. - - ' -, V PAG C FOUR The OREGON STATESMAN Salera, Oregon Saturday Morning.-Octcber 17,-1036 .1 1' I lit- ? II, lift Founded 1851 ; ".Yo Faror Siray I; A'o Fear Shall Atte" - 'From First Statesman. March 28. 1851' it Charlcs A. Spbacve Sheldon F. Sackett THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CD. Member or the Associated Press" Th .A aaocl.tr d Press 1 exclusively entitled to tho as for publica tion ot U r.t t dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In tfrU paper. - ! ! : Movie Propaganda j THE democratic papers that hare been denouncing prop aganda in the movie houses need to draw in their horns. For the game is one the new dealers started themselves The shorts now running in opposition to the new deal are b& ing properly labeled" at the close as paid advertising spon sored by The Crusaders, a non-partisan organization which four years ago was working along with FDR for repeal of pro hibition. . ' j . But the new dealers were first to see the opportunities for eploiting the picture public. Away last summer the WPA called for bids from news reel concerns on the job of making movies which according to the specifications Were to be of such quality that "the finished production is to be of such high entertainment standard as to be acceptable for exhibi tion in any commercial theatre within the United States." That the purpose was propaganda "for the, WPA is proven by the fact that one of the terms of the contract as set forth in the form of bid, was as follows : I "8 DISTRIBUTION The contractor shall agree to cause to be released andor distributed one jnewsreel story on the subject of WPA activities each month during the life of this contract through the medum of a nationally distri buted newsreeL I There you have it. Talk" about poisoning the minds of the people with cleverly planted propaganda. Probably this was what prompted opponents of the new deal, at their own expense, to run as paid advertising movie shorts to combat the new deal propaganda paid for at the expense of the public treasury. ' . j The contract was awarded by the government to Pathe News, a nationally famous newsreel concern. No wonder William R. Weaver, writing; in the July 15 issue of "Motion Picture Herald" saj's: "The, Work Progress Administration of the U. S. A. has set out to' buyjts way to the theatre public." '',- One of the first of the propaganda films was produced by Rex Tugwell's resettlement division, which brought in a foreign camera-man to film the story "The' Plough that Broke the Plains", as part of the propaganda for Tugwell's "planning". The Fargo Forum of Fargo,-N.sD. exposed the tricks used in this film. To exploit the drouth pictures were shown of a steer's skull, all blanched, lying on th cracked, parched earth. The Forum charged and it was later admitted that the skull was just a photographer's "prop" moved from spot to spot. You can find the blanched skeletons of steers on the western, plains most every year; and you can find dried out water holes where the earth is cracked every summer. But the new dealers didn't scruple at falsifying the film and then circulating it as scare propaganda among the people. Significant was the declaration of one film company when the call for bids was announced. Universal newsreel in a page advertisement in the Motion Picture daily of May 21 declared its policy in part as follows : J "From, now on the newsreel you show should be Indepen dent. " .-):.. "The Universal Newsreel Is utterly independent of every thing except your audience. j : "It has no candidate for political preference. "It is not carrying favor with peace advocates of war seek ers. "Don't let your screen be used for propaganda by anyone - or any intern t. . .-. MM "The Universal Newsreel Is happy and free." p The Universal was the only standard newsreel company not invited to bid on the WPA picture project ! Harry Hopkins will insist that the WPA films were purely "educational" and not political. He is the chap who . thinks he can get away with anything because, to quote him, the "people are too damn dumb" to catch oni Well, the Cru- tional." The difference is that the theatres run the Cru sader films as paid advertising, while the WPA films get no sponsorship label, and the theatre gets no pay for the prop . aganda advertising. It is not that great public projects have not ween puuiicizea. .rrojecis inte ooumer aam, Donneviue, etc., have had ample publicity by newspapers and newsreel companies, done for their news interest, not for propaganda purposes. j Propagandaby republicans, how can it begin to compare with the endless stream of propaganda passed out by the new deal agencies and paid for out of the billions appropriate . by a compliant congress? Too Much LABOR organizations have been running to the government to get officials to discipline naughty employers. Under ' Mr. Roosevelt, and under former executives too, govern ment has exerted the crackdown, the most memorable inci dent being the threat of Roosevelt I to send the army in to run the anthracite mines at the' time of the coal strike in 1902. The method however is a two-edged sword, as the organiza : tions on the waterfront have reason to suspect. For the stiff ; reply by the doughty admirals who temporarily constitute the 'maritime commission carried something of the mailed fist in words that were no velvet glove. The unions promptly ac quiesced, unwilling ot defy the government agency. But. they can see the danger of labor being made to dance to govern ment music. , ' i : - It is natural for; the public, worn out with the turmoil on the waterfront, to demand decision by authority, to bring . peace and to get the'strife off the front pages. v With proper respect for the merit of arbitral award in case of industrial dispute there is the menace of coercion and of creation of more bureaucratic authority in establish ing government agencies with powers such as the maritime cjimiiissiun assumes, n is tne popular tning now to run to tne government with every cut finger. The business can be over- worked until the country is oppressed and overrun with gov ; ernment. -i V M j I The danger ahead is of too much government, too many with political authority; too little flexibility in the economic and political structure. Government should be the very last resort, not the first, in case of frictions. Patience has been worn thin on the waterfront, so the "last resort" theory may be in place there. But the habit is apt to grow to the ultima! breakdown of government or the creeping paralysis of enter prise. . ' : ' . j The farm credit administration is beginning a campaign to get the-farmer borrowers to pay up. The landbanks are , warning farm ers they must bring their obligations to a current basis, and a letter from the 'Information agent starts with the statement: "Getting oat of debt Is the best investment a farmer can make any time." Very true; but surprising gospel to come In times when spending Is the rage, with the Jederal government, sponsor of the banks, settinr the pace. But Jhen, nobody gets a headache at a champagne party so long as the drinks last: i An "old timer" calls to tell us the "1. O. G. T." referred to In t ho old copy of Willamette Farmer described in this column a few days ago was the order of Good Templars. It was a temperance organ ization, sometimes ridiculed under the nickname," "I Often Get Tight". It used to meet, along In the early days of Salem, in Rector's hall, an early day . assembly place located just south of The Statesman building. - . ' ' ; . . ! - A Japanese volcano baa been belching hot lava. It is merely fol lowing the national tradition of Imitation and trying to copy the voUtical orators in the USA. r ! . . . . - Editor-Manager Managing-Editor. Government Bite for Breakfast By R. J. HENDRICKS 10-17-38 Jefferson Davis, secretary of war, told Gorernor Curry about the Coast reservation: the officers then guarding it: W (Concluding from yesterday:) Not only on Rogue river, - but throughout all of southern and southeastern Oregon and ; north ern California, was the so-called Rogue River Indian war of 1856- 1858 over. Old John, Its moving spirit. and the last of its leaders to surrender, was a captive and on his way to the res e r v a 1 1 o a, brought In by the command of EL O. C. Ord, then a lieutenant. S -: Lieutenant Ord was a part of the picture in the ending of the Rogue River Indian war, and the same man, then Major General Ord, was at Appomattox, with Generals Sheridan and Grant, to receive the sword of Lee the three of them having learned some of their lessons of success through handling and fighting Indians in the Oregon country. - v Historians generally spoke of Chief John as "old" John. He was not very old. Mrs. Victor said of him: - . . r "When dressed In civilized cos tume, he presented an appear ance not very different from that of a hard workings farmer of Pennsylvania or Ohio of 50 years of age." i She also said o him: "Chief John was a bolder, firmer and stronger man mentally than any chief west of the Cascade moun tains." He had -also stoic savage cruel ty and lack of pity characteristic of the outstanding types of his race when roused by deep hat reds. . ' Lieut. Ord was born in Mary land in 1818 and was of the 1839 West Point graduating class; fought in the Seminole war and did garrison duty at Monter ey, Cal., in the Mexican war; be came a brevet captain in 1850. He sent arms and ammunition to Oregon from California for the use of citizen soldiers fighting the Cayuse ,war in 1848, after the Whitman massacre. These sup plies arrived too late to be of use as intended, because the news of the need of them reached Ord after the trouble was about over. S S Ord in the Civil war quickly became brigadier general of vol unteers; defeated the great rebel cavalry leader. J. E. B. ("Jeb") Stuart at Dranesrille, Va.. Dec. 21, '61. (Sheridan was the only other commander to defeat Stuart.) Ord became a major gen eral of volunteers May 2, 1862. In Oregon, besides bringing in Chief John and his tribe, Ord rounded up the Mackanotin. Chetcoe and other tribes in south western Oregon and northwestern California. i ! Besides John F. Reynolds, ac cording to the Jeff. Davis letter in charge, at Fort Urapqua. sev eral other low ranking officers who in the Civil war achieved high ranks were stationed at Fort Umpqua. Among them was A. J. Hardie, who was one of the six West Point graduates ot 1843, including Grant, who saw service in our early Indian wars; the others being Augur,- Dent, In galls and Judah. .. John Fulton Reynolds was born at Lancaster, Pa., in 1820; grad uated with the 1841 class from West Point. In the Mexican war he partic ipated in the defnese of Fort Brown, Texas, and was engaged in the battles of Monterey and Beuna Vista. f t At the outbreak of the Civil war he was commandant at West Point, and at once became a brig adier general of volunteers, in command of the Pennsylvania re serve corps before Washington. He was in the seven days battle before Richmond, showing bril liant tactics at Beaver Dam creek but was later captured at Gaines's Mill and afterward exchanged. Next year be was in the Pen insular and- Northern Virginia campaigns and in the succeeding Maryland campaign in command of the Pennsylvania volunteer militia for the defense of his nat ive state. . ' ' In November, 1862, he was given command of the first corps of the Army of the Potomac and promoted 'to the rank of major general of volunteers. V . How did the Indians fare after they were brought to the Coast reseveration and guarded by U.S. soldiers at . the three posts de scribed in the Jeff. Davis letter? Sheridan in his memoirs admit ted that at first they did not fare well: especially the tiroes in the Siletz section, where he was ob liged to interfere. The tribes near Fort Yamhill, under Capt. Russell and Lieut. Sheridan, were treated and handled well; Sheridan gen erously gave much of the credit to Capt. Russell. Mrs. Victor in her book said among other things not creditable to the government: - -. - . u "At the reservation affairs did not move smoothly. It was for the most part a rugged and heavily timbered country, bounded by mountains on one side and by the sea on the other. The Indians complained that" the forest did not afford game. The bouses hast ily erected were not Inviting. The shops, mills, farm machinery and other beneficent gifts promised by tne terms of the several treaties were absent ... Even the com- commissary department was a failure, because congress delayed making appropriations . . . The quarterly expenses, of the Siletz reservation (she should have caid the Silets part ot the Coast res ervation) , wbleh the Indians found so desirable, ; were over 1100,000. a large part of which sum was - expended ta , Improve ments. - i - j : The agent. R. B. Metcalf. found his pay to be so meager as Interpreting -By MARK ! WASHINGTON, D. C, OcC 14. The Immense advantage of the radio to Mr. Roosevelt Ilea in the persuasiven ess of his TOlce. I mean the tones of his voice, the lmbre, - as dis tinguished from the ; meaning of his -words. The hearer is moved emotionally by the ; tone, and thereby is lulled Into a coma with respect to ; the MAIS MUUvau meaning Of the words. Then the listener, having heard the speech over the radio, does not read it in the newspapers. ; The result is that, since the radio came, speeches are judged by the ear, rather than by the eye. And the speaker whose voice has the more charming appeal to the ear. has a great advantage. I have alluded ' before to the charm : of Mr. Roosevelt's voice, and have received letters of pro test. There are some to whom Mr. Roosevelt's tons and ovr-tones are unsympathetic, but those are only a fraction of the electorate. To a great majority, Mr. ! Roosevelt's cadences are agreeable. If the pre sident's addresses were deUvered in - the Ccecho Slovian tongue, they . would be listened to with pleasure. He could recite the Pol ish alphabet, and it would be. ac cepted as an eloquent plea for disarmament. One could say of Mr. Roosevelt's speeches what "Mr. Dooley" said of the late Senator Beveridge's ."Ye could waits to them. Or. as a versifier once said ot ephemeral popular songs, ; "Provided the tune has a right good swing, "It doesn't matter what words you sing." : Yet, I suspect the republicans could overcome Mr. Roosevelt's vocal perusasiveness. Indeed might even turn it into a boomer ang. This campaign could be turn ed into a real debate. Let the re publicans delegate competent de baters to take up each of the president's speeches, examine it with a cold eye, analyze It from the point of view of the Intellect rather than the emotions, and present to the public a clear men tal not emotional picture of what the president said. o The president's recent appeal to. the farmers began "In 1932 I pledged my admin istration to a farm policy that would help the farmer. Tonight "every man and woman on an Am erican farm who has read today s market reports knows that we have done what we said we would do." . About the accuracy of these words there could be some de bate. But let us Ignore, as a point irrelevant here, the assertion that "we have done what we said we would do." Consider the infer ence conveyed by Mr. Roosevelt's persuasive tones. The Inference is that the rise in prices of crops between 1932 and -1836 was due wholly to the president's farm policy. This implies that but for Mr. Roosevelt, crops priceswould still be where they were in" 1932. It amounts to saying that Mr." Roosevelt brought about the re covery from depression. If that were true, then Mr. Roosevelt must have been responsible for the recovery that has taken place throughout the world. And if Mr. Roosevelt is the agency that brought about world recovery, then he -is subject to a serious charge of lack of patriotism for having discriminated against Am erica, for having brought about a greater recovery elsewhere than he brought about in America. I suspect that every competent economist in the world would say that . the recovery from this de pression came about through na- , Ten Years A30 October 17. 1926 ' Formal dedication ot the Knight Memorial church will.be held today marking another pro gress of . Salem churches. A blazing troop ship laden with munitions drifted today, an in ferno of death to 1200 Chinese soldiers. . '. Stutt of Oregon will cooperate in nnr movement looking toward a reduction of telephone rates. Twenty Years Ago October 17. 1916 Annual state convention of Bap tist church opens here. i City budget is cut down for year 1917, tentative figures near ly $10,000 less. Bitter battle going on in the Transylvanian passes. Bucharest report extremely strenuous war fare waged. . to offer no inducement for him to remain; though he did remain. and came out at the end of Tour years with $40,0001" That was a sample of a per- cnetage of federal funds intended to be used for the benefit of, In dian wards going into the pockets of unscrupulous and money hun gry white men. Some renegades remained in the southwestern Oregon "sticks" after all the parties conductd by the U. S. soldiers had been de livered to the Coast reservations. But, July 2, 1858, Capt. Elisha II. Meservey of the volunteer mil itia reported from Gold Beach to Governor Curry at Salem: i "The last of the red men have been captured AND SHOT, only women and children spared, and THEY are enroute for the reser vation . . . This portion of Ore gon will rest In tranquility." s That report had a least a note of finality satisfying to- whites whose relatives had been - ruth lessly robbed and murdered and their buildings burned. the News SULLIVAN tural forces, that the reepvery was as an to ma tic aa tne- depression Indeed, I suspect the - average man would say this. If he put his mind on it. Yet of all the falla cies in the con temporary , world. tne most widespread, the one that will influence the. largest num ber of votes In this election, Is the fallacy that the party In power brought about recovery. That fal lacy, in some past periods of ris ing prosperity, has operated to the advantage of the republicans, who happened to be In power at a felicitous time. And I suppose the republicans are barred from complaining . when the fallacy happens now to operate In favor ot the democrats. Mr. Roosevelt really thinks he did It. He said once before that he and his policy brought about the rise in farm prices. He said it under circumstances, which showed how deeply he believed it. On May 31, 1935, Mr. Roose velt devoted an hour and a quar ter In an extraordinary press con ference to' attacking the supreme court's decision in validating N. R. A. One of bis reasons lor at tacking the N. R. A. decision was. he. said that the same principle of law, if applied to Triple A, would invalidate Triple-A also Triple-A had not yet come before the court. And invalidation of Triple-A- I quote from an ac count of what Mr.tloosevelt said as printed in the 'New York Times. June 1, 1935: "If we abandon crop control, wheat would immediately drop to 36 cents -a bushel and cotton to 5 cents a pound." Some of the other accounts did not include the word "immedi ately" but no matter. Competent economists knew that neither Im mediately nor within any foresee able future, neither by an ad verse decision ot the supreme court on Triple-A nor from any other foreseeable cause, would wheat drop to 36 cents a bushel or cotton to 6 cents a pound. 1 recall suggesting that if Mr Roosevelt would like to make a bet on his prediction, takers could be found.- . -. j . In due course, the test of the president's Judgment came. On January 6, of the present year, the supreme court got around to Triple-A. The court, invalidated Triple? A. That was more than nine months ago. And wheat and cotton have not dropped in price. on the contrary they have risen The error of Mr. Roosevelt's eco nomic understanding suggests that he is a poor not a good con troller of agriculture. Mr. Roosevelt's recent cam paign speech to farmers achieved fallacy by commission and .fallacy by omission. He gave a detailed. compact summary of his actions about farming. To the ear, it sounded thrilling. The summary omitted to say that Triple-A had forbidden farmers to grow more 'potatoes than the government dic tated. It did say that Triple-A (until the supreme-court invali dated it) provided fine and im prisonment for any farmer who sold "bottleg" potatoes, or any customer who bought them. Mr. Roosevelt turned to the farm program now proposed by Governor Landon. About this plan Mr. Roosevelt said of all things that it would cost too much. Think of that! now Franklin D. Roosevelt ! counting the cost. About the merit of the charge I know nothing. There may be something in it. Yet the specta cle of President Roosevelt mak ing a charge of extravagance against Governor Alfred M. Lan don of Kansas- that is something for what I am told is called, in the regrettably vulgar idiom of this unregenerate day, a "Belly laugh." Sew Tork Hrld Triton Eyndict. . Compiled sy Ralph C MorrUon wh kw udt his hem ia OregoB for 15 years. Mr. Morrison was bora in Kansas an4 attended th Unirersity of Kansas He was . onnecttd wits the editorial de partment of the Kansas City Star for ten yean preTions to his moving to Portland, Orefoa. . ! . What will Alfred M. Landon do as president of the United States? William Allen White, the great Kansas editor,, who has been, one of the canniest political commen tators In the. United States since the days ot Theodore Roosevelt, has been one of Alf Landon s closest friends since Alf 's college days. After the death of his first wife, Alf spent much time with Mr. White bathing himself In the atmosphere of a normal home and getting , hold Of himself. Mr. White has given us something on which to base our judgment as follows: :.: - .. ! l. . ...I " "In a sense Landon Is a pioneer. Lincoln was. Landon has more ex perience In politics and in busi ness and in dealing with men -and Influencing them than Lincoln had. . ' .1 "This much Is sure. Alf M. Lan don will be a fair man. 'He ex hibits no vanity. He judges men shrewdly. He ; keeps his own counsel. He lays his own . plans, projects his own way. "In his inaugural address and his messages to the legislature, he has quoted Hegel and various aca demic economists. ' In the living room of the executive residence, one may see the old fashioned standard magazines Harper's. The Atlantic Monthly. Scribner's, often The Nation's Business, The Saturday Evening Post. The New Republic and the Nation,, always a New; York daily newspaper, and invariably a good - novel and the current book of sociology or pop. utar science.) He respects the world of books and the university cloister. 'Before every Important political move he has made in Kansas, he has consulted an aca demician, but Landon has not given the professor executive power. He has taken the expert's wisdom, bet has kept power for himself. : i 4 . "That Is his sort canny and candid. At once forthright in m Landon.. The Man By SINCLAIR LEWIS . The .guards were not far down the corridor, and their rifles were already loaded. It was In less than a minute' that Aras Dilley was saluting from the door, and Shad was shouting, "Come here! Grab this dirty crook!' He pointed at Fowler. "Take him along outside." They did, for all of Fowler's struggling. Aras Dilley jabbed Fowlers right wrist with a bay onet. It spilled blood down on his hand, so scrubbed for surgery, and like blood his red hair tumb led over his forehead. ; Shad marched out . with them. pulling his automatic pistol from its holster and looking at it hap pily. Doremiis was held, his mouth was clapped shut, by two guards as he tried to reach Fowler. Emil Staubmeyer seemed a little scared, but Effingham Swan, suave; and amused, leaned his elbows on the table and tapped his teeth with a pencil. - - From the courtyard, the sound of a rifle voile y.. a terrifying wail, one single emphatic shot, and nothing after. . - . CHAPTER XX The real trouble with the Jews is that they are cruel. Anybody with a knowledge of history knows how they tortured poor debtors in secret catacombs, all through the Middle Ages. Where as the Nordic is distinguished by his gentleness and bis- kind heartedness to friends, children, dogs, and people of inferior races. Zero Hous, Berzelius Windrip. The review In Dewey Haik's provincial court of Judge Swan's sentence on Green hi 11 was in fluenced by County Commissioner Ledue's testimony that after the execution he found in Green hill's house cache of the most sed itious documents: copies of Trow bridge's Lance for Democracy, books by Marx and Trotsky. Communistic pamphlets urging citisens to assassinate the Chief. Mary, Mrs. Greenhill, Insisted that her husband had never read such things; that, if anything, he had been too indifferent to pol itics. Naturally, her word could not be taken against that of Commissioner Ledue. Assistant Commissioner Staubmeyer (known verywhere as a scholar and a man of probity), and Mil itary Judge Effingham Swan. It was necessary to punish Mrs. Greenhill or rather, , to give a strong warning to other Mrs. Greenhills by seizing, all the property and money Greenhill hatT left her. Anyway, Mary did not fig,ht very vigorously. Perhaps she re alized her guilt. In two days she turned from the crispest, smart est, most swift-spoken woman in Fort Beulah into a silent hag, dragging about in sbabby'and un kempt black. Her son and she went to - live with her father, Doremus Jessup. , Some said that Jessup should have fought for her and her pro perty. But he was not legally permitted to do so. He was on parole, subject, at the will of the properly constituted, authorities, to a penitentiary sentence.' So Mary returned to the house and the overstuffed bedroom she had left as a bride. She could. not she said, endure its memories. She took the attic room that bad never been quite "finished 'off." She sat up there all day, all ev ening, and her parents never heard a sound. But within a week her David was playing about the yard most joyfully ... playing that he was an M.M. officer. The whole house semed dead. and all that were in it seemed frightened, nervous, forever wait ing for somthing unknown all save David -and, perhaps, Mrs. Candy, bustling In her kitchen. The office was deader than his home. The worst of it was that it wasn't so very bad that, : he saw, he could slip into serving the Corpo state with, eventually. no more sense of shame than was felt by old collegues of his who in pre-Corpo days had writ ten advertisements for fraudulent mouth washes or tasteless cigar ettes, or written for supposedly reputable - magazines mechanical stores about young love. In a waking nightmare after his im prisonment, Doremus had pictur ed Staubmeyer and Ledue in the nformer office standing over him with whips, demanding that he turn out sickening praise for the Corpos, yelling at him until he rose and killed and was kill ed. . Actually, Shad stayed away from . the office, and Doremus'a master, Staubmeyer, was ever so certain self-sufficiency. His charm hi a cordial modesty. He is senti mental as a girl and wise as a serpent a curious fellow. But what man is not when you know him well as he stands under the klieg lights of even transitory fame?" Conservation Unit Plans New Budget DALLAS, Oct. 16 The di rectors of -the Polk County Agri cultural Conservation association met and prepared a budget for the new program. The directors from the various parts of the county are: C. W. Brandstetter, H. D. Pence, Robert Mitchell. H. N. Dickinson. W. Frank Crawford. H. P. Elkins, and Claud Hoisington. It Is not -definitely known what the total amount of money will be that can come to Polk county, but it Is estimated to be over $100,000 and may even rearh $14,000. according to W. C. Leth, county agent. Budgets for the various county associations are not supposed to exceed B per cent of the total grants in the count, but because it is difficult to determine the costs of - administering the pro gram . and of- making the field measurements, the committee felt it necessary to make the budget a little high in order to make ad ditional allowance. It is estimated that the expense of the. program will be about $S000 althoagh'the budget as prepared - called for about $S000. 1 nlere i friendly and modest and rather nauseaungiy run or praise tor nis eratsraanship. Staubmeyer seemed satisfied vWhen, instead ot the "apology" demanded by Swan, Doremus stated that "Henceforth this paper will cease all criticisms of the present government." Doremus received from District Commissioner . Reek a jolly tele gram thanking him for "gallantly deciding turn you great talent service people and correcting er rors doubtlss made by us in ef fort set up new more realistic state. Ur! said Doremus and did not chuck the message at the clothes-basket waste-basket, but carefully walked over and ram med it down amid the trash, i He was able, by remaining with the Informer In her prostitute days, to ' keep . Staubmeyer from discharging Dan Wilgus, who was sniffy i to-the new boss and un naturally respectful now to Dore mus. And he Invented what he called ! the "Yowyow editorial." This was a dirty device of stat ing -as strongly as he could an indictment of Corpoisra, then an swering it as feebly as he could, as with a whining "Yow-yow-yow thats what you say!" Neither Staubmeyre nor Shajl caught him at it, but Doremus hoped fear fully that the shrewd Effingham Swan would never see the Yow yows. I ' So 'week on week he got along not too badly and there was not one minute when he did not hate this filthy slavery, when he did not have to force himself to stay there, when he did not snarl at himself, "Then why do you stay?'! r . His I answers to that challenge came glibly and conventionally enought: "He was ; too old to start in life again. And he had a wife and family to support" Emma;, Sissy, and now Mary and David.i , All Stbese years he had heard responsible men who weren't be--ing quite honest radio announc ers who soft-soaped speakers who were- fools and wares that were trash, land who canayishly chirp-' ed "Thank you. Major Blister" when thy would rather have kick ed Major Blister, preachers who did not believe the decayed doc trines 1 they dealth out, doctors who ; did not dare tell lady in valids ; that they were sex-hungry exhibitionists, merchants who peddled brass for gold heard all of them complacently excuse themselves by explaining that they were too old to change. and that they had "a wife and family to support.' Why not let the wife and fam ily die of starvation or get out and hustle for themselves, if by no other means the world could have th echance of being freed irom tne most Doresome, most dull, and foulest disease of hav-. ing always to be a little dishon est? 1 ; fr . " I Thoughts of Etape -So she raged and went f on grinding out a paper dull and a little dishonest but not forever. Otherwise the history ot Doremus Jessup- would he too drearily common to be worth recording. ' Aga)n and again, figuring it out on rough sheets of copy pap. er (adorned also with concentric circles! squares, whorls, and the most improbable fish), he esti mated! that even without selling the Informer or his bouse, as under j Corpo espionage he cer-r tainly pould not if he fled to Can ada, he could cash in about $20, 000. Say enough to give. him an income; of a thousand a year twenty dollars a week, provided Tue could smuggle the money oflt of thelcountry, which the Corpos were dally making more diffi cult. Well, Emma, and Sissy and Mary and he could live on that, in a four-room cottage, and per haps Sissy and Mary could find work. I j But!: a3 for himself I It was all very, well to talk about men like Thomas Mann and. Lion Feuchtwanger and Romain Holland, -who in exile remained writer! whose every word was in demand, about Professors Ein stein or salreminl, or, under Cor poism.) about the recently, exiled or self-exiled Americans. Walt Trowbridge. Mike Gold, William Allen IWhite, John Dos Passos, H. L. Mencken, Rexford Tugwell, Oswald Villard. Nowhere in the world, ! except possibly in Green land or Germany, would such stars, be unable to find work and soothing respect. But what was an ordinary newspaper hack, es Budget Group For Jefferson Named it Two Special Policemen Are Assigned For . Duty f on Hallowe'en JEFFERSON, Oct. 1 . At the regular meeting of the city coun cil, a 1 communication from the federal administration of public works In regard to waiving liqui dated damages in the sum ot $20 a. dayj and the necessary engi neering incurred on ccount ot ex tension of time was approved. Councilman W. L. Cobb an nounced that only four persons refused to sign the petition pre sented' toward the building of a new city hall. Application for funds; will be made to the PWA Immediately, for this project. Name Budget Group The following persons were named on the budget committee: L. L. Shields, Dr. J. O. VanWin kle, Harry Roland, E. A. Barlow, and W. S. MeClain. They will meet with the city council Wed nesday evening, October 21. On the election board there were named: Bertha Curl, Grace Thurs ton, and Mrs. L. H. Knight, judges; and Miss: Anna Klampe and Ruth Cobb, as clerks. Special police for Halloween will be B. B. Smith and A. Wil son. I - The water committee was in structed to look after the busi ness of putting la a four Inch By SINCLAIR LEWIS pecially If he was over forty-five.: to do In a strange land and more especially if he had a wife named Emma (or Carolina or Nancy or Grlselda or anything else) who- didn't at all fancy going and living in a sod hut on behalf of honesty and freedom? So debated Doremus, like some hundreds of thousands ot -other craftsmen, teachers, lawyers, what-not, in some dozens of coun tries under dictatorship, who were aware enough to resent the tyranny, conscientious enough not to take its bribes cynically, yet not so abnormally courageous as to go willingly to exile or dun geon or chopping block partic ularly when they "had wives and r families to support." . f Doremus hinted once to Emil Staubmeyer that. Emil was "get ting into the ropes so well" that he thought of getting out, of quitting newspaper work for good. - The httherto.frlendly Mr. Staubmeyer said sharply, "What'd you do? Sneak oft to Canada and join the propagandists afainst ine enter t jo tning doing: xou a stay right here and help me- help us!" And that afternoon Commissioner Shad Ledue should ered in and grumbled "Dr. Staub meyer tells me you're doing pretty fairly good work, Jessup, but I want to warn you to keep it up. Remember t h t Judge Swan only let you out on parole . . . to me! You can do fine if you just set your mind to it!" . "If you just set your mind to It!" The one time when the boy Doremus had hated his father had been when he used that con- . descending phrase. Perhaps his worst Irritations were that Staubmeyer had push ed a desk and nis sleek, sweaty person into Dor era us 's private of fice, once sacred to his solitary grouches, ' and that Doc Itchitt, hitherto his worshipping disciple, seemed always to be' secretly laughing at him. Under a tyranny, most friends are a liability. ' One quarter of them turn "reasonable" and be come your enemies, one quarter are afraid to stop and speak and one, quarter are killed and you die with them. But the blessed final quarter keep you alive. When he was with Lorinda, gone was all the -pleasant toy ins and sympathetic talk with which they -had relieved' boredom. She was fierce now, and vibrant. Shd drew him close enough to her, but Instantly she would be think ing of him only as a comrade in ; plots to kill off the Corpos. (And it was pretty much a real killing off that she meant! there wasn't left to view any great amount of her plausible pacifism.) She was busy with- good and naHlall a 0 T A v4 Vtnnnw had not been able to keep her In the Tavern' kitchen; she had so systematized the work that she had many days and evening . free, and she had started a cook-i 1 ing-class for farm girls and yonn? the provincial and Industrial gen erations, h a d learned neither good rural cooking with a wood fire,' nor yet how to deal with canned goods and electric grills and who most certainly had not learned how to combine so as to compel the tight-fisted little loc ally owned power-and-light com panies to furnish electricity at tolerable rates. "Heavensake, keep this - quiet, -but I'm getting acquainted with these country gals getting,, ready for the day when we begin: to, or ganize against the Corpos. I de pend on them, not the well-to-do women that used to want suffrage but that can't endure the thought of revolution," Lorinda whisper ed to him. "We've got to do something." "All right, Lorinda B. An thony," he sighed. And Karl Pascal stuck. At Pollikop's garage, when he first saw Doremus after the jail ing, he said, "God, I was sorry to hear about their pinching you, Mr. Jessup! But say, aren't you ready to join us Communists now?" (He looked about anxious-- ' ly as he said it.) x "I though there weren't any more Bolos. "Oh," we're supposed to be wip ed out. But I guess you'll notice a few mysterious strikes starting now and then, even though there can't be any more strikes! Why ' aren't yon joining us? There's where you. belong, e-comrade!" (To Be Continued.) ter main oa Ferry: street; and making some changes ia the wa ter mains at Clark's service sta tion near the north city limits. C. 8. Emery was paid $125 for the lot on Third street on which the city well is located. Various other bills were paid. , Funeral Services Held I For Anna Odekirk, 58 WOODBURN, Oct. 1$. Funer al services for Mrs. Anna Ode kirk 58, who died Tuesday ev ening in Portland, were held from St. Luke's Catholic church Thurs day morning at S o'clock. Mrs. Odeklrk was a daughter ot the late Jacob Miller of Woodburn, and is survived by her widower, Tom Odeklrk of Tillamook; son, Albert; six brothers George. Henry, Ben. Matt, Jake and Laurence- all of Woodburn i a sister, Mrs. Katie .Hereford of Portland. Interment was in St. Luke's cem etery. Barbara Jean Brown Is Laid to Rest at Cervais GERVAIS, Oct. IS. -Barbara Jean, eixht-months-old danchter of Raymond and Margaret Brown, died at a Salem hospital Tuesday morning following an operation. Funeral services-were held at the Pioneer church Wednesday r " ternoon. Rev. D. J. Gillanders t f Woodburn officiating and burl i waa in the Pioneer cemetery 1.1 der direction of th th el of Woodburn. . : it' ' ''