P.GU FOXJlT .Tht OREGON STATESMAN; SaJen. Oregon, Saturday. Monday, January II, 1933 Founded "A'o Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Avcf From Pint SUtesmtn. March 28. ItSI THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Chaxlcs A. Snuouf :t EdUor-Mtnager ShxxDO V, Sackstt - Hanaging-Editor The Associated Press la exclusively entitled te the use (or publlca ' Cm of all un dispatches credited to It or sot otherwise crtdiud la tbia pswk. Farm Relief SENATOR McNARY is advancing his three-point program to possible relief of agriculture, as a substitute for the in . ralidated AAA. There is little doubt that Senator McNary is in a, very powerful position in the senate. The administra tion forces are bewildered and at sea. They will perhaps soli cit the advice of the senior senator from Oregon whose inter est in the subject of agriculture relief long antedates that of the squire of Hyde Park ; and they will be concerned as to the attitude of the republican minority, no matter how much they may scorn their party foes. McNary is suggesting as alternates to AAA the equaliza tion fee, the export debenture plan, and the allotment plan, each of which he says comes within the power of congress as a subject of legislation. Before rushing in to provide an alternate, congress might pause to see the effect of abolition of AAA. The nullifi cation of NRA did not cripple business. It may be that the substantial farm recovery which has already set in will re aoire no further legislative stimulus. The difficulty with fresh enactment is that it assumes that agriculture in Amer ica is permanently impaired and will be in need permanently of artificial support. That hardly seems a justifiable conclu sion; because American history is full of examples of inter vals of farm depression followed by periods of stable pros perity. Now would be a proper time for the democratic party to proceed with its 1932 platform to revise tariff schedules, with the idea of stimulating foreign trade and making pos sible the natural export of farm surpluses. The Statesman fa vors a direct attack on the economic problems involved rather than further subsidy. If reasonable economic balance can be restored the farm problem will solve itself ; and the proper function of government is served when it interferes as little as possible with the free operations of economic laws. Gilbert in Fade-mt ONE of the screen's great lovers drank himself to failure and to death, John Gilbert. He was once office boy on the Portland Telegram. The other great lover of recent times, Clark Gable, once had a job in the want-ad depart ment of the Portland Oregonian. Just what the newspaper business or Portland has to do with celluloid romance is hard to say; but these men gained fame and fortune in the role of Don Juan, Lothario andHomeo. Gilbert faded out and the heart failure came as merciful release. Gable is still in the winnings though he is a two-time loser in the divorce court. Some of the women seem to have done better. Clara Bow, the one-time "it" girl, has settled down as wife and mother. Theda Bara, early ,day vampire woman, is also a sedate married woman now. Jean Harlow wears her hair natural now and avoids matrimony. In the early days of the movies and talkies when money came easy and went easy, the favorites won luxuries far be yond their capaicity to enjoy or to bear up under. Wealth and adulation turned their heads and they thought them selves above all codes of convention and of morals. As the industry matures so will the stars. A more professional at mosphere will develop. Salaries may not be so big as to be morally devastating. Acting for the films may become just one more way of earning a living. The "glamour" that has enveloped Hollywood will fade with greater familiarity with If a txrni-lr on1 nlotr At" frxnTea whan if rrAoa what Ttrill f Vio mnnn struck girls have for thrills and Make-up of the Court THE Pendleton East Oregonian derives hopes from the fact the "supreme court justices are mostly old men and as they gradually retire should be replaced by men more in touch with modern conditions in the United States and other lands." The E-0 might look at the record a little more closely. The majority opinion was written by the youngest member of the court, youngest in years and next to youngest in point of service, Justice Roberts, age 60. Signing the minority opin ion was the oldest member of the court. Justice Brandeis, 79. ' . .' Stone, who wrote the minority opinion is 63, and a fellow-dissenter, Cardozo is but 65; but another comparatively young man is Pierce Butler, 69, one of the "reactionary six" the'Portland Journal derides. Hughes is 73, Van Devanter 76, and Sutherland and McReynolds 73. The division in the court was not by party linens for two of the dissenters, Stone and Cardozo, are republican. Butler and McReynolds of the majority are democrats. Nor does the source of the appointment seem to have influenced the court Stone was named by the strict conser vative Pres. Coolidge; while Roberts and Cardozo were named by Pres. Hoover. The East Oregonian says if membersTdie Pres. Roosevelt "will doubtless seek liberals of the Stone, Brandeis, Cardozo type", which if true would mean the president plans to pack the. court with men of his own political prejudices. Most presidents nave sougnt to keep tne court non-political and free from pronounced slants. . Spending Without Taxes rr was a foregone conclusion that the lower house would pass the bill for immediate payment of the bonus. It is agreed that the senate will pass the bill; and if it is ve toed that there are sufficient votes to pass it over the veto. Argument now as to the merit of the bill which pays in full the bonus though under the original act it was not due until 1945 and in addition wipes out interest on the partial pay ment already authorized, would be useless. '' The distressing thing is that the bonus is passed with . no provision for paying it. This merely increases the federal , deficit already alarmingly large. It comes at a time when the treasury is threatened with further huge drains to make good federal contracts with farmers. The bill should provide a me thod of financing. It is not : government to spend money in vast sums beyond its income. While the practice of the administration sets a bad precedent in this regard, the cold, fact remains that there must be a pay-up day if there is a pay-out day. If the country wants the should make the contribution ; believe the country wants the ; assume the country is prepared , fore in the taxes required. Apparently though the congress , does not recognize the truths of simple mathematics. It is willing to pay; but not to tax. The result is merely to pile up : grief in d&ys ahead. Hogs are higher, bat pork lower is a headline telling, the story ,of the day's inarket. That's satisfactory aU round: better prices for the producer, lower priees for th consumer: Thar is a form of relief r that works two ways with injury to none. Pleasing news, that an arch ; hospital net had beat captured win not be returned here, Gut Anderson Is Quoted as sarin there will be a major war, but 'he isn't sure Just where. That's prophecy. with a string to it mm USl emotional excitation? good business practice for the bonus paid low, the country an taxes. If the congressmen bonus paid now they should to provide the revenues there- - forger who escaped from the state in Arizona. More pleasing, that he Editorial Comment From Other Paper . WHIPPING UP THE FURIES Bewailing the decision of the supreme court invalidating the New Deal's AAA. the Portland Journal indulges . Its dlsappolnt mea in abuse of those members of the court - who voted "agin' Roosevelt." The "reactionary six" Is the Journal's label for Chief Justice Hushes and Justice Roberts. Butler. Van Devanter, McReynolds and Sutherland whose names it says "are found in all decisions in which the re actionaries of New York and New England are Served and the great mass of citizens discriminated against" This is the most blatant type of political dap-trap. It is a de liberate and malicious incitement of class prejudice and revolution ary hatred which the smug editors of the Journal afe so ready to denounce when uttered by some soapbox radical .in a Portland park. The Journal charges that these six in the supreme court bare disregarded deliberately the "welfare clause" in the constitu tion to magnify ''the reserved rights of the states." An intelligent liberalism. In our opinion, does not include any such vindicative and dangerous atti tude toward the supreme court In this country the wholesome doctrine of Judicial review is as much a part of the foundations of government as the constitution it self. The court has often shown a more intense desire to stretch the bare words of the constitution to cover the nation's needs. A very recent example was in its favorable decision on New Deal gold policies, and The Journal then was inclined to praise some of the judges it now subjects to abuse. The supreme court, however, cannot be expected to stullfy it self. In the gold case it has the broad powers given to congress to regulate money on which to base its decision. In the AAA case, there was no such foothold for wide interpretation; on the con trary there were many barriers to such action. The fact that Justices Brandeis, Stone and Cardozo did accomplish the task of reconciling AAA with the constitution does not establish them as more honest or more hu mane than the other six only more imaginative, putting it char itably. Hughes, Roberts, Butler. Van Devanter, McReynolds and Sutherland were interpreting the constitution AS THEY SEE IT and this is their sworn duty. The words of the constitution cannot be Pushed out of all semb lance to original meaning, to meet political exigencies. It is general ly conceded that if this nation is to meet many of the problems of modern industry and agriculture. the words of the constitution will have to be altered, and the con stitution itself provides the legal way to do this. It is NOT within the powers of the supreme court. That indeed would be to make "a few old men masters of the peo ple." Whipping up the furies of mob prejudice against the court is a technique borrowed from the communists. Eugene Register Guard. THE COURT SPEAKS AGAIN President Roosevelt may decide for himself what the constitution means when it provides for com munications from the executive to the congress on the state of the union. This was made clear last Friday. The supreme court, how ever, still has the final say on legislation and yesterday the court said, finally and with some emphasis, what it thought about the agricultural adjustment ad ministration. The well rounded whole of last week's address turns up with a pronounced flat. Invalidation of the AAA by the high court was not unexpected. What it will mean in the national economy it is too soon to say since it cannot be known what new measures will be devised to take its place. In other aspects the effect of the decision cannot be other than salutary if it results in less blithe and hurried accept ance of measures open to grave doubts of constitutionality. The economic fallacy of the AAA program and its burdensome effect on the consumer were noted months ago. More serious, how ever, in its bearing on American life, freedom and progress was the disregard of the constitution evidenced in its support and de fense by the party in power. Once more the supreme court has called a halt. The president and his democratic majority must heed. Bend Bulletin. Twenty Years Ago January 11. 1910 There is a balanee of 18208.08 in the state fair fund. The Marion county poultry show opens today. The county will erect a bridge over Pudding river on the- Prat um road, seven miles east of Salem. J Ten Years Ago January 11, 19120 In the. society section Nancy Thielsen, Josephine McGilchrlst, Josephine Cornoyer and Jewell Hlnier are pictured as prominent young Salem misses. January 11 to 17 hat been set aside as Good Roads week in Oregon. The complete text of Governor Pierce's Jackson day address is published. Phone Line to Elect MACLEAY, Jan. 1 0. The an nual meeting and-election of the Waldo Hills Telephone company wili be held Monday night at the grange nail at o'clock. Bits for Breakfast .', By g. J. HENDRICKS ' Salem. 10 years ago c ; and Bom of 1ta history and this section's ; franchise. crop and franchise advantage! : W V r (Continuing from yesterday:) When the Lee missionaries came to the site of Salem they .found it being called Chemeketa by the- na tive, the Indian Sam f 05 place of gathering. " , V The writer believes it was an Indian city of refuge. like those of the Israelites; a city of peace; place where individuals and tribes might come and be safe from boa tile attack. S After the coming of the Laus anne in 1840 with the machinery, the place .was called The Mills, for the mission saw and grist mills under one roof, where the Larmer warehouses are now. This was the first building on Salem's site erected by white men. The next was the house of Jason Lee, for mission headquarters. It still stands, the southwest front somewhat altered, and is at 960 Broadway. Then, in 1844, when was open ed the Oregon Institute that by change of name in 18S3 became Willamette university, the town began to be called "The Insti tute," and so continued "until 18S0. s In that year, the town's cen tral portion was platted, and the name became Salem, from Salem, Mass., given by Rev. David Les lie, hailing from that city. But the plat of North Salem was filed a little before that of Salem proper (or Present down town Salem), and the one of an other Salem a few months after. s s s The other, of the second Salem plat, took in what the man who filed it, J. B. McClane, claimed was the original town. Which it was. It included the land on what was then called "Boon's Island," being all the land between North Mill creek and the mission mill race which took its water from that stream. S The first mills and shops and stores were on that "island." So McClane had the right of it, though his Salem had only a few blocks and lots. S S . John D. Boon, last and next to the last territorial treasurer and first state treasurer, had his of fice on that "island," which was named for him. S "m H The Bits man has been called "an incurable optimist," some Health By Royal S. Copeland, M.D. RECENTLY X TOLD you about "emphysema". This is a condition marked by dilation of the air sacs of the lungs. Today, I want to teU you about another disturbance of the lung which is sometimes confused with emphysema. It la called "em pyema". Empyema Is an accumulation of pus in the pleural cavity, ths ches cavity. The pleura Is a thin and delicate membrane that covers ths lungs and lines the cheat. The right and left pleural cavities are distinct and 'separate from each other. This slippery membrane facilitates the movements of the lungs, permit ting "them to move without friction. It protects them from Injury as welL As a rule the pleural guards against germs. But occasionally, when germs are of a strong strain, they reach the pleural membrane, and Irritation, and perhaps severe Inflammation, of the pleura results. This creates a condition called "pleurisy". Pleurisy may follow any Infection of the chest or upper part of the breathing apparatus. It Is a com mon complication of the simple cold, bronchitis and pneumonia. Pus-producing germs are those which pro duce empyema. Symptoms of Disease At the onset of the disease the suf ferer complains of pain In the chest and difficulty In breathing. The pain Increases In severity and may be so great as to prevent sleep and rest. Sometimes. Indeed, It becomes neces sary to give the patient an opiate. Other symptoms are chill, followed by fever, sweating and dry cough. As a rule the fever drops within twenty four hours, but soon rises again. This fluctuation In temperature continues for several days. This -septic curve", as the doctors call It is an Important sign in the diagnosis of the disease. Empyema may be difficult to recog nize. In doubtful cases It is advisable to have an x-ray taken. This will reveal whether or not any pus - Is present In the chest cavity. Unfor tunately, the x-ray a not always available. - Another method of diagnosis, and treatment too, is to "tap" the chest for pus. This Is a simple procedure and need cause no alarm. A local anesthetic Is used and In this way no pain or discomfort is felt If no pus Is obtained It does not prove positively that empyema Is not pres ent Sometimes the penetrating needle may miss the Infected area. Hospital Care Best In every case of empyema it la best to have the patient removed to a hospital. Here constant care can be given to promote the comfort of the patient and to hasten recovery. If progress la not satisfactory. It la sometimes necessary to have the ac cumulated pus removed by surgical measures. On this account the hos pital is the place tor treatment by your own physician. If operation Is advised do not de lay. Bear to mind that neglect of empyema leads to further spread of the pus. It U amazing te see how quickly the patient recovers after thhi op eration. Be is entirely relieved of pain. Breathing la no longer difficult Ho la assured of speedy and complete recovery. Dr. CopelanS ts ptad U nncer tnqvtriet from Tender tens sewd addressed stamped eaertopei tcita their caesftoiia All oniric should be addressed t Mm n care ef tW Muxpcper. (Copyright. tU4. X. r. .. IneJ times In derision. It Is an epithet he accepts with pleasure, whether la general or in particular And especially whea applied to Salem and its trade territory and to the state of Oregon, too, and Its people, with emphasis upon Its pioneer 1 stock. Older readers remember the Slogan pages that ran in the Thursday and the Weekly States man for years, conducted by the writer. s . They told about the things the writer claimed could be done bet ter here than elsewhere, or pro duced at lower cost or with bigger quality, and that ought to be made, grown or handled here on larger scales or upon greater areas. V He has had no reason to change his mind In any case. Fifty-two subjects were thus treated each year. A brief resume will follow, for the information of the growing generation and of new comers in the Past seven or eight years: S First, loganberries, because the juice of this king of the bush fruits, at the time the slogan Pages were started, was being pushed by two vigorous concerns, and advertised and marketed widely throughout the United States. The loganberry juice business received a body blow from high war prices for the berries and a high federal war tax on the pro duct during that struggle. The tax was found illegal and remit ted but not soon enough to save the original concerns exploiting it; and the money did the man who got it no good in the long run, though it was not lost on lo ganberry juice, and might have been saved, and saved the indus try, had it been wisely devoted to rejuvenating the business which its illegal collection so badly crip pled at a critical time. But this is the point: Loganber ries, though born by accident in California, having been brought to Salem first, then scattered in this trade territory, did and do better here than elsewhere. They are still the greatest bush fruit There is still an opportunity for their production on a great scale here, and their marketing in cans, the dry or dehydrated state, the cold Pack, and the Juice. There are hundreds of beneficial uses for the juice, and it can be mar keted in every country. S Second, prunes. This territory produces the best Oregon or tart sweet prune in the world, and other varieties as good as any. A prune cooperative doing all the things needed to prepare, pack andr market this crop, that would mix brains with persistency, and stick together everlastingly, would make prunes here a good crop for 1000 years and then be in its youthful days. (Continued tomorrow.) Woman Is Injured As Bus Overturns MONMOUTH, Jan. 10 Mrs. Merle Moore of Corvallis who is well known in Monmouth as Bes sie Graham Moore, was one of 4 passengers injured Sunday night when a northbound stage over turned near the Six Corners en route to Portland. Mrs. Moore was returning to" Portland where she is a teacher in the Fernwood school, from her home in Cor vallis. Reports received by her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Graham of Monmouth, stated that she suffered a cracked vertebrae and wlil be placed in a cast at a Portland hospital Thursday. Miss Edith Clark, teacher of languages at Monmouth high school was absent early this week because of the serious illness of her mother, Mrs. Agnes Loftinj. Miss Clark has rarely missed any tiire at school, probably cot a day it was estimated in more than 7 years. Mrs. Ben Pollan is ill at her home from measles. Mrs. W. R. Graham is an Influenza patient. Mrs. Guy Deming is also ill from a serious cold. Hardy smith, for merly of Monmouth, now living at Smithfield, is reported to have scarlet fever. Mrs. Rose Riesterer Is . Sole Owner of Sublimity atore; Buys Out Hassler SUBLIMITY, Jan. 10 Mrs. R-e Riesterer Is now sole owner of the former Riesterer and Has- sler firm, Herman Hassler having sold his half interest to his part ner with the new year. The busin ess will be known as Riester's General store, and Ernest Riester er, son of the owner, and Isobel Riesterer are carrying on the act ive management This store business was estab lished before beginning of the present century by Mrs. A. II. La Croix. Hubbard Woman Writes Of Extreme Cold Found In Southern Indiana HUBBARD, Jan. 10 Miss Ef fie Sargand of Hubbard, who is spending the winter months with relatives in southern Indiana writes that the weather there Is terribly cold, being 14 below zero and snow several Inches deep. Health Meeting 13th BRUSH COLLEGE. Jan. 10. Mrs. A. XL Utley, of Brush Col lege, president of the Polk Coun ty Health association, announces the next meeting to be held at the Monmouth hall, Monday night Principal speakers will be Dr. Starbuck. Dallas, Dr. Bowersox. Monmouth, Dr. Knott Independ ence and the county health nurse, "HIGH SCHOOL TRAGEDY" SYNOPSIS Julie Martin, she's all of 17. Is relating what happened after her French teacher, pretty Constance (Connie) Sinclair, was found shot dead at a desk in her (Miss Sin clair's) apartment Julie has star tled her mother and interests her father, a lawyer, by telling that she and her boy friend, Dicky Ward, had visited the apartment the pre vious afternoon, a few hoars before the murder. She had returned a fountain pen which she had bor rowed from Miss Sinclair. News paper reports make known that the teacher was slain about 10 o'clock that night The police went to the apartment upon receipt of a mys terious telephone call Informing them that Miss Sinclair had been slain. Julie's young brother, Allen, also a high school pupil, leaves ths breakfast table soon after the fam ily starts discussing die tragic news. At the school later. Police Inspector O'Brien Questions Julie concerning the return of the pen. casing his inquiry on notes mads during an earlier examination of Mrs. Sardoni who conducted the apartment house tenanted by ths slain teacher. Julie tells the In spector that she talked with Mias Sinclair about a book. Princioal Perkins remarks that he found ths book on the teacher'a school desk that morning and gets permission to return tt to tne rental store. As Julie Is leaving, she admits the last known caller on Miss Sinclair Melvin Wright described by Mr. Perkins as "the school's problem boy." Julie wonders what hap pened during Melvin's star chaa. ber session with the Inspector and tne principal. CHAPTER m That night Dicky came over, and did we have a lot to talk about! Hs . km) KatAft rniBstiAnai) anil ftl V,. UMVOWVUU IrWl auu told about the same story I had. We were awfully puzzled over the pea. espisodel But most of the time, we were taken up with the full details in the evening paper. The first reports were nasty ana meager in the morn ing, but by afternoon the police had made several statements. We were not mentioned at all, of course, for which Mother was very thankful. I was disappointed then, but later I had reason to find out that publicity has its drawbacks. The accounts be pan with Mica Sasa and Miss Wbefton's calling at 7:00 o'clock that night to ask Miss Sinclair to the movie, and her re fusal. She said aha had letters to write. Evidently there had been but one letter and that a difficult one, for there were many erumnled sheets of stationery with only be ginnings, and one on her desk, un finished. Nothing was said about thv pen: the newspapers must have nuasea tnax angle. AH the letters were addressed to "Dear George." The first para graph of the final one was printed ra zulL One San Francisco paper carried a facsimile of it in her hand writing, with the heading: TEACH ER'S ILLICIT LOVE RE VEALED. Mother thought that disgusting, and so did Dicky and L We both knew Warn Sinclair was all right X have kept aU the dippings about the murder and made a acrapbook. So I copy this from that paper. It is we letter. "Dear George, x 1 have tried so hard to berhi this tetter tonight It is very difficult to know how to say this so that you will understand . and believe me. Whea we knew each other back hornet jod we were both kids and erasy about each other, I might have married you and been fairly happy. But please believe ma, George, when I say that I doat lore you bow. Years nave passed and evsryuung is different "la the first place, you are may neo to someone) ales. I know we said -that tout marriaro should make a difference in our friend ship, when we first met again in San Francisco. I tried te be modern about -M, and I thought we had a right to the old interest and affec tion that were left Perhap I was wrong: I still think I was right aaa uings stayea was way. "But they haven't Ton bars eome over nerw so many weekends i nen. too, uickry aid not know about Melvin's being there that night Did I astound him with that esmsode! - Com Public Enemy No. 1 .Pis J rfiil ager asked me if you were my fi ance. And we cannot have another scene tike Sr-'.ay's. "Then. too. I have. seen your wire. Now dent be angry with her. I rather admire her for coming straight to me with what she had to say. Of course, she blames me for everything and she tunas wt are bavin? a real 'affair.' I am afraid I lost my temper, too. We bad rataer a row. i anow i said a lot of foolish things, among them that I saw no reason for sacrificing our friendship. She went away thinking I was thoroughly bad and shameless, Tin afraid. "I decided not to tell you anything about H when I saw you Sunday. But after that scene in the car, I began to see it all differently. Your wife was rtgnt This cam go on. Mrs. Sardoni had seen a woman " wees oezors . tne stranger lett in s temper ... . I am telling you the positive truth when I say that doat wast ts you again. Please believe There the letter ended "stooned by a bullet," ths psper said. There was a lot mora; First of ail, Mrs. Sardoni had seen a woman enter Miss Sinclair's apartment ths week before. She gave a full description of her, tall, dark, exceedingly well and fashionably: dressed, very good looking, about twenty-seven- or eight She wore a black fox shoul der cape and carried a small muff, a rather extreme style. She had driven a large, -new car. This woman's visit lasted about an hour. Toward the end of it the Yofces of both women had been raised, and the dark stranrer had left In a great tenrper, running-down the stairs to ner car. It was suooosed that this was "George's" wife Police In Seattle were checking with Miss Sinclair's family and friends for the possible identity of this mysterious couple. Mr. Sinclair, the murdered girl's father, would arrive that evening. - But to continue the events of the evening of October 20, as they say Ut detectivs stories, (I am rtadinr them now, occasionally). Mrs. Sar- aom naa seen another visitor enter about :00 o'clock, young -maa whose description she had given po lice. Reporters had not discovered who he was. Of course, Dicky and I knew it was MeUdn Wright, He had left about 8 :30, slamming down the stairs as Jf .he were angry, too. The reporter pointed out that from the number of starts and the length ef the -final letter. Miss Sinclair must tiavs had more time to spend on It than the three-cjuerters of an hour which had -elapsed between, the teachers. call and the boy'a. In $ y a canty other words, she must aava been A alive when he left I "I idont see that," said Dicky. "X mean, I dont see why that proves he didat kill her." "You dont think he dlttdo you?" "Well. no. . But look. What was to prevent his returning an hour or so later and shooting her, if he was so mad? And here's another thing: how do these guys know she wasnt working oa that letter ever since we left at five? She probably didnt take so much thns for supper. And ft doesat look to me as If it took so long to write once she got going. It sounds pretty much the way any one might talk." I looked at Dicky with admira tion. That is the reason I like him. I suppose. He iant so awfully hand some, but ha does think. enter Miss Sinclair's apartment the "WelL I dont think Melrfn dA it" I answered. "But you are right We ought not to count him ant H. could have done It if he had a gun." "You know Dicky was awfully serious. "I think' the French system is rhrht, A man euwht t Ke wm. sidered guilty until he proves amm- sexi innocent "That's what some aewraanera doJ" Iaaid. j We went on reading. Mrs. Sar doni had seen neons else eater. 8he had had a headache and gone to bed at 9:00. As her apartment waa right underneath Hiss Sinclair's, ana as sue aaa neara aa snot, taa police supposed the alayer had used a silencer. The couple whe-oecupied the apartment oa the ether aide of the first floor, opposite Mrs. Sar doni, had been out te a bridge party and did not return unto midnirht They could offer ao help at all. .the teachers had stopped to eat after the show, which had been long one, and had returned fust as the police arrived. - j The- teiephon can ad coma at 10:45. The officers sent out on th . ease had found the door of Miss Sinclair's apartment unlocked, had . opened tt, and found her la jade green lounging pajamas, half-sup ported few the desk chair, her arms and head aorawled oa the desk fU ' self, and a bullet through her breast I cried a utue at that and Dicky- waa most awkward. Just as hs was v patting my shoulder, a newsboy called, "Extra!". . 'j- . We both dashed to the street and bought ths panes. Ths police had revealed a new development,. Hym. the Filipino janitor of the apartment house, had disappeared tn night ot ths murser I '-' (To 8a Continued) miss Margaret GHiia. , cwvrteM.tsse.1