fhe OHEGON STATESMAN, Salem. Oregon; Saturday Mornla& Septembert2S, 1933 i . 11 ji lt if : II Mi ll l i: it Founded 1151 "Aro Favor Sway Us; No Fear Shall A tee" From First Statesman. March. 28. 18S1 Chahlcs A. Spkague SHEUKJN F. SACKETT . THE STATEoMAK PUBLISHING CO. Blc-mber of the Associated Tress : The Aoclnteri Press Is exclusively entitled to t!M for publics lion of ail ocvi dinnatches cretliu-U to It or oat otherwise credited in thin paper. j i . Crop Insurance ThOTH candidates for president are proposing crop insur- O ance as a bid for farmer holding back may be able -ear. Campaigning is a sort of petitive bidding is the order of the AAA checks plus soil conservation plu3 crop insurance Landon advocates payments for producing instead of not producing, plus soil conservation plus crop insurance, plus I warehouse receipts for storage Crop insurance is no new Dakota tried hail insurance in the non-partisan league hey day. Private companies offer hail insurance and fire insur ance for standing grain. They iof general crop insurance, but Perhaps it would be possible to determine the law of ave rages which Would govern crop production, weighing in prop yl er proportion floods, drouth, frost, cutworms, cinchbugs, boll weevil, hot winds, downy mildew, corn borer and potato bugs. But the actuary who can figure it all out in advance would have to be a combination of Einstein, a soothsayer and the Witch of Endor. Insurance is something ciple; but it requires facts and so complicated as crop insurance covering even a single crop over a vast territory, with a jtions involves assuming hazards very difficult to measure in aovance. Even if the loss ratio could be determined, the problem of allocating assessments on farms and of adjusting individ ual claifns for losses at the end of the crop season is hard ! enough to tax the wisdom of a Solomon. I The pertinent question that i the loss ? Is this to be one.more vast drain on the, government treasury; or will the funds for the benefits be derived from premiums paid by the eligible beneficiaries? If the govern j ment is to foot the bill, which would be quite in keeping with i the easy-spending habit of the administration, then here we have winning boondoggle idea i mg m a manner to satisfy even the most ardent spendthrift. This paper is not hostile to crop insurance, provided it is worked out on a sound basis. It would think much better of the proposal if it were not a gadget dangled before the eyes of farm voters just a few weeks before election. Another Spanking for Father Coughlin? WORD from Vatican City isto the effect that Father Coughlin may get a stronger "warning" unless he pipes down in his bitter attacks on President Roosevelt. He was previously reprimanded by his bishop for calling the president a liar, and made personal apology therefor. Later he characterized the two candidates, Roosevelt and Landon. - one as carbolic acid and the other rat poison. In a speech this week he referred to the president as anti-God because the lat ter says "destroy and devastate." j The priest xf Royal Oak is so intemperate in his utter ances lje destroys what influence he might otherwise have. Rome objects because it stands by the principle that "in ev ery polemic, authorities should be respected." Father Cough lin aoes no creait to noiy oraer Dution to American politics. Question iBinci apuai journal queries: "II it cost to get a JL 5,000 republican majority in a rock-ribbed little GOP state like Maine, what will be the cost in the populous doubtful states with ten times the population?" To which The Statesman responds: "If after the boast ; of Gov. Brann that the democratic administration had poured i $156,000,000 into the little state of Maine, the democrats then lose this state by a 5,000 majority for senator and a 40,000 majority for governor, how much will it cost the federal treas I ury for thd democrats to lose (or win in 48 states in Na. ; veinuer; . The coming of Edward P. McGrady to San Francisco as a govern ment representative to intervene as conciliator in the longshore dis pute may be welcomed by those hopeful of a peaceful settlement of the trouble; He is familiar with the situation, because he worked out the agreement two years ago when the general strike was called in San Francisco. While a labor man himself, he has enjoyed the respect of employing groups. Even if he is unable to effect a renewal of the agreement in the time remaining, he may succeed in keeping negotia- "'- " ouifjmft m uiuuuu Be "-wueen lctoria or spam Is visiting her son in New York. This country ought to have a friendly interest in Spanish queens. It was because Queen Isabella took a frieiidly interest in a traveling ad dlepated sailor with a crazy theory about the earth's being round, and was willing to gamble a little on him, that this continent was dis covered. In recent years there have been doubts about whether the discovery did the world any good or not; but few people seem dis posed to move back to Europe, and none to Spain at the present mo ment. The state printing office has started work grinding out the voters pamphlets. There will be a massif matter dealing with the various measures the voters will pass on in November. The mess is almost un iformly bad. In fact we do not recall a time when as little rational legislation was proposed as this year. Ordinarily we encourage voters to read the pamphlets and come to their own conclusions about the -merit of the measures. This year the advice Is hardlr necessary. The voters can rote no on all the bills and not go far wrong. Foreign engineers have been visiting the power projects In this area and are quoted as exclaiming a great deal over what they see at Bonneville. A Swede looked at the Columbia and said it was "unbe lievable , ten times as big as the biggest river in Sweden. Give him a Paul Bunyan book to stretch his Imagination a little . I. Al Smith graciously concedes the air to FDR for the night of Oc r fna 8a8 he will not begin until after the president has fin ished. If It is to be a catch-as-catch-can debate Al hasn t conceded anv thing. He gets in the last word. j " Japanese indignation "knows no bounds' because Individuals of their race have been picked off In China ports.iThe bounds of their indignation doubtless extend to the west margins of China. "Chinese dictator steps into breach" reads a headline Very un usual. A breach Is what a Chinese general always steps out of. Kakacka Buys 7 Acres Near Scio - SCIO, Sept. 1 5. Sale of the iTa Abbott 7 -acre traet at the south city limits of Scio was re ported this week. The new own er is J. F. Kukacka. who recently sold his 80-acre farm a mile so t fe west f Scio to eastern parties for 17.000 as a cash transaction. - Mr. and Mrs. Kukacka plan to make the new place their permanent Editor-Manager Mav.aging-L. ' ' r votes. In fact the farmer by just to drive a hardjbargain this farm auction in reverse, torn the day. Roosevelt flourishes on the farm. idea in this country. North have even toyed with the idea never ventured into the field. j which is proven sound in prin not guesswork. And anything wide variety of growing condi arises is this : who is to bear which would accelerate spend- and makes no worthy contri Exchange ircuuiug lunuer discussion of the I home. Mrs.! Kukacka, who is re cuperating from Injuries resulting from an auto accident near' Scio in July, 1934, contemplates mak ing a trip soon to California on a visit to relatives and friends. i J. A. Withers, Swift & Comp any representative in Scio for a number of years past, this week closed a deal for the former Ru dolph Borovlcka residence and. land consisting of one acre. The Withers family has occupied the premises under lease for several weeks. It la considered one of the best properties In Scio. - Bits for Breakfast By R. J. HENDRICKS Cost of the 9-26-36 burned capitals; when the second one was finally completed: S S -w It does not matter a great deal now; but one finds in the last Ore gon Blue Book, under the caption. Capitol Building," this para graph: The structure was completed in 1876, four.years after the state legislature had authorized j its erection at a cost of approximately 9325,000. The massive c o p p e r dome which now gives , the build ing a degree of uniformity with the capitols of other states was not a part of the original edifice; nei ther were the porticoes with their two-story Corinthian columns. The porticoes were added in 1SS8 and the dome was erected in 1893." H V One does not need to add "build ing" after the word capitol. A capitol is a building. The legislature had not "auth orized its erection at a cost of ap proximately $325,000." The - legislature authorized Its erection according to plans to be adopted, and made an initial ap propriation of $100,000. The ar chitects, Krumbein & Gilbert, Portland, estimated that the cost of the building they designed would be about $500,000. It turn ed out to be about $150,000 less, including many changes and re pairs made in the 20 years from its beginning in 1873 until the dome was put on In 1893. And the porticoes were added before 1888. They were added in the period of 1883-6. - The New Year Statesman of January 1, 1887, had an article in which it was stated that Thom as McF. Patton from Marion coun ty introduced a bill in the lower house of the Oregon legislature of 1872 appropriating $100,000 for the commencement of work on a state house. That session of the legislature was of course held in the Holman building, still standing, northwest corner Ferry and Commercial streets, and the bill was signed by Governor Grover In his office. which was the corner second floor room in the present Statesman block, across the street south; in which room, by the way, this is being written. "The structure was completed In 1876." says the Blue Book. It was a long way from completion then, but work had progressed far enough for the legislature to meet in regular session in September of that year in the building, the house on the third floor of the north wing and the senate imme diately beneath on the s e e o n d floor. And the state officers by that time were housed in the building. i The New Year Statesman being quoted said: "The building Is NEARLY completed now, with the exception of the grand dome." The office of Secretary of State R, P. Earhart furnished for that number of The Statesman a list of the state warrants drawn on state house account to that date. following: 1872-4 1874-6 1876-8 ..$ 90.649.53 99,761.24 2,195.61 1878-80 1880-82 1882- 3 . 1883- 6 . Total 28,999.67 . . 414.40 924.06 . 75.000.00 .$298,144.51 That was "exclusive of rnnvlrt labor, by which the excavation was done, and all the brick made. and inclusive of all necessary re pairs." as the rsew Year article said. - It was stated that the 175.000 for the 1883-6 period was expend ed under the direction of W. F, Boothby, supervising architect, and included the "new assembly (lower house) hall, the rotundas, steDS and antiroarhp anil frown ing the departments of justice and tne senate chamber, besides plas tering and completing all the base ment proper, and furnishings for the supreme court and assembly halls." f s The dome, added in 1S9.1. nt about $50,000. Counting It at that ngure, tne total cost. Including repairs up to that date, was $348,- 144. al. (The reader has nerhana noted that the items given from Secretary Earharfs office figure up slightly less than the total printed.) There is no wav now tn f fnrt mil which was correct, the rt?ui tntmt or each of the items making It up; likely the latter.; S f V There Was no mat tnr e-rnnnf a because W. H. Willson, who plat ted the original Salem town gave the capitol block to the territory, and what was the territory's be came the state's. . V V . J . . That is. Willann mari ise to give the block, and. thmirh she did not Join in the platting. Mrs. willson signed the deed to the Territory of Oregon. The caoital block was In Mn Wlllson's half (north half) of the aonation land claim. W The reader will note that when the state house was first occupied, in the summer of 1876, it had cost only $190,410.97. - i The writer recalls that tn ffc spring of 1884, when lie first saw me Duuamg. the whole south wing. was yet unfinished, and a great ' deal more besides. .Work had not been started on ba t and west steps, nor on the porti coes, xne construction of the dome came nine years later. (Concluded tomorrow.) ; Leaving for College : KEIZER. Sent. 2 5. Howard and Erma Cole are leaving San- uy tor Eugene to tutia tne Northwestern Christian college. They hare both been employed re cently at Montgomery wards. Interpreting the News By MARK WASHINGTON, S P t. 23. Newspapers last week reported that a salient American figure had retired for time o an ivory tower of silence and lnconspicu ovmeii. One despatch read: "Tucson, Ariz., Sept. 17. (I. N S.) S e cretly touring the Unit ed States' to stu dy rural rehabil- 1 tat ion a n d i Mars Snnivan grasshopper con trol projects," Rexford iy Tug well left here today after his In cognito had been learned. His des tination was unknown." Other despatches said that Pro fessor Tugwell had had influenza and had 'gone to a hospital for treatment. Need for rest and quiet would adequately justify the in- cognity .same on the hospital rec ords. 1 Yet here is a strange thing. Here is the man who proposed most of the ideas in the new deal, and who persuaded President Roosevelt to adopt the ideas, urged them on congress and fas tened them on the country. And here are those Ideas, land the president, engaged in a campaign in which the new deal is on trial for its life. Yet here is the principal author of the hew deal silent on a desert in Ar izona. ! Professor Tugwell's silence and inconspicuousness, we may be sure, is not due wholly to influen za. Even were he in the best of health, most of us surmise. Pro fessor Tugwell would be incon spicuous in, this campaign. His si lence is part of the silence of oth ers high in the president's circle. Silent also is Professor Frankfur ter. Others talk. President Roose velt talks. National Chairman Far ley talks and how. A hundred minor new dealers talk. The acoly tes and apprentices of the new deal talk. Its- recruits talk Including those recruits high in democratic leadership whose status in the new deal is that of forced conscript They all talk; they talk much and they talk loudly. But those who invented the new deal, the high priests of it, those who intellectually are its com manding generals they are silent and unseen. One recalls the mili tary technique of a valiant com manding officer celebrated by Gil bert and Sullivan In "The Gondo liers"; In enterprise of martial kind, When there was any fighting, He led his regiment from behind He found it less exciting. But when away his regiment ran. His place was at the fore, O That celebrated. Cultivated. Underrated, Nobleman, The Duke of Plaza Toro; When to evade destruction's hand, To hide they all proceeded. No soldier in that gallant band Hid half as well as he did. He lay concealed throughout the war, And so preserved his gore, O That unaffected. Undetected, Well connected Warrior, The Duke of Plaza Toro. While I quote that musical sat ire, because it is amusing and partly pertinent, I would not will ingly create the impression that It really applies to Professor Tug- well. To some of the other Intel lectuals, yes they are timid mice temporarily emboldened by hav ing a powerful friend In the White House. If that friend leaves the White House they will scurry back to the calm of their academic clos- Editorial Comment From Other Papers TRUE THEN, TRUE NOW ,The charge made by Frank Knox that "Under the present pol icies of this administration no life insurance policy is secure, no sav ings account is safe" has stirred up something of a tempest. The Republican vice-presidential can didate has gotten under the skin of the New Dealers. The Incident demonstrates how much weight is placed on the words of Alf Landon's running mate for nearly two months ago virtually the same charge was made by another and It went al most unnoticed. At Yellowstone paTk on July 25 Orval W. Adams, second rice-president of the American Bankers' association and executive vice president of the Utah state nation al bank, of Salt Lake City, in an address before the Montana bank ers association said "We know that the continuance of the pres ent spending and borrowing pol icies of government can lead to but one end, the destruction of the savings or our depositors." Mr. Adams made no reference to In surance, companies but his state ment was as applicable to them as to savings depositors. . , The Adams address, which was entitled "If Our Depositors Only K n e w", received considerable mention at the time of Its deliv ery but nobody objected to what he said about savings. It is only when the charge is repeated by Colonel Knox that the New Deal ers get stirred up. Of course It was as true when made by Frank Knox u when made by Orval Adams. The col lapse of boot strap government fi nancing hurts everybody. Bend Bulletin. Endorsed OARP Leaders To Attend Monday Meet SCOTTS MILLS. Sen IS. The Townsend club will meet Monday at 7: 10 p. wu. at theTdd Fellows hall, with Frank DeLano to tfe llrer an address on -Loyalty." The four , endorsed Townsend candidates will ho special guests. - ' h i , IMBSSSMMSSMS SULLIVAN ets. But Professor Tugwell Is not timid. The intensity of his hate for the American system as It is gives him a truculent boldness. If he were not restrained, by some In fluence outside himself, he would stand out In front, denounce the "propertied czars," declare the destination to which he proposes to take America, and tell the world to like it or lump it, Whether Professor Tugwell has been told by Mr. Roosevelt to be silent during the campaign is a thing no one can surely say. The intimacies between those two are not for the ears of outsiders. But one can surmise a smiling order from president to professor, "you'd better lay off. Rex, for a little while. No hot stuff. Until after election , I'm going lo work the other side of the Btreet. I'm going to go to the right I'm going to tell 'em bedtime stories, sing lullabies to them. I'm going to hold conferences with insurance presidents and public utility heads You know- lion and the lamb stuff green pastures and still waters that sort of thing." If the country is to be denied Professor Tugwell's voice until November 3, the republicans ought to reprint some of his old speeches. This campaign needs paprika on both sides. Pep for the new dealers, and Irritant for the republicans, would be provided by reprinting the speech Professor Tugwell made to the democratic state committee at Los Angeles last October. The speech which began "how deep are the sources of your indignation?" The speech in which he said: "We must draw together, nursing the sources of that anger which has driven us forward and making more and more clear the great hopes which pull us in the same direction . ." The speech which contained the phrases "deathW struggle of indus trial autocracy." "disestablish ment of our : plutocracy." The speech in which Professor Tug well said: j "It la well enough known by now what the leadership of Pres ident Roosevelt commits America to; it is also well enough known by what methods further achieve ments will be made . .;. our best strategy is to surge forward with the workers and the farmers of this nation, committed to general achievements, but trusting the genius of our leader for the dispo sition of our forces and the tim ing of our attacks." The strategy ef "timing our at tacks" includes, apparently, the device of soft pedalling during a campaign for reelection. But that speech of Professor Tugwell ought to be circulated. It might explain why the commun ists want Mr. Roosevelt reelected. New York Herald-Tribune Syndi cate Ten Years Ago September 20, 1026 Willamette Bearcats defeated by University of Oregon '4 4 to' 0. New parking ordinance went Into effect today. Residents sub mitted In a peaceful and orderly manner. Beet sugar factory ; here will care for cfop of 8,000 acres of su gar beets. Twenty Years A90 September 26, 1016 Bombs have been reported drop ping along the northeast coast of England. : A Warner auto trailer which is practically a home on wheels is a feature of the auto show.. A three year old tot was killed by a passing wagon about 6 miles south of Salem. "ItCantH Dorrmui ' Jcssup. liberal Vermont newspaper man, the central figure of Sinclair Lewis' novel, sees hla fears realised In the presidential nomination of Buss Wtndrip, a second Huey Long. Running on th Democratic ticket, with the support of Radio Bishop Prang's .League of Forgotten Men. his platform is a combination of Ameri can phrase-making and European Fas cism. He has backing in most strata of political thought. Kven Europe Joins in. ending General Balbo, Putxi Hanf staengl and Ramsajr McDonald to BtiAnp for Buzs. who tours the coun try by special train, advised by L Sarason, to campaign against Repub lican Walt Trowbridge. Most of the mortgaged farmers. Most of the. white-collar workers who had been unemployed those three years and four and five. Most! of the people on relief rolls who wanted more relief. Most of the suburbanites who could not meet the installment payments on the electric washing machine, Such large sections of the Am erican Legion - as believed that only Senator Windrip would se cure for them, and perhaps - in crease, the bonus. Such popular Myrtle Boulevard or Elm Avenue preachers as. spur red by the examples of Bishop Prang and Father Coughlin, be lieved they could get useful pub licity out of supporting a slightly queer program that promised prosperity without anyone's hav ing to work 'for it. The remnants of the Ku Klux Klan, and such leaders of the American Federation of Labor as felt they had been Inadequately courted and bepromised by the old-line politicians, and the non unionized common laborers who felt they had been inadequately courted by the same A. F. of L. Back-street and over-the-garage lawyers who never yet wangled government jobs. The Lost Legion of the Anti- Saloon League since it was known that, though he drank a lot. Senator Windrip also praised teetotalism a lot, while his rival, Walt . Trowbridge, though he drank but little, said nothing at all in support of the Messiahs of Prohibition. These messiahs had not found professional morality profitable of late, with the Rock efellers and Wanamakers no long er praying with them nor paying. Bread in the Desert Besides these necessitous prac titioners, a goodish number of burghers who, while they were millionaires, yet maintained that their prosperity had been sorely checked by the fiendishness of the bankers In limiting their credit. These were the supporters who looked to Berzilius Windrip to play the divine raven and feed them handsomely when he should become president, and from such came most of the fervid elocution ists who campaigned for him through September and October. Pushing in among this mob of camp followers who identified po litical virtue with money for their rent came a flying squad who suf fered not from hunger but from congested idealism: Intellectuals and Reformers and even Rugged Individualists, who saw in Wind rip; for all his clownish swlndler ism, a free vigor which promised a rejuvenation of the crippled and senile capitalistic system. Lpton Sinclair wrote about Buzs and spoke for him just as in 1917, unyielding pacifist though he was, Mr. Sinclair had advoca ted America's whole-hearted pros ecution of the Great War, foresee ing that it would . unquestionably exterminate German militarism and thus forever end all wars. Most of the Morgan partners, though they may have shuddered a little' at association with Upton Sinclair, saw that, however much income they themselves might have to sacrifice, only Windrip could start the Business Recovery: while Bishop Manning of New York City pointed out that Wind rip always spoke so reverently of the church and its shepherds, whereas Walt Trowbridge went vTtadrrp, fhe hi jppen Here" hofseback riding every Sabbath morning and had never ' been kndwn to telegraph any female relative on Mother's Day. bn the other hand, the Saturday Evening Post , enraged the small shopkeepers by calling Windrip a demagogue, t and the New York Tiitoes, once Independent Demo crat, was anti-Windrip. But most of the - religions periodicals an nounced that with a saint like Bi shop Prang for backer, Windrip must hare been called of God. Jiven Europe Joined In. iWith the. most modest friendli neis, explaining that they wished noj. to intrude on American do mestic politics but only to express personal admiration for that great western advocate of peace and prosperity, Berxelius Windrip, thre-came representatives of cer tain foreign poferi, lecturing throughout the land: General Bal bo! so popular here because" of his leadership of the flight from Italy to Chicago in 1933; a scholar who, thpugh he now lived in Germany aitd was an inspiration to all pa triotic leaders of German Recov ery, yet had graduated from Har vard University and had been the most popular piano player in his class namely. Dr. Ernst (Putxi) Hknfstaengl; and Great Britain's lidn of diplomacy, the Gladstone of the 1930's, the handsome and gracious Lord Lossiemouth, who. a$ Prime Minister, had been known .as the Rt. Hon. Ramsay MacDonald, P. C. . I Tours the Country . . - JA11 three of them 'were expen sively entertained by the wives of manufacturers, and they persuad e many millionaires who. in the refinement of wealth, had consid ered Buzz vulgar, that actually he was the world's one hope of effi cient international commerce, Father. Coughlin took one look ai all the candidates and indig nantly retired to his call. I Mrs. Adelaide Tarr - Gimmitch. who would purely have written to the friends "she had made at the Rjotary club dinner in Fort Beu lah if she could only have remem bered the name of the town, was as considerable figure in the cam paign. She explained to women voters how kind It was of Senator Windrip to let them go on voting, so far; and she sang "Berzelius Wlndrlp's gone to Wash,'? an ave rage of 11 times a day .Buzz himself. Bishop Prang, Senator Porkwood (the bearless Liberal and friend of labor and the farmers) and Colonel Osceola Iuthorne, the editor, though their pHme task was reaching millions by radio, also. In a 40-day train trip, traveled over 27,000 miles, through every state in the union. qn the , scarlet-and-silver, ebony naneled. silk-UDholstered. stream lined, Diesel-engined, rubber-pad ded, air - conditioned, aluminum Forgotten Men Special. It had a private bar that' was forgotten by none save the Bishop. The train fares were the gen erous gift of the combined rail ways. - I Over six hundred speeches were discharged, ranging from eight minute hallos . delivered to the crowds gathered at stations, to two-hour fulminations In auditor iums and fair grounds. Buss was present at every speech, usually starring, but sometimes so hoarse that he could only wave his hand 4nd croak, "Howdy, folks!" while He was spelled by Prang. Pork wood, Colonel Luthorne. or such volunteers from his regiment of secretaries, doeto ral consulting specialists in history and econom ics, cooks, bartenders and bar 6ers, as could be lured away from playing craps with the ac companying reporters, photo graphers, sound recorders and broadcasters. Tieffer of the United Press has estimated that Buzs thus appeared personally before more than two million persons. I Meanwhile, almost daily hurt ling by airplane between Washing-: ton and Buzz's home, Lee Sarason 1 Supervised dozens , of telephone 1 dynasae, la fci tnce By SINCLAIR LEWIS girls and scores of girl stenogra phers, who answered thousands of daily telephone calls and let ters and telegramstand cables and boxes containing poisoned candy. . . Buzz himself had made the rule that all these girls must be pretty, reasonable, thoroughly skilled, and related to people with political influence. For Sarason it must be said that in this bedlam of "public rela tions" he never once used contact as a transitive rerb. , The Hon. Perley Beecroft. vice-1 presidential c a n d I date, special ized on the conventions of frater nal orders, religious denomina tions, insurance agents and trav eling men. . , Colonel Dewey Haik. who had nominated Buzz at Cleveland, had an assignment unique in cam paigning one of Sarason's slick est Inventions. Haik spoke foe Windrip not in the most frequent ed, most obvious places, -but at places so unusual that his appear ance there made news and Sara son and Haik saw to it that there were nimble chroniclers present to"" get that news. Flying in his own plane, covering a thousand miles a day, he spoke to nine astonished miners whom he caught in a cop per mine a mile below the surface while 39 photographers snapped the nine; he spoke from a motor boat to a stilled fishing fleet dur ing a fog In Gloucester harbor; he spoke from the steps of the Sub Treasury at noon on Wall street: he spoke to the aviators and ground crew at Shushan Airport, New Orleans- and even the flyers were ribald only for the first five minutes, till he had described Buzz Wind rip's gallant but ludi crous efforts to learn to fly; he' spoke to state policemen, to stamp collectors, players of -chess in se cret clubs, and steeplejacks at work; he spoke in breweries, hos pitals, magazine offices, . cathe drals, crossroad churches forty-by-thirty, prisons, lunatic asy lums, night clubs till the art ed itors began to send photographers the memo: "For Pete's sake, no more fotos Kunnel Haik spieling in sporting houses and hoose gow." Yet went on using the pictures. "For Colonel Dewey Haik was a figure as sharp-lighted, almost, as Buzz Windrip himself. Son of a decayed Tennessee family, with one Confederate general grandfa ther and one a Dewey bf Vermont, he had picked cotton, become a youthful telegraph operator, worked his way through the Uni versity of Arkansas and the Uni versity of Missouri law school, set tled as a lawyer in a Wyoming vil lage and then in Oregon, and dur ing the war (he was in 1936 but 44 years old) served in France as captain of infantry, with credit. Returned to America, he had been elected to congress and became a colonel in the militia. He studied military history: he learned to fly. to box, to fence; he was a ramrod like figure yet had a fairly ami able smile; he was liked equally by disciplinary army officers of high rank, and by such rough necks as Mr. Shad Ledue, the Cal iban of Doremus Jessus. ' Doctor Mareoblin Haik brought to Buzz's fold the very picaroons who had most snickered at Bishop Prang's sol emnity. - All this while. Hector Macgob lln, the cultured doctor and burley boxing fan, co-author with Sara son of the campaign anthem. "Bring Out the Old-time Musket," was specializing in the Inspira tion of college professors, associa tions of high-school teachers, pro fessional baseball teams, training camps of- pugilists, medical meet ings, summer schools in which well-known authors taurht the art of writing to earnest aspirants who could never learn to write, golf tournaments, and all, such cul tural congresses. 1 Truly, as Bishon Pran said. the apostles of Senator Windrip njonunuea on page 8) 4 r