs and take i them on a visit to Washing ton. j When Hunt wanted the younger Dorion for interpreter for his Astoria overlanders, he would go anly if his wife and two small boys were taken along. That is how Hunt came to have the wo man of his party and it was a case of good luck to him. All the reasons therefor. In cluding many brave and heroic acts, and powers of endurance beyond any of the men, would make too long a recital for this column. The blood of the heroic wo man has been inherited by a large number of Oregon people, some of them prominent in various lines. 1 The first husband of Mari anne Verne, daughter of Madame Dorion and her second husband. was Issac Xavier Gervais, son of Joseph Gervais of the house of the wolf meeting, etc. Isaac's X. Gervais fouxht in the Cayuse war under the famous Capt. Tom McKay, step-son of Dr. John McLouehlin, also in the so-called Rogue river and Yakima warsi of 1855-6-7-8. Isaac's son Jerome Gervais and ! Jerome's son Louis and his children have been and are good Citizens. One of Marianne's daughters tras married to George Gay, prom inent pioneer, builder of the first prick residence erected west of the Rocky mountains and north Of the Spanish (California) line. (That house was across the Will amette river from the Jason Lee mission, and about three miles distant. Many noted guests were In early Oregon days entertained there. The house still st ands, in bad repair. It is in Yamhill county, (the line between that county and Polk county running along the South wall.) ! In that (the Gay) line. Dr. Cleveland S. Simkins, of the fac ulty; of the University of Tennes see, is a great grandson - of Ma dame Dorion. 1 . Also, the Stephen Staats fam- i Health By Royal S. Copeland, M.D. CHICKEN-POX IS a common dis ease of childhood. Although it is a minor infection, it should always be iavoided if possible. It can prove to jfoe yery disagreeable. Often It af flicts one who has .been ill from-some other ailment and in that event may prove serious to the weakened child. I The disease is highly contagious :and is quickly spread from one to i another. As a rule It afflicts children of school age, but I have known it to ! attack Infants. Adults are not Immune to chicken, ! pox. or "varicella" as the doctors call it. But because of its rarity In adults jit Is sometimes overlooked, or mis taken for some skin inflammation. Once In a while the adult patient is embarrassed by having this simple disease confused with smallpox, . Germ of Virus Type Though the actual cause of chlck- j en-pox is not known, it is believed to be due to a germ of the "virus" type. A virus is a germ so small that It cannot be seen even with the most powerful microscope. Such an agent is often referred to as a "filterable virus", because a solution containing It will pass through a filter, germ and; all. just as water does. The infective material is spread by the secretions of the nose and mouthv Like other Infectious diseases, it es pecially is contagious at the onset of the Infection and tor several days thereafter. In rarer cases the disease is carried by Individuals who have had; contact with the discharges of a sick person but who are not them- ; selves afflicted with chicken-pox. The skin lesions break out about two to three weeks after exposure. But before the eruption appears, the victim may complain of weakness; with loss of "pp", backache, and possibly abdominal pain. Occasional ly the fever may he- as high as 104 or SOS degrees. j Blisters Develop The "pocks' first appear pinkish : or reddish areas which develop into small blisters. The blisters -rupture and; dry down, forming scabs which ultimately fan off the' surface. As a rule the pocks first appear en the face, then on the chest, back and ab domen. The eruption reappears in crops as fast as the old ones fade from sight The rash-covered skin Is extremely Itchy, and the sufferer can hardly resist the desire to scratch the In flamed surface. But it is unwise to i yield to the temptation because whenever a scab Is scratched off a permanent scar Is left. Children should be guarded against tampering with the sore places. The little patient s hands and finger nails should be kept scrupulously clean. In order to prevent Infection of the skin. A soothing ointment solution prescribed by your doctor will con- 7: I the Itching and hasten healing. Answers te Health Qoeries Ctara. Q. What causes frequent attacks of pleurisy? The patient Is usually affected la the fall and spring and Is subject to freQnant attacks. A. Thla trouble- csot sssosuly be traced to cold and lowered nstetaac. slake rnvmrr etfort t Imprw the geiswal health. '-Overcome any na derferlnr Infection ar wtmkaeae. Tar rait partiexdaxe mend a self-adtlra tl. stamped wtrvelope and jepeat your gu tian. fCopjtriffht. 1S3S, JC. A, IncJ Breakfast HENDRICKS Ily is related to the Madame Do rion connections. Staats was co- discover ; of Gold In California, with James W. Marshall and Capt. Chas. Bennett, all three having gone to ' Sutter's fort from the vicinity of Salem, Oregon. S For nearly 85 years, the place of the burial of Madame Dorion re mained undiscovered to the out side world, though it was plainly; written In French In the records' of the old St. Louis, Oregon, Cath olic church plainly written for; a person who understood the story of the woman's life and had; besides a smattering of the French language when the person final-: ly examined the record. S Sunday, April 7, 1935, the United States Daughters of 1812 of Oregon, with appropriate cere monies, dedicated a marker to Madame Dorion in that church. That church, second oldest of the denomination in the Oregon country, is only a few miles from the site of either the original Chemawa or the present. "W She died Sept. 5, 1850, and was burled, under the church, the next day. Her death occured either in the Middlegrove district or near the church probably near the church. i General Joseph Lane, first territorial governor of Oregon,; met her at that church not long before her death, as he wrote in his diary. Thus, after so long a time,: there is no doubt concerning the place of burial of Madame Do rion. Two places are claimed for the last resting place of Sacagewa,' the bird woman, and two dates, far apart, for the time of her death. Apparently good authorities showed beyond doubt, up to a short time ago, that the place ofj her burial was in the burial ground of the Shoshoni Indian agency, near Wind River, Wy oming, and the time of her death ADril 9. 18S4. when she was about 100 years old. S But now comes the new book "Story of the West," by Ethel Hueston, which is a review of the Lewis and Clark expedition, after pursuing the routes they traveled and her conclusion is that Saca gewea died at the age of about 25 near the site' of Fort Manuel Lisa, Northern South Dakota, and that the site of the little grave yard that held her body was later washed away by the glut tonous erosive ravages of the muddy Missouri river. U "W J There is a lot bf apparently indisputable evidence to support both claims. But of course, both cannot be true. S S The Indians of the country west of the Rocky mountains in vited Christian missionaries to show them the way to worship the white man'3 God, according to the white man's Book of Heaven. It was a comparatively mod ern Macedonian call. It came about in a way that will be very briefly told in the next chapter of this series. : (Continued tomorrow.) Play to Be Given At Woman's Club Mrs. L. L. Gribble Mitch Improved Following Recent Illness AURORA, Ndv. 18. Mrs. M. H. Evans entertained members of her bridge club Wednesday afternoon In attendance were Meedames U. Eilers, P. CC Ottaway, C. S. More land, A. L. Strickland, F. C. Ren frew, C. S. Calef and J. Krans. Mrs. Krans received .high score for the afternoon. Arrangements are being made by the program committee for the program for the Woman's club which will be at the home of Mrs, B. W. Stoner Wednesday. A farce on the courtship of Miles Stand ish will be presented, The east includes Priscllla,-Mrs. C. S.' More- land; Miles Standish, Mrs. P. O, Ottaway; John Alden, Mrs. C. S. Calef. Mrs. F. D. Renfrew wllj read the script. The play will be directed by Mrs. C. E. Gilbreatn, Leaves for Home Mrs. W. P. Gilbreath of Aber deen, Wash., who has been visit ing her son, C. E. Gilbreath, re turned to her home Friday. Mrs. C. E. Gilbreath accompanied her for the weekend, Mrs. L L. dribble, who has been confined to her home because of illness, is much improved. Study Club Takes On Selling Jobs AMITY. Not. If. The Amity Study club met Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. O. E. Roth with the president, Mrs. W. R. Os borne, presiding. j( ; j. The club voted' to sponsor the Red Cross drive and the Christ mas teal sale. Mrs. J. A. Breeding gave an instructive lesson in "The Work and Progress of 'Yamhill County Health Association". Light refreshments were served. - Present were Mrs. Rosina Wal lace. Mrs. E. R. Mitchell, Mrs. Rllla B. Thomas, Mrs. W. S. Fullr er, Mrs. J. A. Breeding, Mrs. W. R, Osborn, Mrs. Clara ' Broad well, Mrs. F. W Dickey, Mrs. Sorett Sorensen, Mrs. J. M. Umphlette, Miss Shirley Umphlette and the hostess. Girl to Rogers OAK POINT, Not. 18. Mr and Mrs. Joe Rogers, Jr., are thi parents of a- daughter born Mon day morning. This is their sec ond child and first daughter. w ' Illicit '" ' Mil ' SflP W INK I MMM 'WIFE IN SYNOPSIS Luxurious to the atb degree of ' commercial splendor were the es tablishments , of the Anastasia Beauty Salons, but dreary and un kempt were the locker quarters of the operators, who dressed and "made-up" for business in white washed, barn-like rooms. In one room, as they rouged their cheeks and donned their fresh, starched white uniforms, the girls talked . . . talked chiefly about the Riley sis ters, who managed each of the Anastasia Salons, and about Walter Riley, their brother and the owner of the salons. Among the opera tors was one who stood out from the rest Helen Schiller. One day, before the salon opened for busi ness, Helen : was demonstrating some dance steps that she had seen on the stage the night before . ... and Walter Riley appeared. Her dancing was, a blow to discipline . . . but be did not make his presence known. Instead he backed away, to enter a little later, banging a door. When he appeared then, all the girls were at work, and he went on into the office of his sister, Stella, who managed the salon. That eve ning, he found himself back in the t ww . . nop wnere neien woraeo. intend ing to speak to her about her danc ing of the morning, he found him self disarmed by her smile. When she asked him if he liked to dance. he appeared uncertain, admitting finally that he had never danced. neien was surprised at this, and he suddenly asked her If she would teach him to danc. "I'd tn he said honestly, and so they de cided to go to one of the better hotels tar Ainnmr mwA (.n.Ua Then, she suggested tactfully that It might bt better to meet in front ot tne library. He felt ill at ease. However, as the evening wore on and they danced, he found himself enjoying the dancing in spite of his wswaronesa, j CHAPTER V .. He drove her home to the decent rwooramiiy brick house in which she lired in Bay Ridge, and they sat in the esr &nr1 tsJVtul natfl K .vtnj and he realized she was cold in her tnm coat, and he told her she had better go In, the while he held her then. She had a childlike obedience wax maae nun reel masterful and protective, ue did not kiss her good night, although he wanted to. They aoooa nanos. He came up on the tittle brown- wrae stoop wita ner ana waited while she produced her latchkey and opened the door. She did not ask urn In: be dldnt expect ft. Bis sis tars naked men la altar the theatre for cocktails mad sandwiches. Bat in the flat here, ethers ware sleep Ins;: probably someone slept in the parlor, tie understood all this. The RUeys had la their meteorte rise Passed throurh rust aneh a stare. "Good night, she whispered. "Thanks for grand time." 14e too," he whispered, "I had a ffrana tuna, too." Fni so glad, rre got to go in Bow. Good nisrht." "Will yoq go out with me tomor row nlghtT To the theatre?" She had no artifices to intrigue nun. . tMuetry was alien to her nature. i -Oh. Td lore to -"111 get something; A comedy? "Teav She was getting hoarse with whispering. "Good night." : t Her fingertips slowly left this hand. She closed the inner door. Carefully ho closed the onteT door. He stood for a moment on the doorsteps, his bat In hi hand, and ha realized he was ouite idiotically happy and that it was raining on htm h1 Helen tiptoed into the flat, care- fnllv . elosinv thai door ma that ha lock would click sofUy, and then she erept down the hall to the room she snarea witn ner sister, tseue. ne wsm eiad Belle was aaleen. Sha dldnt want to break the spell by talking, she undressed without a light and. groped for her eotton fitttmi tmAmr tit nRlftw Every minute of it had been per- reex. one laugneo auenuy as she recalled bits of their conversation. And she had leen afraid I Ha was so fanny, so clever and amusinsr. But the most Hh rilling part of all waathat he asked her te ro out with him tit tnnuvn lo4 stifled a persistent little voice with in ner taai axpt ssying: vvnen wiu It uf 7 What Aamm ttm vrant f nnt and gave herself op entirely to rosy, ecstatic, luxurious dreams until they, too, were tost la sleep. Tuesday mornin Is the wash- Musi IWear it Again?" CUSTODY" roomi The same bustle, the same grumbling, the same conversation. "What f ju do las night?" "Not a. darn thing," said Helen, her f ice over her knees as she laced up the white oxfords. "It was a ter rible night, wasn't it?" There were the usual Tuesday morning run of appointments.. Burr of the nail files, sizzle of steam, smelllof scorched hair and swishing of water. ( ' At about 11 o'clock, as if attract ed by a magnet, she suddenly looked up, Walter Riley stood in the door way. I He! caught her glance. His face wore the dark, nervous mask she knew so well. She did not smile She produced her cbhey and ! ' . . V '. " ' ' ' uuiiitWIIIItipKlll, at him. She simply looked one and a 1 a sail a vara swuuy axoppea ner eyes, tie saw i: that her mmuhii tmmm changed. She went on swiftly buff- tug ner customer's nana, tie satisfied a.n) mlijrwawt M m ticetL Everyone was boav. Tha (mm of conversation inimrled wtth th nam and buzz ax machinery; The room: was a beehive of lBduatrv. Helen ararkad ailantlw trn....Ll desperately to cover up her sadden iniTVBUWU, I ArJaiSd aha amm tt.tKI nacki Shooting pains darted tmder bct vjvm.f Lam uun wintry sun &ad set and she could see the sky out- aUOaV ITU CTllIEal CIAPr I rVsb awfwli amiaa.aiiaa, silent, fagged, going about the tail- mra ei in oay witn listless, auto- maue gestures. tui lassitude, bow ever.: would fall wu u they i were washed and out of the oateziu smiona, lor they ooauuiy xoxins; animan and a stretch, a rat-wavh Mv.. their own clothes and they would Dooyant again, naar bad oates. -inat ray I met 1mm wmV . ." Hi mraalA ha wattfn rv wtppw wut gauy enougn. Helen lingered over her dress- rar. fna nan tm nn lc all day. She promised she'd go with him to the theater or waa It all a dream? He'd probably be waiting downstairs or shmild aha m v. where she had met him last Caref uDv aha Kmid.! I,M -- . black- chiffon dress and alinnad it er her i head. Tkm m i..- snifdna pn again and combed and set her long slightly waved ash blond hair. She raa i !m.i. i- big loop at the hack of her head and fust waved aHrtitlv m ilost of the girls frizzed the inside . of the hair over the ears to achieve these high puffs which completely covered the ears. Some pat in false wads of hair; others frames of thin . buckram, on which the hair was smoothly laid. These were known as "cootie garages." Her hair done, i Helen powdered her nose with pink powder and bit her lips. She didn't rouge. ! - . It was now six-thirty. Except for the cleaning women, there was no one about. No sign of Walter. She put on her black hat, lined with blue velvet and her dark blue coat with skunk collar and cuffs; then, still uncertain, decided to wait for him downstairs in tb lobby. ened the door. She did sot ask The little old Jew who kept the "fweatand was closing for the dsy. Helen stayed with him in his little booth and chatted until he was ready to go. The night elevator men cam -en. The dock over the en trance door pointed to seven; then fifteen past seven. Helen was nerv. f uncertainty. If aha went to the library, he might come here. He might, on the- ether hand, be waiting there. StUL she reasoned, eventually he would come to look for herheTe. What ought she to do? Perhaps ha had forgotten. His i7"7 , wnuaing. do, that was his business face, Helen decided. He Probably looked like that at her so bo one would suspect. I Seven-thirtv and !. i cm sha waited. At 1 1 tonight he burst in. -L Z&SL0 Ut be apologized Stf-Jr bot netly leouldn't help ltl" . Of rlad yon camel" . . 1 - - aw Hjr w uij mim- S??.I.?y.It " important and I couldn't ret t nmiH ret to a phone. My sister's rettlno- jwrted. Ill tell yon afl about it terribly sorry - lie steered her out asw aurvML a vn r , ji ' . " w " arc geoa quick dinner, t know a place." ZL , rm,.tooT. . WeTI get . a Fifth Avenue: r" " my2d!" 709 mtUi hmT bea d" i aRm . - 1 . - V "w come,- be as- eerted fiercely. 1 "Ob. yea. Id have m His hand slipped it ar.lt 4 a 1 Knnl I... i , - , . , 'rr umr tap ana found her band I " - tweet kid - he-said earned " " tie e Continued) n-aa5ai': x 2 i - :: i i t