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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1937)
Tie OREGON STATESMAN, Sakza. Oregon, Tbnrday Ilonda JsrrrrjCl , 1837 ' 1 - -. '-ft "No Favor Sways U; No Fear Shall AtctT From first Statesman. March ?S. 181 ! ! CHARLES A. Spragub I - - Editor and Publisher THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Charles A, Sprague. Pre. - - - Sheldon F. Sackett. Secy. Ilember of rite Associated Press II. Tt Associated Prraa la axdualirHy entitled to tbe uaa for publH-a-tloe mt all aewa diapalrttra credit to It or not otherwise credited la tltlS PSBf-l. . j - . . 1 "v -r Judicial Procedure j Tl fTANY are the criticisms that 171 can courts. Justice is regarded often as both blind arid spavined. Delays, technicalities, musty precedents are said to be used to interfere with the processes of justice. For some of this criticism there is and bar are alert to need for reform; and progressive attor neys are continuously at work which .will reduce the expense of Justice in the end and the time-consuming delays. An Oregon committee headed by Justice George Ross man of the supreme court has during the past biennium con tinued work nreviouslv begun looking to reforms in judicial procedure. These reforms are none of them radical ; many of ' them are minor in character. On the whole they! should result in improvement and reduction eases. Perhaps the most important proposal is one permitting: the trial judge to comment on case as well as to advise jurors his long experience in the trial of cases the judge is in posi tion to offer helpful comment so jurors may more readily an alyze the evidence and arrive at a just verdictJ This right is now enjoyed by judges in our federal courts and in the courts xf England and Canada which bear a high reputation for the administration of justice. , M As a method of avoiding committee recommends change ney to file information against ing, against whom lies probable save the wait for a grand jury session. t Few are the prosecutions for perjury although false swearing is a frequent occurrence on the witness stand. The reason is that not only must the falsehood be proved but the fact that it was material in the case. A lesser penaltjr is rec ommended for perjury in the second degree where a person is found guilty of false swearing. This, it is hoped, will do away with some perj fired testimony. Another reform proposed is to equalize the number of challenges permitted each si'de in criminal cases: to require an accused who plans: to plead in sanity to give notice of his intention instead of springing it at the last moment. i J ! In addition the committee recommends changes in court rules such as the machinery of appeals ; permitting an adver sary to impeach a witness he has called if he! questions bis credibility, etc. I M One proposal of importance and merit is to have circuit judges report to a central office the sentence dispositions lu " i,f l r,s mcjr ujns m uiuuum " r""s "77 disparity in sentences now observed. In addition there OUght 1 a i a j , r 1.4... I to be a central bureau containing records of persons guilty of offenses even if thev are not a i , i i - i i i i CSXaousnea, WIUCIl Iiaiurauy good cause. Where the chance ever then the change should be of the Rossman committee are made after considerable study and in general conform to the recommendations made by bar associations and federal authorities. The legislature should give the bills involving the aref ul and favorable consideration. Bonneville Delay- mHERE is no delay in thirprogress of construction of the I dam at Bonneville, but there In fnrminiy tri rnlirv trt crnvprn thp kaIa of it si nower. So I slowly has the political end moved the dam may be completed with no transmission lines ready to carry the energy to con sumers. Last session of congress bills were introduced and revised to meet certain criticisms, but no action was obtained before congress adjourned.! It was anticipated that early ac tion would be secured at this session; and Sen. McNary re introduced his bill giving the federal power commission rate- making authority. Now the whole subject is f fnrmulatAd. Pres. Roosevelt t I velop such a policy. This task will take some time. Whether I it will be drafted and adopted in time to serve Bonenville when the building job there is completed cannot be foretold. The bone of controversy which will be fought over is the relation between public ownership and private utility opera tion. This centers now m TVA wnere the division reaches right into the governing board. Chairman Arthur Morgan ation with existing private faculties. Member David Lmen thal favors public ownership without regard to the invest ment of private companies. Pres. Roosevelt has made no pub lic expression of choice in the matter; instead has passed the whole problem on to this new committee which! will consider not only TVA but Bonneville, Grand Coulee, Fort Peck, and other great hydro plants being Clearly the government Either it should effect a compromise with the private con cerns with the government holding a short snub rope in the way of rate control; or else it should frankly take over the utility companies at reasonable ernment cannot in fairness destroy through ruthless compe tition the investment of large numbers of its citizens made in good faith in a utility which has long served the public. j Capitol OREGON'S state capitol win enjoy a real distinction in be ing one of the few state capitols whose conception, : de sign, construction and beautification will j be homogen eous and will be complete with the building's erection. In pre paring: their preliminary plans the architects Trowbridge & Livingston and Francis Really consulted with artists to make the plans for decoration 'harmonize with the j architecture, The state capitol commission has very wisely, in our opinion, awarded commissions for the art work to the men who Tiar- ticipated in the original conception, and whose careers as artists are proof of their superior talents. The building itself promises to be an impressive and beautiful structure. With the embellishment by the sculptor and the mural painter it ought to become one of the great art triumphs on the Pacific coast, attracting travelers from all parts of the world. ! The state is faring very well in a financial way in its building enterprise. It win get a commodious capitoL faced in the finest of building materials, white marble, and will have the art work completed; will have reason to be proud the commission which is in charge of its construction. milE best tribute that may be I merchant ot Salem who died suddenly Wednesday is -to say that he bore a high reputation tor integrity as a merchant and as a man. Active and progressive la was Interested in the finer things ot aixe asiae xrem , ousiness. in church, in music, and in WtIc affairs. The loss of a leader of his type is serious in any community. ' WAn vaara tra oa hla Inauguration day the banks were closed. This year motor plants are closed and west coast ehipplng suspended, in.. tmnaa tha fireafdent can open up these industries aa A Uv vvr iaas j ev f-ww r - ----- e?edlly a he did the banks in have been leveled at Ameri foundation. Members of bencn seeking improved metnods of litigation, the uncertainty of time required for trial of the evidence introduced in a as to the law. It is felt from delays in criminal cases the to permit the district attor accused persons, after hear cause of guilt. This would committed to the Denitentiarv. I u t j I iiuuju IlUt ue snwea save iu for improvement is found how- made. The recommendations necessary legal I changes their is delay back at Washington held up until a national policy haa named a committee to de-1 favors a program of cooper built by the government. must come t&. some decision. compensation. A great gov Decoration all lor 52,500,000. The people of the capitol and be grateful to paid to George E. Allen, prominent tne management o bis easiness, ne - . i - SI. j Bits for Brcalcfast By R. J. HENDRICKS Burning of the 1-21-56 historic Bennett j ' house In early part ! V of legislature of 187: "a ; (Coatlnred from yesterday:) The house of tbe Capital engine company, whose LaFrance pumper was disabled, as told In the story, was located at the southeast cor ner of Liberty and State streets, and -was therefore only a few rods from the burning building. v : The .Bennett house was on the northwest corner of State end High streets,-where t!:a Masonic building is now. , , . . S V The Tiger engine company, that had the Silsby machine, waa hous ed west of and near the southwest corner of State and Commercial streets. : v i There was a great rivalry be tween the Capitals and Tigers. That was before Salem had a paid fire department. All were volun teers, and the most prominent men in the city were firemen, and the most outstanding ladies were members of the coffee club, which provided that beverage and lunch es to the firemen when they were called upon to fight the destruc tive element. V V "Sidewalk firemen?" That was a word of contempt for tbe people who stood around In the way of the firemen and gave unsolicited advice. : The reporter of 50 years ago who called the Chinese nation the vilest In the world, and the Can- tonese nationals of that race who predominated among the ones who came to this coast tbe vilest of tbe vfle, needed a little enlighten ment. I - The Chinese people' compare favorably on an average with any in the; matter of Individual hon esty and faithfulness to their pledged words. This was (and Is) true or tne "cooues" who came in large numbers to Oregon up to ciU8lon ,ct tbe early eighties!, when the; ex- was !. passed came mostly from the south of China, in the Canton section. The average Chinese house serv ant was honest and faithful, and the Chinaman who made a busi ness promise generally kept it, No race or nation has; a monopoly on h human virtues, and ot coarse there were and are Tile Chinamen, as a matter of coarse there I" n element i In the population would be among people who make I which still retains a sentimental . . - . ..I i ill v i. up about a fourth of the whole human race, xne Chinese are generally thru tv urlnr In monev mattera mil the first comers to this coast were suspicious of the white race, and did not trust bankers. Hence tbe hoarded gold and other money of the Chinamen In the Bennett house. But all Chinamen thereafter trusted our bankers, and were good depositors, and are to this day. The man who told the reporter that most of tbe members of the 1852-3 territorial legislature were quartered at the Bennett houe wa rignu He would have been correct had he included the 1451-1 legis lature, which was the first one to hold its sessions la Salem; At the time of the opening of that first session, the first Monday in De cember, 1851. the Bennett house was new; likely finished during the summer of 1851. ! s v The I Salem townsite- plat was . . I filed March 22. 1SS0. and Bennett 111 UBl UAW UvU wiUQ VVll I tracted for the site of the Bennett house.) with w. h. and Chloe a. Wlllson. the "owners" of the prop erty though Wlllson in tact only represented the real owner, : tbe Oregon Institute, which i became Willamette university. (But that's a long story.) The deed Bennett afterward received, to 14 lots, among them the hotel site, cost him $1300. according to Its face. Those 14 lots, Inj thhe very center of Salem, are now worth several hundred thousand dollars. 1 . But !A. Bush wss not a member of the: 1852-3 legislature, nor of the one before. He was not a mem. ber of (any legislature. But he was the only territorial printer, and the first state printer, i He no doubt i patronized the Bennett house. During the sessions of the there Iras no other hotel to pa tronize;, with room for any con siders ale number of guests. ror was Geo. Lt. Curry an ex- governor aunng euner oi tae first sessions -of the legislature in Salem. Not until May 14. 1852. did he become secretary of the ter ritory, his first step toward the chief executive's chair. W . w All early : day hostelrles were called bouses, not hotels, as gen erally now. The Bennett house was the first preventions place in saiem f or the entertainment of - the traveling public, with capacity for a eon- slderable number. e V V Before Its day. the traveler. whether by vehicle or on. horse back., here In Oregon, generally went prepared to entertain htm- seir, wita a roll of blankets aad a rope to tether his horse, or with a tent and the makings of a place to lay his head. . Cr la ease be came to a cabin. however small, -rude and scantily furnished, he was welcome to share whatever the settler had. The man who did not offer such accommodations as he had was worse than an In grate. , (Concluded tomorrow.) Dallas Legion Post Plans For State Officers' Visit DALLAS, Jan. 20 The regular meeting of the Carl B. Featon post of the American Legion will be held Thursday night. Plans will be made tor the February 4 meet ing when state officers will be present.' s age of Salcfir Speculates By D. H.TALMADGE THE VALLEY WIXD . 'Tie a - frolicsome, rollicksome wind ' The wind of the vale called Wil lamette, i In from the sea, and la from the hills. I A rather nice wind I salaam It! Round It goes here and round It . goes there, i Wet from the south and cold r from the north, Hesitates briefly passing the east- Good idea, too, as might be set forth. . Blows from the .west for aa hour . Or tWO, .; ! Turns south to breeze la on a leak. Blows the leakage all oyer the ; place. - - And we've rainfall for a f uU week. ' -; : J;;;.-u:;.;;v-v .;,.,- -Excepting, of course, during the intervals when the wind Is on Its travels. But at this season of the year tbe heart of tbe wind Is In the south, and it Is never long ab sent from its home. ' Against the Current For the first time since Mana ger Eddie Lewis opened bis pres ent season of vaudeville at the St te theater, I caught a breath of the old-time spirit from the bill presented Friday and Saturday. We wbo have come down the long trail from the days of The Four Cohans and Harrigan tk Hart perhaps realize more fully and feel more deeply than the youngsters of today the changes that have come in the attitude of the public mind in relation to stage variety entertainment. I Eventually, j the amusement- minded public may turn again to vaudeville and the minstrels. There are those who think it will. And there are those, also, who have attempted to galvanize the ghost of Uncle Tom, and have thus far failed to do so. The public at this time finds Itself well satisfied by photoplay. radio and the dally comic strips in the newspapers. However, there Is an element" In the population liking for the flavours of Its youn ger days, not all of which the stage and screen seem to them to have brought along.: As X was saying Isn't It diffi cult to keep on the subject? I ask ed an Innocent question pertain ing to the fire at Jefferson the other day. and the gentleman of whom I asked the question start ed his reply with the fire at Jef ferson all right, but when I stag gered away a half-hour later he was telling about an attack of prickly heat he once had In Ari zonaas I was saying, I say, the bin of last week-end at the State had a quality which some others of the season's bills had failed to catch. This may have been due fn some degree to the mood in which I looked at the shaw. More than one fairly meritorious entertain ment has been damned because the damner chanced to be In the wrong mood. But it may also have been due somewhat to the presence, as program director, of a former or nament of the varieties, a man approaching 70, who did an old- time step or two and sprung a number of old-fashioned gags and sane- a son- in a. aiirnristneiv mnnA ar aar Tlc: A half-way down-and-outer, c:, llU"0 stage bill included two rather pret ty aance numbers one Spanish the other of the sort know as "strip, wnica succeeded: being sensa tional without being vulgar. And there was a skating act. which was somewhat commonplace nerhans. but done by two youngsters, a boy and a girl, whose sincerity was so apparent that it was impossible to help liking them. The bill ended with a clamor of recalls for a trio of musicians, two women with vi olins and a man with an accord ion. This act Included a mandolin solo and a song or two, and the audience, young and old, liked It. Some folks are hard as tha dickens to understand. There was Wis Hopkins, who lived about two miles. up the creek from Maion'a corners, wis Paid coffee kept him awake nights When he drank it rr.r annnar Kn .1 m. for supper, but he always drank it for supper because if he didn't he got a sort of weak feeUng in his stomach, and when he got up in the morning he groaned a heap Ten Years Ago Jaaaary 81. 1927 Pay of legislators will ba in- creased by $5.0t e day according to the adoption, of a house con. current resolution la the senate. Boy Scout awards ware made last night; high honor of "Lite I Scout" awarded to Horace Stew- art. : - ,, -v Fire bills recommended br Governor Patterson transferring the management of Oregon State penitentiary from executive de partment to state board of con trol approved by senate. Twenty Veers Ago Jaaarr H. ltlT Monmouth is sending aa excur sion ot 350 students of State Normal scaool and residents to Salem to teur Institutions and riew f legislature. London rocked by explosion la huge munitions plant, scores kill ed, hundreds injured. Fred 8. Bynoa has received a bronze medal from international awards bureau of Panama Pa cific i international exposition in recognition of his service in per sonally collecting and sending to exposition important exhibits. Us because he hadnt slept much dur ing the night. So Mrs. Hopkins she gets some Imitation eoee down at the store the, kind y know that's made from grains and vegetables and bark and one thing and Other and she serves it to Wis at supper, but It doesnt suc ceed in keeping Wis shut ofhts sleeplessness. Wis said imitation sleeplessness was Just L a.: bad as any other kind so tar as he was able to see. Anyway, the neigh bors said that in the warm wea ther, when the windows were op en, they could hear Wis snoring like a foghorn within ten minutes after he'd went to bed. and they believed the coffee story was noth ing more than an excuse for not getting up as. early as he ought to 'haTe. : "' The line which separates bad luck and something else of a more personal nature Is a very thin one. The man who left his galoshes un der an open window and found them halt fined with rainwater next morning called It bad -luck-but I dunno. . ; , INTERPRETATION ' A whistle ounding from the night outside ; i ; i , Is no more than a sound to you and me, But to the hearing of the girl in side - . Quite plainly it utters the one word, "he," ; And to the whisUIng boy the home , : outside - ij . t Its sentiment; pub in a word, is "she,",.; "; j--" And the sum of its meaning, out side, inside. Is no more nor less than the one word "we." A Question much favored by oldsters when I was a kid related to the size of the moon as it ap peared to the eyes of a very young person. "How big does tbe moon appear to you?" the wise oldster asked, and some kids replied "as big as a dinner plate" and others replied "as big as a barrel head," and still others replied "as big as a world., A belief existed amongst the oldsters that a reply to this question threw a light , upon the character of the kid. perhaps it did so. but I was never able to definitely determine .what tbe light revealed.' Conditions, I reckon, hare much to do with a person's Judgment in such matters. A man who told me somewhat , more than two years ago that a silver dollar looked as big to him as a full moon Inform ed me yesterday that the swelling had been reduced considerably of late. Possession appears at times to lessen value. I hare heard ba bies cry for the moon, and there Is some reason for believing that the parents would have taken the moon down and given it to the lit tle darlings had it been possible for them to do ao. It is fortunate that we, with our present equip ment of mentality, were unable to be beyond a certain point in furthering our ambitions. It would add considerably to the burdens of family life' to have a moon to take care of. Still, lt might go a long way toward solving Musso lini's territorial problem. HERE AND THERE Marconi's definition of science: "A lantern in a forest ... Tal lulah Bankhead. for many moons missing from the Salem screen, is to "do Scarlet Q'Hara in the film version of "Gone With the Wind" . . . Mrs. Simpson is re ported in the "big" news to have lost 10 pounds in weight . . . Queen. Apparent Juliana of Hol land,' married recently, wore red flannel under her: wedding gown, and the bridesmaids wore , red flannel under their gowns; and taken all in all it was a good sen sible Dutch i wedding. I like the Dutch . . . "Life is mostly froth and bubble: two things stand like stone: kindness in another's trou ble, courage in - one's own." Charles Klngsley . . . I hear of a scene in a Rogers-As talre picture which was retaken 47 times A window opened a mere crack when the outside air is cold pro vides as muca ventilation as a VrA nnnlon aZ ! trees. Expert opinion ... A par window open full length at 80 de- ty of Salem skiers at Idana Sun day.. No special enthusiasm noted In their reports . . . I gather that Mount Hood will get most of next week's snow and lee party '. . . An Interesting game, to play. Resem blance between people in the mo tion pictures and home folks. Not many types of beauty or character in the films that are not duplicat ed in Salem. Tes, and Improved upon. Co-op Oil Plant : Has Good Report The Marlon county ' Farmers Union oil company, ta its annual meeting this week at Mt. Angel, elected Ernest Werner of Silver-, ton. Warren Gray of Marion and Joe . Wavre of ML Angel to' the board of directors.' The directors named Werner president and War re, vice-president. Joe Brockhause is secretary-treasurer. The Coop Oil company pumped 175.127 gallons ot gasoline last year, against, 201.441 gallons the previous year, with the financial return on this commodity nearly double the 103$ return. Total sales, include oil, tires, tabes and other articles reached I C 0.0 4 5.0 7 ia 1030, against "138.001.08 for 1038, with net earnings from op erations tor 1030 at 83723.30. Net profit tor 103S war 32801.17. - A patronage dividend declared Juae 30. 1030. totaled $701.80. aad a second patronage dividend at the end of the year reached $1182.08. bringing the total div idend for the year to $1053.87. 1 1 tl m n 1 W. C flk o..J ove CHAPTEIl XXXII In the spring, when the acac ia trees were aweet with their feathery yellow. bloom, and flow ering fruit trees all over Berk eley burst into pink and white and - coral glory. . Christie's at torney. Nelson Pierce, drove up to Spanish Pass to taut to some of the people who had known Adolphus Cooper. , "Want to come?" he had-ask ed her. ('. Want to come? Her whole be ing ached with homesickness for the mountains. , To smeii - tne pines. To feel the slippery pine needles thick under her feet. To see the first wild flowers. Butter mm. Indian naint , brush. Jon- nie Jump Ups, and the little wild violets, purple ana wnue. . Above all. to see the old house again. Just to look at it from the outside. jEven that would be heaven. ' : But she couldn't ask Janet Woods to keep Donny for a whole day, and she couldn't take him on such a long 'drive. "N no I don't believe I do, she told him.; i So he went! atone, and just to keep her. mindj oft of it she spent the day washing woodwork and windows, and waxing floors, pausing only long enough to rescue Donny! front the - corners he got into with his "walker, inanod hr Janet! whose "Sister didn't need it any more, and to answer him as he recited his vocabulary; oxer and over "Mmm Dada Mumm Dada " "Yes, darling! IMummum is lis tening Daddy will come bye and bye. : ! -.' J---- But her mind was miles away. Next'day Nelson Pierce came out to see- her. ! "Not much! lufk. he said. "I was afraid not. Dad never talked much, you know." V "Evidently noti I found plenty who knew, you as his daughter, though. Let's see, Hector Bloom er is one remember him?" Remember him! My goodness, he kept store there, eTer since I can remember. Gladys Piatt and I .used to buy all dsy suckers aad potato Chips there! But I never liked his wife because she was one of the church ladies who told Dad he oughtn't to let me run wild that was before he married Aunt Nettie, of course. "I dare say. About your Aunt Nettie. She's prepared to put a lot ot money into this thing. In fact she's already spent a lot. McGUnn and Stanley hare had a man in Alaska and they've got everything cold. Of .course we i have traced mi r mn r father's activities, but most of those old timers are dead now.. ' -" I r"-'-r "I haven't got the records of his marriage, but lt must hare been a good ten years before you were, born maybe ; longer. You didn't tell me that Mlmi was 38 when she died. "Why, she couldnt have been! She was awfully youag. I can stiU remember how she looked. Very slender, and with sort of trans parent white skin, and pale gold hair ever so much lighter than mine. She was Just a girl every body spoke of her as Dad's young wife '.-. w , "That's true enough -she was 2 8 " years younger than he waa. But she was 38 when she died I Lhave those records all right. Before Christie's eyes- floated the picture of Mlmi, a slender wraith of a girl making daisy chains for. her oa a gTeea hillside that last spring : Could she have been that oldf -. But Nelson Pierce seemed to know. He went on speaking: "She was Just a kid a mere ehfld. when she first showed np la Nome but don't forget that that was more than 30 years ago, and old Adolphus was In ' his prime thensomewhere la the forties. "Whevz! Gotta get my barn painted afore mv paint gives out!" T aaaaSBSa-' .aSBaVPr M M - lb i ta n y s but fuU iof fight still, and strong as is horse.- . . fHe'di already made two tor tunes one in gold on the Yukon and another In a dance hall ahd gambling place he had in Dawson. Then he sold out and. moved to Nome when the rush came there, and he picked up another fortune. ?Mimt didn't work long as an entertainer. They moved around a lot after the rush was over, and made a couple of trips to Seattle before they finally closed up and came back here to the states. Yes. he made a lot of money, Mrs. Lath am." . i V:.: ' VI can see him as a miner he always liked mines and he always had some prospecting going on somewhere. But I can't think ot Dad running a gambling place ' . - 'fWellj Alaska was a pretty rough place at one time ", "I know. But Dad was so dif ferent. So quiet. And Mlmi was so gentle and sweet. . - "Of course. I do know that she sang ballads Dad told me about that once and I know it was true, but I cant see how a young girl like that ever happened to go to a place like Nome. "I told yon that Aunt Nettle would never talk about it. And heaven knows their family the G e d d e s were respectable enough! I wasn't much more than a baby when Dad took me back there after Mlmi died, you know but I can still remember the stiff,; early Victorian house and the afternoon coffee parties and Grandma Geddes in black silk." i ''But they're all dead, Mrs. La tham. The only one . who could throw any light on it is this al leged aunt of yours. Nettle Ged das Cooper, and depend on it, she won't! Of course, if I can get a little more positive information such as she won't care to have aired in a courtroom " A What do you mean?" she ask ed, uneasily. . j Well old family history such as ' ' . j He hesitated. Latham's wife was inclined to be difficult at times. And 'he was having . diffi culties enough without adding to them. - -: j; 'Such as what?" .'- I Well why Mlmi left home and went to Alaska, for one thing. You will admit that doesn't sound very well, and it as I think there. waa a good-reason for it. Nettle Cooper, with her social aspirations isn't going to like that, very much!" PI won't have my mother drag ged into it! I don't care what she did. I don't erea want to. hear about it. And It you're going to try to win the case that way you can atop right now, because I un-excuse me that's the door bell" --. - - r; i : ' Just her luck. A collector. But one of .the pleasanter ones. "How about a little check for Gorman's Wood and Coal com pany?" f'Oh! well, not today, but I think next week , fMondayt- -Yes ill try to have It on Monday" - . . -ALL right. Monday It Is. About how much were you thinking of -Well I dont 1 know exacUy. I might" - . The full payment? Let me aee yes $18.85. That's the amount Mrs. LAinam." - "Well X , couldn't promise ft au. But I II try. come back Mon day - l ' . ; "VERT welL GOOD day. - That was the worst of a front door that opened right Into the living room. No priracy. Though when they built the v house they had not counted -on collectors. . She closed the door." returned to Pierce with aa apolegitlc little smue. : . . . . T'ifow yon ! leave ererything to 1 " iriT"-" V tat' Hazel Livingston ma. and don't -worry." be said brightly. He rose to go. "But I mean: that about my mother!" " ! - . I "She wasn't your mother. That much is clear. I still hope to prove that Adolphus Cooper was your father, ! bat we ( know definitely that Mimi Geddes Cooper wasn't your mother. Didn't X make that clear before?" "Oh. yes. I understand that. It's the way 1 feel about her. I won't have anything against her come out in court not if I never get a nickel!" ) He was a patient, kindly manv but he had spent time and money on this case. What's more, he had gtven up an afternoon of golf at the Wlldwood club to come out here to talk to her. j "I'm afraid it's a little late to assume such an attitude. Please believe X am working in your best Interests and leave lt all to met" He left brusquely, leaving her alone with her new, disturbing fears. . .-'-!- -.. . .. : . j Christie wanted to talk things over with Donald,! but she couldn't bring herself to do it. He thought she was sentimental about Mimi anyway, and he told her, over and over again, that j the entire case was likely to take more courage than she'd hare.! "You don't know me." she said , hotly. "I may be sort of shy. but when I hereto do things X can do them. Remember the time I went to St. John's hospital and talked to the superintendent ot nurses when I wanted a Job there? ily knees were positively knocking to gether, but I made myself do lt. j "And It certainly took courage to go to Aunt Nettie the way; I did. Why, I'd rather face a dozen courts than go through THAT again. Besides I'm like Dad I'm a fighter!". ;-:.!. , i j He had smiled, a little sadly. "Perhaps we're all brave in our own way. It's when we're cabled upon to be brave in a way we were not expecting, that we smash!"! She knew that he was thinking of himself. He had been brave enough to give up time and money and strength to work on that the ory of his. He hadn't minded bar ing people tell him he was crazy, or being poor, or risking bis health. He'd haTe died for the cause. It necessary. It was this other thing the notoriety, the unfair criticism, that was proving too much for him. j Her arms had gone around . him. comfortably. - "I know X know" she had murmured. -- " But she hadn't known' at all. She was Just finding out now.. She had thought that lt would take courage and patience to work with Mr. Pierce on his documents and plans. Catching the bus. going down-to his office day after day, with Donny In her arms, wasn't easy. She had been prepared to face Aunt Nettie and all the world. In court. To stand up before them, and tell her story, bravely. But this this was different. How could aha let them drag the ghost of the fragile, lovely Mimi Into a crowded, sordid courtroom? Hare her labeled dance hall girl good time girlperhaps worse? Aad how could the giro-it up now without offering to pay for the work that Pierce had alresdy put into It? And where would she get the money to pay? She got oat the silver set thst had been Mimll, eried a little orer the photograph of her in the Mer ry Widow, hat, and even tried to get Pierce on the telephone to tell him that no matter what happen ed, he wasat to drag Mimi into it. and that was final. But he was out of town, the -office said, and besides, the case had been post poned again. She worried still, whenever sb thought -of It, But Donny cut b' . (Continued on page 0) fete 5 I