The CI . - r -.021 STATES2.I4N,.' Safcnv Or? en, Saturday Horning, Jul 11, :1CA A " 7s 'v ' ' e Vo Faror Sicay Us; No Fear Shaft AivT From First Statesman. II arch IS. 1851 f THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Conors A. Snxcvt - Editor-Uanafftr - , Sheldon F. Sackett - ... -' Uanaging-Z'T Mrmbrr of the Associated Press . , I The AiMocUfsl lrs U esduslrely entitled te the use for publica tion of ail nri dlspatcbes credited to It or not Uirwi credited I tiiia paper. - f i , Mixing the Parties i I - P. GIANNINI, San Francisco banker, head of Trans- America and Bank of America, has endorsed Pres. Roosevelt for reelection. Most bankers are regarded as hostile to the new deal, so the Giannini endorsement is some thing out of the ordinary. Some critics' say that the new deal was very kind to Bank of America at the time of the bank holiday and that its head has reason to be. grateful. All that aside, we consider it beneficial to the country for some banking and business support to be extended to Mr. Roosevelt. A division strictly on lines of economic cleavage would be a misfortune for the country. It has been a whole some thing for the parties in this country to embrace in their memberships rich and poor, persons of high and low estate. In many respects the new deal suffers from a lack of newspaper support, and this is bad too; because newspapers ought not to be unanimous in their views. Even the "wrong" side needs an exponent and interpreter. This newspaper shift has been remarkable. It is recalled how the president had the White House correspondents all eating out of his hand when he entered office. They were fed up on the dour and uncommunicative Hoover and he was mercilessly grilled by the press. Mrs. Roosevelt gave them food and drink on a cold night and these correspondents, as skeptical and critical a bunch as ever assembled, were captured by the Roosevelts. What happened to sour the soup?. Something must have, because the correspondents no longer seem cap tivated by Rooseveltian glamour. L , It may be said that the Washington correspondents write what their bosses back home want them to write. That may be true to some extent, but the independent writers are not beholden, and some of them are the severest critics of the present administration. i To revert to our thesis : it is dangerous for the country to have sentiments so unanimous with respect tp so mottled a program as the new deal. An intelligent j person cannot condemn it all without reservation ; and no intelligent person can endorse it all without reservation. Bankers of less con servative tj-pe, like Giannini and Eccles, see no danger in rapidly rising national indebtedness. Let them express them selves to that effect. Others are convinced that down the 'deficit road lies chaos; let them speak out with words of warning. Likewise with newspapers and journalists and publicists; it would be well to have frank expressions of dif ferences of opinion. The greatest danger lies in too great a unanimity, in too much regimentation of thought. I In congress for example the new deal itself has suffered for lack of powerful and aggressive opposition. The first congress under Mr. Roosevelt acquiesced blindly and dumbly in whatever legislation was handed down from the white house. The second congress had its eyes opened and was bold enough to speak sotto voce in the lobbies in criticism of much that was offered, but few there were to speak out in challenging tones. New deal legislation suffers from lack of having to face a tough and fighting opposition, r We should distrust a republican party composed only of bankers and industrialists. We should distrust a demo cratic party composed only of college professors and labor union organizers. The republicans can afford to spare a few bankers in exchange for leaders of labor; and goodness knows the democrats will need the bankers if they are re turned to power. '- " Pipe for Water Mains THE choice of materials on a big construction job is sure to excite spirited activity among! sponsors of various materials. For the water line from Stayton island feasible materials are steel pipe, concrete pipe, and creosoted stave pipe of Douglas f hv Each material has its merits and its limitations- as to cost, durability and feasibility. Where pres sures are very heavy steel pipe is regarded as better. Where pressures are low concrete or wood pipe is practical. Engineer Koon is said to be recommending steel pipe for the intake and line under the river, concrete pipe for the upper section where the pressure is low, and steel pipe for the lower section where pressure is heavy. The life of the former if the job is well done is indefinite; for steel the claims are up to sixty years and for wood with creosote treatment up to fifty years. Wood pipe is said to be considerably less expensive than steel pipe, except where heavy pressure would require heavy banding. 11 It is up to the city council committee to study the merits of the materials thoroughly. The recommendation of the engineer is entitled to great weight and should not be over ruled unless for very clear and impressive reasons. Salem does not want to buy any inferior material ; at the same time it wants all it can get for, its money. Other things being equal preference naturally should be given to products of Oregon material and fabrication. Above all, the entire nego tiations for materials and for award of contracts should be open and above board so there may be no breath of scandal Drouth Relief and Politics THE Capital Journal chides us with being too partisan in strictures on the rush of federal officials to the drouth belt. Perhaps so; but our authority, in part,' was Paul Mallon, the Journal's own Washington writer, who wrote in its Wednesday issue : "Messrs. Wallace j and Hopkins have been rushing to the aid of the drought areas so fast they are already a couple of miles ahead of the technical forecasters who are trying to find out the ultimate scope and effect of it Mallon went on to imply the political angle of distribution of funds in the drought belt when he said, speaking of how Lemke guessers were raising their hopes because of farmer wrath, "they really do not' know yet how much money the new dealers will put into the area to cool off the wrath." 1 ! The plight of the drought belt excites human sympathy and justifies measures for relief. We will withdraw any imputation of political significance in the extension of relief if Mr. Farley and the democrats will not follow up this fall with ballyhoo about "gratitude", and pressure for votes because of the money spent. , The Multnomah tax commission law was knocked out ss an unlawful delegation of legislative power. That was the basis by which the supreme court of the United States ruled against the NRA and the AAA. Yet the Portland Journal.. which hails the Oregon decision as triumph of rirtue and good government,-damns the supreme court of the United States for applying the same principle of con stitutional law." - ......... : Just how many" leagues, associations and societies are there working for World peace? And every one has a secretary and head quarters and most of them are passing the hat for money. Peace, like sleep, ia a blessed thing, beloved from pole to pole. But people seem to disagree violently on how It is to be secured. Sen. Borah urges use of a tariff on farm products to keep out imports of agricultural-products. He also berates monopoly. The best bresker-up of monopoly we know Is a little foreign competition. How long would fixed steel prices last if the tariff barriers were lowered a llttleT ' . - , j . I . i Ruth Bryan Owen played for high stakes as a diplomat in .Copenhagen, winning a husband. The president will now1 be overrun with applications from widows, sod and grass, who would like a i.'plomaUc post in Europe, one witk royalty trappings preferred. 1 I ! The Great Ga of Politics By FRANK R. KENT Coprrtxst IS 33. ty TVe Baltimore las , .- A Strange Omission Washington, July 10 THE STATEMENT Is made by a correspondent thai in the fifty three speeches delivered at the Philadelphia contention, ev ery one - of which reviewed the Roosevelt record and eu logised the Roosevelt ach ievements, not -one speaker made one ref erence . to the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. It is not possible frank & sum to read all the fifty-three speeches now, but per sonal recoUectlon plus diligent Inquiry from newspaper men and others in attendance appears to confirm this statement Not one can recall so much "as a men tion of the prohibition amend ment and the President's kiia- cess In forcing Its repeal In ree-i ora time. - IT IS, Indeed, a singular thing mat m all that rast ocean of oratory there should bare been not a single dron on thla anh- Ject. Yet a search of the text of tne major speeches for example. tnose or the temporary chair man. Senator Berkley! (the long est keynote oration on record) and ot the permanent chairman. Senator Robinson fsernn niv to Berkley's Is lenrthl fails tn reveal a word about repeal. Every one of the fifty-three seconding speeches dwelt heavily upon the' Rooserelt opening of the banks. Not a single speaker missed on mat. it was the favorite key which every orator struck, and nothing else was overlooked. But ir, rrom start to finish, there was so much as a whisner about repeal -It cannot be recalled. WHAT IS the exolan&tion? Th omission was so unanimous that It seems deliberate. Yet it is hard to see how It con Id Certainly repeal was an outstand ing acuitsicmcui. More man mat, it was one nromise Mr. TCrtnuA- velt made in isaa which he re deemed promptly and ! fully. Praise for him was to have been expected. It was his due. It would hare been deserved. ThrOUXh him. it could h Maim. ed, an obnoxious amendment to the Constitution had been elim inated. It was something of which he could be croud. In the face of all that, not to so much as mention the matter appears al most Incredible. A great deal has been made bv bis onoonenta nt his repudiation of the 1932 plat form. Here was one pledge to which he could point as carried out not only In the snirit hot to the letter. It is even , harder to unaerstana tne ignoring of this Roosevelt achievement when It Is appreciated that the Mn. trast between the Roosevelt wet ness and the former nolltlcal dry ness of Governor Landon could be so strikingly made. INQUIRY AS TO the reasons for this remarkable silence erokes from certain sractlcal nolittcal sources two suggestions, which explain perhaps as well as anv. One Is that if repeal were put forward as a Roosevelt plishment it at once would re vive recollections that in the fight against ' prohibition Mr. Roosevelt was not really a lead er at all: that the lata Alhttrt C. Ritchie, Alfred E. Smith, the Du Ponts, Mr. Raskob, Mr. Shouse and others now no longer his friends took a far earlier and far more effective nart In that great battle than he. It would aiso recall that In IS 32 the ori ginal platform approved by Mr. Roosevelt . did not contain, a straight repeal plank; that the Roosevelt plank differed little from the Hoover "straddle," which he later fiercely denoun ced; that the plank adopted was forced on him by Smith. Ritchie ami other uncompromising wets. THE OTHER reason suggested is even more Interesting. The re peal easiness was not played up. it is said, because. of the desire not to alienate further from Mr. Roosev!t the clerrvmen of the COUntrr. most of whom nrm Arw and many of whom deeply re sented tne White House effort a year ago to take them into camp through a bogus "personal let ter." It will be recalled that in 1935 a large number of ministers received a letter purporting , to come irom Mr. Koosevelt person ally, asking that , they write him giving their advice and riews. A considerable number responded in good faith. Then it was discov ered that the letter was "nho. ney." that it was an old political dodge letter copied verbatim from" one sent out some six months before by Gov. Philip La Follette (great friend of the President) to Wisconsin clergymen. i WHEN THIS was revealed. Mr. Roosevelt got a lot of pretty hot replies from Indignant clergymen, properly resentful at what seem ed a cheap political trick. Vari ous polls since taken " Indicate a majority of clergymen unfriend ly to the New Deal. Not many weeks ago the Rev. Stanley High, former editor of the Christian Herald, was taken on as a Roose velt campaign helper. The Demo cratic National Committee is fin ancing Mr. High's activities. He has organized a so-called "Good Neighbor League from which he draws a salary and which Is an adjunct of the National .Commit tee. The belief, however. Is .that Mr. High concentrates on writ ing campaign speeches and art! cles and on trying to win the ministers over. In 1930 he was an ardent . dry. He announced about that time a plan (later abandoned) for publi'ing a dry daily newspaper In New York and Biis for Breakfast for R." J, HKTDItlCKS James M. Bates was most 7-11-3 S versatile of Lea mission -family; erected the first house ot whites In Jefferson: -(Continuing from yesterday:) "Mrs. Vaujhan, wishing to get mora Information onHhis, to her. Interesting; subject, S Interrogated her father as to th family , his tory, and drew out from him the startling Information- that there was a secret drawer! In one end of the trunk, and she found a letter from one of .his brothers which had been locked up in the drawer and known only to him self for above 30-yers. k "On opening the drawer the secrets of nearly hair a century. ."Neither of these? letters had ever been answered, and, the writers having- glvan up that brother for lost, had long since been laid away to their final rest. "Miss Ora vaughtn, a grand daughter of 'Urfcle Jitoray, wrote to Washington Clty.1 and finally succeeded in getting in corre Twenty Years Ago JalT 11. lfllA The huge machine! recently stalled by the Pheasant Fruit Juice company are uflng up their quota of loganberries. i Norma Talmadge In "The Child ren in the House" Is the eurrent Oregon attraction. . . Lieutenant Niemejter who will lecture on the world! war tonrght is predicting the struggle, to last at least another T. Ten Years I Ago I I July 11, 1$2 Salem a weltered ufider 107 de grees weather yesterday which broke all former records. . The convict miners In Kansas hare given up their! mutiny and come to the surface lor food. Brunswick record! have been made now with a "light-ray" pro cess which play for a longer time than formerly. , ? Health By Royal S. Copeland, 5I.O. , ASTHMA IN a child, on of the most difficult problems -presented the physician. It Is bad enough tn its acute form. But it is Uo the fore runner of chronic asthma not Infre quently found among adults. i : Asthma la nofci an infectious dis ease. It is not -catching". Yet. it is a real menace to,, the general health. When It attacks the very young child It often leads te complication. These may Interfere with the; growth and normal development, f ! The actual cause of asthma is not known. Several known! factors play an Important part in producing : it. Heredity influences most cases. The histories of more than SO per cent of the sufferers from asthma show that one or the other parent had the disease. A generation may be missed but It Is In a sense "in the Mood. Children with asthma are frequent ly the victims of certain associated diseases. They may suffer from at tacks of sick headache, tflxzineas and certain disturbances of the akin. like the adult, the yftung sufferer from asthma is "allergic' to certain substances. . By this la meant that the victim Is hypersensitive to some foods or materials which have no unpleasant effect on the arerare per son. These substances may be air borne, taken in , throagh the breath ing organs. '-".!--. May Be TealiU In most instances - the unhappy child has some disturbance in the lymphoid tissues of the body. For example, the tonsils may be diseased or adenoids may be present. Some times the nasal sinuses are not nor mal. In any event there is a sensi tivity to protein substances and asth matic attacks are frequent. It is well to have diseased and en larged tonsils removed. 'The same is true of adenoids. X-iay pictures should be taken to determine whether or not the nasal sinuses are Involved. "Special akin tests should be made to determine whether some substance is having an allergic effect. If such sensitiveness is found. It. Is often pos sible to evercoma tt by the Injection ot an appropriate vaccine. The diet Is Important. v Since milk and eggs are common offenders, often leading to asthmatlo attacks, they may be omitted from the diet to see If benefit results. Other foods such as fish, fruits and cereals may prove irritating. ;; v Answers te Health- Queries ' A Reader. Q. I have noticed sev eral rrray hairs In tfea. last - few months. I am a young girl of 24. What would most likely be the cause Of this? A. Premature gray ftalr may be due to shock or worryv This may also be hereditary. Forget it and know that gray hair and a young face make an attractive combination. . 1 R. M. Q. When a young person's Joints pop Is tt lack of something In the diet? i A. This may be due to lack of synovia fluid. If pain accompanies this condition. It would be wise to consult your physician. For full par. ticulara restate your question and send a stamped, self -addressed en velope. : I j -. Dr. Copeland it plad t9 answer faqsiries from readerfeho tend mddretted stamped envelope vHth , their qnettiont. Addrttt eft !r ; tert to Dr. Copeland jla core of ! ttot nevctpaper at its ftola offlco '"In thltdtV I..:-:, J (Copyright. 1938, JC J, IncJ predicted Mr. Hooves'! re-election in 1933 if he stood? firmly tor prohibition. Mr. HigbJI now ranks high as a Roosevelt propagandist and it Is suggested that to boast that Mr. Roosevelt brought about repeal might lessen Mr. High's influence in ministerial circles. However, to treat the whole re peal incident as if it had never happened at all seems carrying the strategy a Uttle . far. " s- tt ' r: . l X ' ': " :: rV" : ' ' ' l ' f '- ' j' r ' spondence with two daughters ot 'Unci Jimmy youngest sister. ;"One Is Mrs. McElhlnney and the, other Is Mrs. Julia B. Schoefp; also a nephew, Edward Lttndy. - : ' .- , ; - SWhlle Mr. Bates was encoun tering the gales at sea that tossed hw bark Into the jaws ot coral reefs his relatives on land were vainly trying to buffet the storms ot financial adversity which taight them anew the transitory nature ot earthly riches, and. from what we can learn, no doubt Uncle Jimmy enjoyed, especial ly " during the last years of his life, as much pleasure and tran quility - hi- his humble home In th) far west as he could hare done In -the bustling city of Washing ton, the nation's capital." ' Thus ends the second Rigdon article. la August, 1927, Mrs. Julia S. Vaughan furnished . for publica tion some of her recollections of early history in Jefferson and vl ciiity. From .this matter is culled the notes that follow: I U S tier mother's maiden name was ..itin w.. V1..1.1. ii m in-ftgije. Sne WM wly mmled to Bartley K. CaldwelL Elev en children were born to them. iWlth eight children. Mrs. Cald well, widow. Joined in Missouri the covered - wagon immigration of j? 146. The children were GI- rara, CaiohiU, , Direly. Laurllla Llona (twins), Mabury, Mary and AKtneda. . l . .,- v."'. v. iAn older son" Arthur had gone to California earlier. i. i. 'Mary died and was buried on the plains. They were bound for California, but the captain of their train advised them to come to Oregon, and they took the southern" route, along with part of the members of the train.. In Bear valley of the Sierras, Calohill with several other men enlisted to serve In the Mexican war and went with Fremont's balttalion. Food for the Immigrants be-' came scarce; had to be rstloned before reaching the Oregon line. Tlfje mother went without food In 1 order that her children might not starve.'r. The oxen kept dying, were re placed with cows; wagon after wsgon was abandoned. Only a fey were left when they reached Cw creek canyon. There Glrard wfth several men hurried on to the Willamette valley, secured food supplies and hurried back Its was December when the party reached Polk county. The lonely mother . and her children had their fifst meager Christmas dinner in Oregon on the bank of the Luckia mute. Glrard the eldest boy had Dtfen as a father to the family. I S -V : iThe next year, 1847, the fam 11? moved to Marlon county, to what is now known as the old Hbgan place, near Jefferson. J There was, soon a double wed ding. In which Thomas Holt and Thomas Ramsdell married . the twins, Llona and Laurllla. Rams dell i was working for Hamilton CAmpbell In the Chehulpum Tal ler, and had to take his pay in better and tallow, which he car ried on horseback to Oregon City and brought hack the muslin for the wedding dresses. (Campbell was the member of the Lee mission who upon its dissolution bought Its cattle. He trtok them to that ralley, between tHe Looney settlement and the Junction of the Santlam and Will amette rivers. The writer notes that the state highway depart ment cans the creek running through that ralley the Chechnl pu!m. The writer disputes the spelling contends it ought to be Chehulpum. Who is right?) I Ii . iThe same year, '47,. the widow was married to James M. Bates. who had taken up a place in the Chehulpum ralley, where Sidney ndw stands. They sold their squatter's right mere ana toox up tneir donation claim that became the site ot Jefferson or the Joint site, with that ot Jacob Conser. j - .v v. Ota 1849, Mr. Bates went to tne California ; gold . mines, re turning the following year, and erecting the log house that was the first building ot a white man onj the site ot what became Jef ferson. Their first- (log) house was a half mile below and it had been washed away by high waiter In the Santlam the winter before obliging Mrs. Bates and her children, including her Bates bapy, Julia Ann,- to lire for a time In the home of her daugh ter, Llona," and husband, Thomas Holt, hear by. ! . r V ' - Mrs. Vaughan recalled two early schools tn the "vicinity of thai- site of Jefferson, before the Jefferson Institute was bull t "one out where Mrs. Bob Weddle lives, the other about a mile south of . Hamilton Campbell's house where: James Pate now lives. They had church occasion ally in this (the latter) school house. (Continued tomorrow.) New Sidewalk and Tennis Court Almost Finished, iWOODBURN. July 10. Im provements at' the Library square park consisting ,of a new concrete sidewalk and the finishing of the second tennis court hare been el most completed. Th new sidewalk has b e e n made possible by donations from tho folowlng contributors ' and through the efforts of Mrs., Ray Glatt and Miss Dorothy Austin: T.C. Poorman, R. L, Gulss, F. H. VaaWyngarden, Frank Proctor, Minnie Richards. H. M. Austin, Lester Gilbert, Clyda Whitman. Winton Hunt, Ray Glatf, P. G. Vlgkers, W. H. . Broyles, Tom Renn, J. Melrln Ringo. George Beach, Blaine McCord. Mrs. Neva MKentle, E. T. Sims, Alfred Kltmp and Mrs. E. A. Austin. The ne'w dirt surface tennis court has ben paid tor, with money approp riated by the Woodburn woman s club. ' ' ' Give Me Rain and I - .' 1 - i . - , "KING OF CHAPTER XV " Zola had reservations on a bal cony which commanded a view of two streets along the route of the Rex parade. She and Lynn laughed and talked together as they watched the antics of street revelers, await ing the pageant. There seemed to be no end to the astonishing revela tions of this festival; Lynn reflected as Zola continued with explanations of its customs and traditions. At last the long-awaited spectacle approached, in all its regal splendor. The procession climaxed that of Proteus,' because it was the pag eant of Rex, the king. His was the first float, surmounted by its glit tering throne. The crowds roared with cheers of enthusiasm. "Hail te the Kingl- "Hurrah for His Car nival Majesty lM The shout arose like a mighty chorus from a deep throated organ.- "All hail, Rex our Kingl- Tne throne surpassed all sybari tieal conceptions of oriental gran deur. Jewels studded the golden creation and flashed their facets in the bright sunshine. Behind the king, his jeweled and ermine-bordered mantle spread its splendor to the end of the long float, where uni formed pages stood at servile atten tion. The king accepted the cheers of the merrymakers with gallant ges tures ana friendly smiles. From a chest at his side he selected glitter ing tokens and tossed them to his admiring subjects. They caught at the baubles with eager glee and tri umph glowed on their faces. Lynn felt her breath catch ia her throat as the royal float moved before their balcony and Jack smiled di rectly at her. His elevstion on the throne placed him on almost the same level and, as he passed before her he sainted, aimed carefully and tossed her a favor which she caught in her outstretched hands. It was a rosette of white ribbon which held a ring - set with a large square crystal. She kneV that it was a bawdy trinket and that the stone was only glass, because Doti had told her that the favors were dime store Jewelry but the significance of the gift set her heart racing and, for a moment, the chaos of color and sound swam dizzily before her eyes. With an effort she ad justed their focus to watch the float disappearing into the con fusion of the avenue. Her laughter mingled with Zola's as they in spected the , ring, but -- aha was vaguely relieved when the pageant again claimed their attention. They discovered Doti and her at tendants on the float of Roman myths, with Doti as Iris the messen ger of the gods and posing upon the rainbow road which ahe traveled. Each of the girls tossed Lynn a favor, which she hoarded with the ring in her handbag, but with much less significance. Finally, it was over, and the king had returned to his den for another year, while the crowds rushed to their homes to prepare, for the innu merable balls of the evening. That majority which was not favored by membership or invitation to attend either the ball of Sex or that of the next important court of Comus, would celebrate with public and private balls of all kind and pro portion. ' - "YouTl have time for a wee nap before you dress for dinner, Zola told Lynn on their way home. It National Officer Of Mailmen Stops MONMOUTH, July 10. Law rence McDonaldpf Almosa, Colo., national committeeman of the Na tional Rural Mall Carriers' assoc iation, who Is national represent ative to the state convention meet ing this' week-end at Astoria, was a guest Thursday at the Philip M. Schweiser homo here. Today he accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Schwei ser to Astoria and on Saturday he will address the convention group. Mrs. Jessie Nowowiejskl. who came to Monmoutn less tnsn a year ago, purchased the Wilson You Can Name it out Own President 3 ! HEARTS 99 will be early and very informal ;so we shall have plenty of time to get into our costumes and arrive early for the ball. I'm going directly to th auditorium I to see that Doti : is quite ready : for hey big moment. You might go with me. only Doti tells ae that Dewey is taking you. That is better, because you will see the fjomus pageant first and arrive at r the auditorium in time for the tableau. You must not be late.; SI I ifl shouldn't miss it for anvthirir Lynn declared. "I'd much rather not see the Comus pageant if you minx we mignt be delayed." 1 fOh,1 no. Just tell Dewey to see that you arrive on time." . H ; Lynn discovered that she was is trifle apprehensive about this eve nihg with Dewey. But she hoped that he would keen his word with her and permit her to enjoy every delightful moment without concern rot ais personal attentions. i! Excitement and happy confusion filled the Merchon mansion. There was an atmosphere about it which felt like a pulse throbbing with tense emotion. Even the servants betrayed a discreetly suppressed jubilance and their high cackling laughter echoed from rear quarters with frequent repetitions, intT- spersed with snatches of high pitched i song. The day of Mardi Gras was always a special dsy of zesure spirits, but when the daugh ter of the house was queen, there was reason for even more jubilance. Old Mattie made a ritual of pre paring the royal dinner and Andy served It with deferential homage. Doti arrived home late that after noon with Jack, bright-eyed and chattering volubly of the day's events. She rushed into Lynn's shaded room which had been shat tered against the glaring sun for thst rest her aunt had suggested. But : she could not sleep. Her thoughts were too chaotic, her im pressions of strange scenes and strange, people toe vivid and dis turbingj The shining glass-set ring was treasured deeply Is her dressing-case, and her memory burnfd with the smile of a tall youth with crisp black hair. How was the pageant? Did yoa like it? How did I look? Doti's questions pattered into the room like sudden i large raindrops into the serene summer day. . M Lynn goaded her enthusiasm to generous response until Lulu ap peared te announce eajolingly. i f Miss; Doti, lambie, Y'all don' hah much moh tune t git dressed fob dinhah. .j Yoh bath is waitin fob yah straightaway, . an ah reckon ' yoh bettah git long wid it. i Tim be right in. Lulu-. But se continued to chatter to Lynn for several more minutes. Her excite ment delineated great haste, but tie customary spell of leisure ruled her as always.- 1 If And then, they were all assem biea in the long white-paneled din ingroom with its Carrara marble mantels' at either end, and candles in hurricane vases easting their mellifluent glow on the sparkling silver table service. Yellow orchids with brown hearts were massed ia the center of the table, which lent an exotie touch to the established and traditional. The house was a bower of flowers, in fact. Gift bou quets had been arriving all day for "tne queen , until it bad been -a problem; to find enough places f ot property on West Main street tbs weegj This consists of two houses and several lots. The larger house Is 'leased to Mr. and Mrs. O'S Snider, j Mrs. Nowowieiskl and family will occupy the other onQ. Mrs. Ida Bunker and Mr. and Mrsi ; Ben Bunker, mother and brother; respectively, of Mrc. Novj owiejski, are here from Luca?. Kan;, as her guests. In August she plan to accompany them, by mot or, to Kansas, - t 1 1 j , " -- ; - -i i Suffers Bad Cut i ELLENDALE. July 10. Mrs. E. Sieel tell on a lard bucket Thursday and cut her right fore), finger badly. She will be unable to ue it for six weeks. by Edna Robh Webster the display of "the later arrivals. Lynn felt somewhat like Alice in Wonderland, stepped into a glitter ing mirror of fantasy and delight. And when Colonel Merchon emerged from his room after dinner, garbed as a beaded Arab and presently Zola swayed down the broad Colo nial stairs as a languorous Cleo patra; Lynn wondered if she might not have gone suddenly, and de lightfully mad. And did not care. For the first time in her life, she felt as if she belonged, as- if she might emerge confidently from her aloof retire ment and become a natural part of this strange drama. - She sensed within her a' genetic endowment which her exiled life had denied her. and for the first time she doubted her mother's right to have) taken all this from her. By inheritance, she had a right to all Doti pos sessed; by environment, she nad nothing. But this night was hers. Until midnight, she could be a gsy Cinderella at the king's ball. After midnight what? No pumpkin coach, even with the influence of magic, could have com pared with the speed and comfort of Dewey's motor car which flew . through the air by its own magic power, at his command. In spite of being a very modern girl who lived in a very modern city, Lynn had rarely been driven about in auto mobiles. The few people whom she knew well did not possess them, and she seldom went about with anyone who did. Yet here, where walking would be-a delight, she never stepped outdoors that a car did not await her. Dewey was In a charming mood. Like all soldiers of fortune, he was at his best when he started on a new conquest. He looked at her closely for a moment in the indi rect light of the dashboard. "You're real then," he decided, with a quiz zicrl smile. I was afraid you might have disappeared over night you're- so beautiful, you know. I thought you wouldn't last like a delicate flower." - - "Don't be absurd. aha lanrhed. Td stay for tonight, anyway. I came here especially for tonight" Im glad somethinff hrous-ht you," he leaned toward her confi dentially. Lynn could not have explained the momentary revulsion which she felt at his nearness, but she was aware ot it even -while she tried to dismiss it with the pleasure she knew should be hers in having this gallant escort for the Rex ball of Mardi Gras. She tried to imagine Susanna's excitement and delight in her situation, but her power of pro jection failed at the very beginning. It was so much easier to imagine being with Jack like this No, she disciplined - herself - severely, - ahe would not think about Jack like that. If she did, even for a moment, her mind went berserk and she lost all control of her imagination. ' It was the same while they were watching the dazzling pageant of Comus. vSitting beside Dewey and hearing his voice close beside her in the medley of surrounding sounds, she did not find the spectacle so alluring and exciting by any por tion of a degree as upon the previous night when Jack had sat beside her. : (To Be Continued) CtetUM. IMS. Klas Mm InttaU. Ia Linn County Chapter of ' Red Cross Sponsors Life Saving, Swimming Course SCIO, July 10. Swimming and Ufe-saving'instructlons iff Scio will be held each Tuesday and Friday mornings under direction of Leo Butts, Albany, sponsored by the Linn county chapter of the Am erican Red Cross. Swimming classes will convene at 9:30 a. m with life-saving in struction to begin at 11 a. m. Jun ior life-saving will include child ren over 14, while senior life-saving instruction will be given to c persons oyer 17 years of ags. Classes will be held in the swir t mlng pool Just above the bridt. on Thomas creek In Scio.