I'AGrQUI "-':,C", ""- - ' ' TLa CIIGON STATIISlAI, Saiga, Oregsa Tcesday MoniizJuiy 1, ' -ij '': V ' ' - :" - rounded "No Favor Sway Us; No Fear Shall Aice" From First Statesman. March ZS. 1S51 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Charles A. Spracui Editor&lanager Sheldon F,-Sackett - ilanaging-L'r 31ember of Lbe Associated rres Th AoclalPd Press Is sxcluxlvely eniitled to ths use for publica tion of all news dispatches credited to It or not thenrise credited this paper. Marketing Crops I i J HYMAN II. Cohen, market editor of the Portland Journal, puts his finger on one of the important farm problems i of this valley, that of marketing of crops. This valley produces such a diversity of crops that its marketing prob lems are multiplied to the point of embarrassment. Each crop has its own character, its own market, and must meet specific market demands. -For some the market is domestic, foi other produce almost entirely local, for other crops the market is foreign as well as domestic There are the matters of i pack, of grading, of financing as well as of media to be used which must be considered for each item of production. In some cases the specialized marketing is pretty well worked out asiin the case of the walnut and filbert growers. In others it is not well organized. I i Cohen, who is a good authority on farm production and marketing in the northwest, offers the following criticism of the handicap which confronts valley growers: "The chief complaint against the Willamette Taller Is the lack of marketing ability of its growers and distributors. There i something Titally wrong with a district that can produce such wonderful qualify and plenty of it, and haTe practically nothing a but a local demand td take care of it. That is the big drawback of horticulture and agriculture in the Willamette ralley. "Need of marketing schools is generally shown In the Willamette- Talley. While there are producers who are able to harreat and pack their supplies and find a fair market at inter als. others are befogged and get little for their work. There is need of schools to show the proper time to harvest, the right- way to pack and abore all the places where supplies can be sold to adrantage. There has been much talk of statewide marketing Arrangements to aid producers but little has as yet come of it." I While the special session -of the legislature renewed legislation on a state agricultural adjustment act, after the first act was declared invalid by the court, we have not heard of any marketing codes for crops of this season. Per haps the need is not apparent this year as in depression years. Perhaps there is fear as to the validity of the present act. However, considerable has been accomplished ; under crop control agreements, as in the case of the loganberry crop this year, where the board set a price and that price was accepted by buyers. It may be that this method points a way for progress in this direction. . i ' Better cooperation among producers is needted to estab lish proper grades and practices. Assuredly more aggressive selling methods are needed for widening the market for such products as prunes, Oregon nuts, seeds, etc. The field is indeed inviting for study and for action. Dr.! W. J. Kerr, chancellor emeritus of the system of higher education was given such an assignment for research. It is to be hoped that he can make definite recommendations which will help solve the problem Mr. Cohen has touched on. ! Jersey EFFERSON township, down J seems to be one unit of 'government which lives up to the doctrine of Jeffersonian simplicity of j government, and full libertv and responsibility of self-support. When the lib eral funds which had been provided for relief were exhausted and no more were supplied or the amount greatly reduced, localities had to take up the burden. Jefferson township sejems to have adopted a simple rule, as it reported to the Jersey league of municipalities: if I "We discontinued relief and told them to get out and scratch, which they did and we are getting along O. K." ! Not even Governor Martin has had the courage to pro claim such a drastic rule. Nor have the other townships of New Jersey, although the relief load has been very much reduced. The league report for 38 communities showed that for June, 1935 the number of cases was 12,706 and the cost $318,548 to the communities. For June! of this year the number was 4,690 and the cost $65,438. ! J A reporter in the New York Herald Tribune, reviewing the experience under the new policy, had this to say: "What happened to the people who were told to get oat and .scratch? Nobody has yet been reported starring, or enduring gTare hardship, although the policy -was inroked three months ago. No figures are yet available on the number ot former relief tclients who have suddenly discovered they can make a living Ty picking fruit and berries, mowing lawns, weeding gardens and working as domestics in South Jersey and along the shore. A 'fonserratire estimate would place the figure somewhere-between 1M00 and 20,000." . : i ! He adds that much of this work is seasonal and the re lief rolls will probably swell this fall and winter when the outdoor occupations end. ! I 1 ! The trouble with the relief business is that the workers are unwilling to go out ori jobs where the pay is considerably less than what they have been drawing on the relief work. They have a feeling that they are entitled to a fair living, and are justified in refusing to accept employment where the pay is low. j Eventually, unless the government is going to assume permanently the burden of providing substenance for dis tressed segments of the population, something like the Jef ferson township rule will have to be invoked. Society should ndt let folk starve, but the rule- of "get out and scratch" is really the most ancient of all economic laws, and one that cannot be superseded in any system of production and dis tribution of wealth. Ages of Cars OFTEN one hears the remark that old cars should be barred from the road because of their increased risk to i other vehicles using the highway. It sounds logical. Old heaps with poor brakes, defective headlights; aged tires would seem to be the ones most likely to figure in accidents either to themselves or to other cars. Like many general assertions which sound plausible, the facts hardly substan tiate the claim. I At least a short survey made by the Automobile Trade Journal of actual accidents, sion. Investigators studied the which occurred in an eastern were grouped by their ages, which ranked from 1925 to 1935. The astonishing ihing was that instead of having the accidents distributed -nearly in proportion to the relative number of cars of given years operating on the highways at the time, the reverse was true. The oldest cars figured in the accidents at only about one-third of their expected share, and the percentages increase until the most recent models showed a disproportionately large number of accidents. The reason of course is that drivers of the older vehicles have been accustomed to driving more ! slowly and more cautiously. Their buses simply will not travel at the speed of i late models. - . f I j What is the moral, go back to the 1925 and 1926 models? Of course not. If we shall not by legislation limit the speed of the new cars, then by voluntary discipline we should learn how to handle them with security ; for ourselves and safety to others. Don't blame the model of the car; blame the driver when an accident occurs. The Spanish government. Itself born of 'revolution, denounces the revolt of the army In Morocco ernments always1 legitimatize themselves; and the Spaniards now in the seats of power have no desire to relinquish their seats of au thority. In any state, whether the rulers are from the right or from the left, the anwer to rebellion is gunfire, nnless those in power are too craven to resist. - t - 7"r-.Ti. 1 1 mi ill . & j. - -ar a .iii r v "w nnrrnr t nT ruin iiivl; Llib ,,,wtjw,rTW me ui ui vuimu btiis mr iM f;mi;iM in z 1SS1 Hule in the sta e of New Jersey, in Accidents pointed to the opposite conclu records of 500 auto accidents state last s winter. The cars as a "shameful criminal act. Gov 01 rOlltlCS I " By It J. HENDRICKS - I l.eeaa,..-. . , . j By FRANK R. KENT Copyright 1933. If Tfcs Baltimore Saa Ready for the Tour ; Cleveland, July 20. : There are still explosive possi bilities in the Townsend conven tion and there certainly Is a strong current of resentment running, under neath. - NeTer theless it seems nnlikely that old Doctor T o w n s e n d's control will weaken or that the. political program to which he , was clearly commit ted before he came here will Frank - Sew not go through. Some of those who have been painfully - squeezed by the strong anti-Roosevelt twist he has given this gathering insist that the good Doctor is senile and does not really know what he is do ing. The facts do not bear this out at all. On the contrary the Townsend course from , the start seems curiously consistent and if he has made any actual blunders to date they are not visible to the naked eye. For example before he came to . Cleveland he ; had entered a combination with the Rev. Father Coughlln and the Rev. "Gerald Smith, the primary purpose of which is to defeat Roosevelt. There was no Inten tion of endorsing Mr. JLemke in the convention. The risks of such an effort were plain. The plan was officially to preserve a non partisan attitude for the move ment but to so drench the dele gates with anti-Roosevelt doctrine that the stumping tour of the four leaders Coughlin, Smith, Townsend .and Lemke c o u 1 d start with the support of the great bulk ' of the Townsend fol lowing. Up to this writing that plan seems to hare been success fully peraued. despite an insur gency that i at one time looked formidable and which is by no means completely quelled. : The conrentlon Is scheduled to end Sunday on a strong anti-Roosevelt note with the appearance before it of Mr. Lemke, th Third Party -candidate himself. Next month Father Coughlln's National Union for Social Justice will hold its convention here and once more the Roosevelt administration will be ripped from stem to stern. After that the four leaders wiU begin their tour in the interests of the Lemke candidacy. Actually of course it will be in the Interest of Governor Landon and ' they know it. Not one of the four has the least notion that Mr. Lemke will be elected. What they want is to beat Mr. Roosevelt and the Lemke candidacy is the only means available for them, inas much as Governor Landon has flatly opposed first, the pension plan of the Townsend movement, and second, the currency infla tion ideas of the Coughlin-Lemke outfit. It is a fact that Mr. Roosevelt has not publicly . taken a . pro nounced and unequivocal stand against either of these proposi tions. He is not of course for either of them but certainly he is far closer, to the Townsend Lemke point of view than his Republican opponent, which makes it seem strange that these four leaders should be so muck more violently opposed to Roose velt than to Landon. : Two ex planations are offered. One Is that it Is entirely natural to be more bitter toward a man whom you believed to be with yoa and then discovered not. to be : thai against the man about whose op position there was never any doubt. "And there Is no question that both the Townsend people and the currency inflationists did regard Mr. Roosevelt as sympa thetic. The other suggestion is that these leaders think that by the election of a conservative Republican President, who will take no step In their direction, the reaction favorable to their respective causes will be very much greater than would be the case with the- re-election of a synthetically sympathic Roosevelt- That however seems a little too subtle for these gentlemen and It is easier to believe that their strong: distaste for Mr. Roosevelt arises front personal reasons. The Incontrovertible fact Is that quit knowingly no matter what they say they are promoting the Landon chances. There Sa no way of estimating the effect upon voters of the pro posed tour of these tour men but undoubtedly rather Coughlin and Gerald Smith are the tws most emotionally effective speakers la the country today. Ia their ability to stir a crowd there is none who approaches them. Dr. Townsend's pension plan, of course, appeals to a great mass of people, and the currency Inflation scheme, as demonstrated la Congress, has a considerable popular support. It sounds like a formidable and many will think dangerous com bination. It Is easy to claim that millions will follow their lead In the election. But it may not turn out that way. Movements such as these have a way of petering out. Men such as these do not always hold together. They are all prone to exaggerate their following and magnify their power. For ex ample, strong as Dr. Townsend Is personally. It Is certain all of his friends cannot be taken away from Mr. Roosevelt. Some of the more pronounced Rooseveltians here are in open revolt. They have succeeded In Implanting a good deal, of poison among the delegates. AH sorts of rumors are afloat. There la talk of the Liberty League and of "Hearst Gold." The unfortunate Duponts are dragged in, uepictea as sintsterry engaged In plotting to buy the whole Townsend movement. The "Kan sas Gang- now In control of the Republican party, is suspected. There are many others. Some of the delegates are really in a state Of great Inflammation and among the leaders there is bitterness and suspicion. Mr.. Clements and other ousted Towneend advisers are "Wagons West." story of Mareus and Narclssa Whitman; celebration of : centenary of heroic trek: ! v n (Continuing from Sunday:) A few actual settlers passed WaiiL. atpu In 1840. In 1841, 24 persons went past. With the Immigration of Dr. White, 1842, came a letter from the American Board. It arbitrarily dismissed Spaulding, Smith. Gray and Rogers, and ordered Whitman to move to Lapwai. t V Gray, Smith and Rogers - bad already all voluntarily left. Whitman Immediately called a meeting of the remaining mission aries at Wailatpu, beginning Sept. 28, lasting four days. It led to no definite conclusion. i Suddenly "Whitman asked for a signed resolution asking him to go east that winter in the interest of the missions. It was given. A. L. Lovejoy, Just arrived with the .1842 . immigration, accom panied Whitman on, that i long, perilous winter's ride, beginning Oct. 3," 1842. ! S T Her friends at Fort Walla Wal la insisted that Mrs. Whitman must not remain at the mission in the absence of Dr. Whitman; It was dangerous. j She left William Geiger In charge at Waillatpu and went to Fort Walla Walla, where she left little David Malin, first of her adopted family. He was half Span ish, half Indian.. - S V t She took with her the little half breeds she called "my little girls," Mary Ann Bridger and Helen Mar Meek. - She went on to the Lee branch mission at Wascopam ; (The Dalles), and from there proceeded to Fort Vancouver, to get the at tention of the physician of the Health! By Royal S. Copeland, M.D. A TOUNO MOTHER recent wrote asking bow to guard her ch acainst summer diarrhea. Fortunately. It Is not as comon as la former year yet It continues to be observed dur ing the summer months. Many of my readers will recall the days when summer diarrhea. In Infants was the most dreaded and serious of all child hood diseases. This disease has graaUy decreased because ot our better understanding ot food. Improvements in refrigera tion and preservation of food sub stances have been of tremendous value In curbing the disease. Blames SpoUeJ Milk In most Instances diarrhea In a young child can be traced to the use of spoiled mm If the milk or food supply is contaminated, diarrhea Is a common result Since this is more likely to occur during the hot weather, special care must be exer cised at tbla Ume. The diet ot the Infant must be carefully supervised during the sum mer months. Likewise, the child should be guarded against excessive heat and sunshine. Te ksep the rounffster cool It la wise to sponge and bathe tbe child at frequent In tervals, Older children should be re strained from too energetic play. In some Instances diarrhea occurs despite every precaution. It may re sult from some infection in the body. For example, diseased and enlarged tonsils and adenoids, or infections of the nose, throat, or ears, may be the cause of diarrhea. The germs ot dis ease are absorbed into the system and carried to the Intestines where Irritation and Inflammation 'follow. Occasionally diarrhea Is a symptom of some constitutional disorder. CoasmU a Doctor: The young sufferer appears ex tremely VL Fever Is present. The chad Is easily Irritated, cross aad wKboot Interest la food. Be may be sick at the stomach, and vomit fre quently. The stools have a putrid dor. are soft,: greenish la color aad contain a great deal t nracua, It U always a good pUa to con sult with your doctor. ' Bear la mind that what may appear te be a trivial intestinal disorder may be the onset of a severe disease. At times the child may beeeeoe so sick i as te require constant eupervisioa. la per atstsnt cases ft may be accessary to replace the lost fluid. Sometimes this Is accomplished by Injections late the skin r rectum. Never neglect diar rhea In a chad. AaewsT to Health Qaaries Mrs. R U. a I had black diphtheria two rears ago aad stare thea have beea trewMed with a rea ming ear. What would yea advise la a case mt tbla kind 7 , A. Consult your doctor for exam ination aad advice. Such a condition shoold have apecUls medical care aad attention. Tear doeter win be glad to advise you snore de finitely. E. T. Q. What can be done for perspiring hands my palms are con tinually wet? I have beea told It Is due to some underlying constitutional condition. What Is the remedy? A. This Is usually due to a nerv ous disturbance. Make every effort to improve your general health. For farther particulars sead a self -addressed. ; stamped envelope aad re peat your question. Dr. CopeUni U glai to mnrxcer fntjutriet from readers tcAo send addressed stem pad vip-cKh their questions. Address oil let ters te Dr. Ceaetead to care af : fat newspaper at Its mala offlc tutkls dtifc i v-i ; (C9WrtsU tSSI. Ks T. C. I sol here, holding press conferences and planning 'rump conventions. As a result of all this the health of the Townsend movement . may be Impaired, the ardor of the forces back of the Townsend Plan diminished. It Is not, however, apt to change the Coughlin-Town-send-Smith-Lemke combination to stump the eountry against -Mr, Roosevelt Politically, that Is the really important thing about the I convention. Hudson's Bay company for. the strenuous . years she had gone through had brought 111 health, culminating in a breakdown. S S Narclssa Whitman came from the fort to the Lee mission, then having been largely, transferred to the site of Salem. She visited the four mission families then living In the Lee house, still standing, SCO Broadway, the first residence of whites on this site. ' Also she visited with the W. II. Gray family at the Oregon Insti tute building. Wallace Prairie (present Bush farm), the con struction of which Gray superin tended, having come to work for the Methodists after leaving the American Board employ. Jason Lee himself took her on her way home as far as The Dalles, whence Dr. Whitman came for her as soon as possible after piloting the Applegate covered wagon train of 1843 over most of its journey. After Mrs. Whitman had reach ed Waiilatpu. she took up a cor respondence with some of the la dies of the Methodist mission here and a few of these letters are still kept: lnterestinc and prescious heirlooms. Dr. Whitman, pilotinr the An- plegate train, received at the site of LaGrande, Oregon, a letter from Spalding, telling of the dan. gerous illness of Mrs. Spalding. Dr. Whitman gave the piloting ot the train through the Blue mountains to Stlccus. Cayuse chief, while be hastened to Lap wai, and soon left the sick lady on the way to recovery. - , Hastening on to the Waiilatpu mission, to . further assist that first great covered wagon immi gration into Oregon, he found an urgent call that must have his attention before he could proceed to The Dalles for Narclssa. It came from Tshimakain. the station among the . Spokane In dians, where Mrs. Cushing Eels gave birth to a son October 6, 1844. S That winter (1843-44) Mrs. Whitman was very 1U. In Decem ber her death was expected. ' : As soon as she could be up she took all the care of her three lit tle ones (orphans.) I In the fall of 1844 her "family- Increased suddenly. The seven Sa- ger children, two boys and five girls, their parents having died Oh the Oregon trail, were brought to her and she adopted them all. I r William Shaw and wife, noted Marion county pioneers, had as sumed care of the Sager children after the death of their father and mother taking them on as tar as the Whitman station. It- ; The next few years were happy pnes for the Whitmans. They raised enough food for their own needs and to supply the mounting number of : immigrants passing that way each fall. ! ; August 23, 1847, Mrs. Whit man wrote her father and moth er:' j "The poor Indians are amazed at the overwhelming number of Americans coming Into the coun try. They seem not to know what to make of it. Very many of the principal ones are dying, and Some have been killed by other Indians, In going south into the region of California, The remain ing ones seem attached to us. and cling to use the eloeer; cultivate their farms quite extensively, and do, not wish to see any Snlapus (Americans) settle among them here; they are willing to have them spend the winter here, but la the spring they must all go on. 1 ;. V V They would be willing to have more missionaries stop and those devoted to their good. They ex pect that eventually this country will be settled by them but they Wish to see the Willamette filled P first," V - ; Plainly she could not foresee what was coming, or would not breathe a word of It to her loved ones. There bad been threats front the first. Perhaps the Whit mans thought the Indians would forget again. But then came No vember. ? (Continued tomorrow.) The Safety Valve - Letters from Statesman Readers NAME FOR SCHOOL To the Editor, Statesman, ; Salem. Oregon. 'Dear. Sir: ;,- The following Is a copy of a letter being sent to the Salem School Board, and I would appre ciate it if you would publish It in your Open Forum department: Salem School Board, Salem, Oregon. Gentlemen: I wish to submit for your con sideration as the name for the grade school on Mission Street BUSH SCHOOL. h "The Bush family of Salem are pioneers In this part of the state and their many benefactions for which the people of this vicinity are indebted make it fitting and proper that some recognition be given this esteemed family. "I, therefore, urge that this suggestion be given your earnest consideration, so that this highly deserved recognition may be af forded and an appropriate nam given this new building. ''Respectfully submitted, -MRS. fi. A. RHOTEN." , . Give Dinner :.i DALLAS, July 20. Mr. and Mrs. R. Guyan and students of the National Institute of Music and Art met at the park for a no host dinner at 1 o'clock Friday. ' ' LOU ; ; "KING OF CHAPTER XXIII I j Lynn made haste' to assure Mr; Lowry of her return. She went di rectly to his office at the rear of the floor, and knocked timidly. His sum mons was curt. "Good morning," Lynn smiled as she opened the door. "I thought I'd let you know I am here, all rig-h." Er good morning," be snapped. "That was considerate of you. Miss BarteL But I'm afraid your coat sideration is a little tardy. Tour 'services are no longer needed here." xyna stared at him with numb amazement. "But Mr. Lowry, you said I might return " her right hand reached out with a little plead, ins; gesture. I don't recall. Yon said yon might return. But how did I know you wouldt Had yon decided to re main ia the south, would yon have considered my situation! From my long: experience, I think not. "But I promised to return," her voico faltered, mors disturbed by the injustice of big attitude than the realization of her own predicament "I'm sorry we hare a new model who is quite satisfactory." His mam ner was suave, but definite. His shru completed the interview. Lynn turned about and left the room like an aatmated atone lain. Her eyas stared fixedly aad her pos ture was not tnax or the graceful mannequin who modeled gowns and wraps for tht envy of stout dow gers and angular maiden ladies; Instiact directed her to the locker room where Susanna met her at the door. Her lips opened for some flip, pant remark, and snapped shut again like a turtle. Why, dearie what's the mat ter?" she rasped, hastening to sup port Lynn's slumping: figure. "Are you slekl" . Lynn nodded. She was hurt end bewildered, and a little sick, she supposed. She felt again as she had on that day more than a year ego, when her mother had left her alone. Sosaiine led her to a chair and brought water ia paper cup. Lynn's hand trembled as she reached to take ft, araak a little. "Ill be all right." she managed te say bravely, and tried to smile. "Han alone and don't bother about sse. or yoall lose your Sob. too." "Say he didn't bounce yon. did amy oasaane aemaniea tvereeiy. Lynn nodded. " Why-ftho brute. Say; listen. noney, ru just, go in and tell htm a few tunc'' Lynn raised her hand. "Don't say a word, Susanna. He would only do the. same thing to you, and it wouldn't -do me a hit e rood. Ill End work some place. At least. I've aad this year f experience." She stood a as if everythina were ouito ail rig-fat, -fcut she felt empty and ex hausted. "WelL say." Susanna orroned for adequate words. "I hope you wont he forgettln' your old pal, now. Let me know what you're dom', wont on Lyna smiled wanry, bat with friendly assurance. Of coarse. ehaat forget yon. And 111 be see In' yon soon, honey. I think 111 run atonjr home for today. I'm -a little tired," she decided, slipping Sato her coat and wonderinr what had caused her weariness. She had been ae baeyant only an hoar boCore. Ia her mental turmoil and smart ing physical hurt, she could think . only of Mrs. Kime as a haven of sol ace and reassurance. Everything would be adjusted, one she had talked with her one dependable Pet Parade Winner At Stayton Announced STATTON, July 10 Winners la the Santiam Spree pet parade, led by Lieutenant Max Alford and the Silver ton band, . were an nounced here today. Th sweepstakes and first prise for the best display weni to Betty Lou and Boyd Wendt of Stayton; second to Milton Castleberry of Sublimity.- For the best trained pet Kenneth. Sledge took first and Norris Hunt, Jr.. oiecood. First prize for the best entry went to Yvonne Hlatt of Roseburg; Lov- elle aad Yvonne Scraatoa recelr- jjHE ARTS" friend la the shifting maze of hu-' man associations and disloyalties. And that lady's a-reetinsr justified her faith, for the reassurance which she had anticipated was given im mediately. ; . 1, ; I "Pshaw 1 don't you worry about losing that little job, my deary I never liked the way that xettow treated you, anyway. There's bet ter things waiting for you, and this may prove to be the boost you needed, instead of something:-, to grieve about. If there isn't a place for a rirl like you in this world. there's no reason for it to keep mov ing around." fjj This cheered Lynn and seemed to open for her a new vistar of j the future. She unpacked and put aWay her clothes, remembering the recent association which the sight of them inspired. That bright and beauti ful and carefree world which ;she had left, behind I Lynn still mar veled what it would be like to b- (0X0 : in such a place, to be an In herent part of Its beauty and com fort and pleasure, as Doti was. RiTo know everyone of importance Who lived ia a place, to be so familiar With every landmark and tradition. She never-bad known any place which was really a home, never had been; vital to any of her surround ingsJ Why, even her job, which she had believed to be the one anchor ef her existence was gone. She mused upon the inconsistencies of human nature, the deplorable tin importance of each individual. .One might be lieve he was indispensable to sons little eor in the greet scheme of things. But if he dropped out for a minute, another waiting atom took his place, and the universe moved ion as serenely as before without him. The inevitable ness of it frisrht- tened her. She must strive harder to make herself mors important to the scheme, so that her loss would create more disturbance. Of course, she never could became indispens able; no one was. But there was soma tuaerence. There were some people whose omissions would cause quite a jar la the smooth-run a in? macninery, m a cor -which slipped i or a moment. Pari ox the machine might hart to be stopped for awhile. even, while the old cog was replaced with a new one, but the wheels would - soon be revolviar arain unwuiir u nr. : Lyon started out on the follow- nog morning to find that new place !2r nerseu in the scheme, leokinr very fresh and smart in her new wpruf nik ana crisp Btense and tne jaunty ciocue oat. it was. etui little eariy in that dimate for spring attire, out we sunny cay offered its advantage to the enest whkh -re quired her sartorial distinction I Lynn visited the mere exclusive shops, first. - Sleek, handsome ma trons hurried forward aa aha en tered, obsequious smiles on their rouged lips which hardened torrlm. vivid lines when they learned She was not a prospective customer. For the 'most part, the -shops were de serted. Spacious, empty salons awaited profitable activity. But. the first sounds of honeful animation subsided flatly whea Lynn requested worx. ine aoor latenes clicked deO nitely and mockingly behind her. I At noon, she stopped Into a cor ner drug etore and ordered a sand- wieh and coffee. Balancing" on the high stool at the white vitrolite counter, she wondered if she could possibly be the same person whose breakfast had been' carried to her bed on a tray for a week, .who had gorged open epicurean delights in ed second. First prise for the most novel nispiay. went to u:ynn Htm- palavan Hughes. For th mall eat net Marv vt of StiTtmt . Hired first prize and Maxine Wil son ot Aumsvuio took second, j Falla City Visitor FALLS i CITY! Jnlv 20 ML. Ina B. Graham, who was superin tendent of the primary depart ment of the grade school" for a number oh years is visiting bid friends Jiere and,, at Kewberg. She! will be the . g nest of her brother,; William Graham, and wife. Miss Graham Is from Wln- terset Iowa - by Edna Robb Webster 1 sumptuous places and danced un der balmy skies. ' The afternoon was a sequence of the morning, only more discourag ing: end ominous. It was like con fmnmi. fn rmmA m mtnrv in auest of a happier ending, and discovering only greater tragedy1 weirunem store managers ended brief inter views with the same vague hopes. Perhaps, later. They would take her name and address ana nouiy her if thrv needed her. This vague encouragement with a keen ap- a a .a w a. praisai ox ner iace ana ngure. u their cheerfulness was not reassur ing. A wretched month followed for Lrnn. There seemed to be more models in the city than there were garments to display. Work of any kind was scarce. Lynn was not trained for any other definite ser vice. After the first few days, she decided that she would accept any thing at allt clerking, filing, even a waitress er cashier in a restaurant. But none of these was needed, ap parently. Her beauty commanded some interviews which might have been denied ordinarily, but they all terminated in vague promises. She was not the only beauuxul girl in the city in search of work, she dis covered. Durlns that first week. Lynn had made several calculations. She still had a little money. Enough to take her to New Orleans for instance. Once there, she always would be assured of food and shelter. And Doti had promised that work would be found for her if she insisted upon being to industrious. But every time Lynn considered that possibil ity, her thoughts hastened to Jack son Thorpe aad all he had crown to mean to her. She had decided be fore leaving the south that she could not endure living all her life where he was with Doti. And so she turned resolutely away from that possibility. Something would happen soon to establish her here wher ehe be longed.' This deplorable situation could aot continue forever. One day, she waited for Susanna at her lunch hour, seeking her youthful companionship. Susanna was ae- lighted at seeing her. And they went for lunch to their favorite rendez vous, the Fireside, where Lynn or dered frugally. -What's newT- Susanna de manded, i "Nothing," Lynn replied. "I don't think there ia a vacancy ia the whole city. I've been everywhere. "Gee. kid. that's tough. But you're sure to get a brtt't soon." "That's what I try to think every day, but nothing happens." "I found out why yea were let eat." Susaaae ventured, after a mo ment of silent consideration. Lynn was alert and anxious. "Why?" . Oh. Lowry got himself a new girl friend who needed a Job, I guess so your going away for a week gave him an excuse to work her in. She isnt half ee beautiful as yon, but she has a good figure, and of course there's nothing better than a pull like that, while it lasts." "I wondered why he changed his attitude so suddenly about my leav ing," Lynn recalled. "Then it rave him fust the opening he was looking for, because he had no other reason to discharge me. Well, that clears ap a lot of things in my mind. Thank yon for telling toe, Sasanne." . (To Be Continued) OwrtsfcV !. Ktas hmm Srmdux. b Seattle People. Visitors At 7aldo Hills Home WALDO HILLS. July 20.- -Mr. and Mrs. Norman F. Bates of Se attle were week-end guests at the Edson Comstock home. They were en route to their home after! a business trip to their wheat ranch near Heppner: They told of the severe earthquake that rocked the ranch house on Its concrete found ation. Neighbors of L. It. Herrick net at his farm home early Sa .day morning and put his hay In tht mow. Mr. Herrick has been 111. i HI