Tho OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Sunday 'Morning. October 2, 1903 PAGE FOUR , rejaontate$raati "Mo Favor Sirays Vs; No Fear Shall Am" . From Ftrtt Statesman, March. St. 1881 j ... CiiAiLEs A. S Prague - THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.' Charles A. Sprague, Prea. Sheldon F. Sacaett. Secy. 1 V Mcuiber of the Associated Tresa j tlon ol all o.w dinpAlctiM credit J to U or oot .(.h.rwl. crUll thla ppr. ' i ' ; All Quiet on the Western Front j Ti,i..,1f 4i.fi wMnt r.nronpsn crisis, reams of "ex- pert" opinion and anlysis have i. t , nrnii a i j t -L mediated after the final answer of "peace had been written, nntii rinnA f Am'ninn w released bv the experts, in- All we know for sure is mat it is now uciouer "all's quiet on the western front' No big guns are booming along the Sudeten border nor on France's Maginot line, and men are not dying by the hundreds. Czechoslovakia has sor rowfully agreed to the enforced shrinkage of its territory. It has suffered the loss of its formidable boundary-line on the German side, but has gained guarantees of its new border tinder circumstances which will make it harder . for the democracies to renege on their obligations the next time. The argument that is raging now involves the prospect of a "next time" sooner or later, and the crux of the argument is this: Can Europe, by correcting the inequities of the post- Ancr th "hv not" nations with the nai x&wAfcAo auu .f iVfnnxo tnenra noDM or is there so '.great a philosophical conflict between democ racy and totalitarianism that the clash must eventually come, a clashfall the more terrible because of the delay ? The world breathes a tremendous sigh of relief after the tensiori of recent weeks, but events are still moving. Just what is this new pact between Germany and England, "sym bolic of a decision by our two peoples that we will never go to war with one another again?" What would it mean if Hitler idid set out to violate the rights of another small nation, perhaps to violate the guarantee of Czechoslovak integrity? U Also, what does it mean that both sides in the Spanish civil-war are releasing their-foreign troops?. The Italians who. have been aiding Franco, and the international volun teers fwho have been fighting, on the Valencia side, are all leaving, so it is reported. The Italians were withdrawn after Franco assured France that in case of a central European outbreak, his portion of Spain would remain neutral. Whether this announcement piqued Mussolini is not indi- n for? 1 I If Europe is pacified on a it aiso means someuiing in uie xar cau iugwuu maj """f1 a stif fer attitude in relations with Japan there. All of which means only that the international clock has not been stopped. What the future holds, none of the "experts" really can say. If,f as in the crisis just ended, adjustments- can continue to be made, then England and France will be justified in their conciliatory attitude in 1938, and a real victory for world peace is represented in the fact that today, "all's quiet on the western front." l Primary Almost General Doubts still persist in some quarters of the value of the direct rimary as a means of off ice, but the system is now almost universal in the United States. Only Connecticut and Rhode Island still cling to the ronvention system' exclusively, although in New York the primary is limited to state and national legislative offices, and" in Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Georgia and Virginia the method is optional with each party. New Mexico was the latest state to adopt a primary law. . r? ; The most recent objections have been raised to the "open" type of primary, in which voters may select any party ballot they wish. This system prevails in Idaho, Washington, Minnesota, Montana and Wisconsin. . 1 Theoretically, all of the democrats might vote for Andy Gump in the republican primary, and all the republicans might vote to nominate Caspar Milquetoast on the democratic ticket, each party thus hoping to weaken the opposing ticket and assure its own victory. The Idaho primary this year, and the national furor following, to which President Roosevelt contributed in charging "political immorality," j focused at tention on this question, i - f Oregon, jointly with Wisconsin, claims leadership in the development of the primary; they both adopted it in 1904. Xts spread to an dui two states indicates its popular appeal. The next j stop may be to cure its weaknesses and imperfections. ; - . 1 A Oregon City As was anticipated when The Statesman the other day, with what it hoped was obviously humorous intent, com mented on the "slum clearance" program -in Clackamas county, there has been instant response from Oregon City. The Enterprise, clearly recognizing the spirit of our remarks, observes: - . - - " ' . - 1 - "Establishment of the first county unit housing: authority of Oregon has aroused state-wide comment of the press, based upon a Washington newspaper release which eridences ignorance -of housing conditions here. Washington has its slums, cheek by jowl with costly federal structures. New York tenements have long been a disgrace to our most populous city, and factory cen ters have.been cursed by hastily built dwellings lacked comfort and sanitation., But if. our local housing authority restricts its activity to slum-clearance, it will hare nothing to do. ; . . ! "Millions are at our disposal for the elimination of the slums of Clackamas county, and we hope the Great White Father will not deny us a few. dollars, if a rigorous search should fail to . Jind the conditions' to fit the basic requirements. After all, the : experiment -will not cost ua anything, although we hare received some- rather unsavory advertising at the hands of the publicity hounds. :. ; : - ' : . ; '-:-.''!;: .--,!. : "The county housing authority has a dirty job. sans dirt. j. and may properly cease to function if suggested projects are s 'sot on the desired lowly plane. Meanwhile, onr county has been held up to the nation's scorn as unclean, and most; of us resent At as being untrue. We had hoped the state press would pass the subject by, but newspaper vigilance has triumphed, greatly to vMir own discomfiture and embarrassment." i Fortunate k Come to think of it, the Czechs are lucky. Most likely they haven't come to think of it. But just think how for tunate we'd feel here in the United States if we could get rid of troublesome minorities as easily as Czechoslovakia does it without trying at all. ! . j Wouldn't it be nice if we could push all the communists over to a strip of territory on our extreme left and then move the border inside of them; and push all our fascists -don't fool yourself, we have them over to the right edge and draw a line this Bide of them. : ' , . ii Then if we had a couple of borders left, we'd generously have one for whatever minority is your pet hate but we'd reserve the last one for the jitterbugs.' j 1 1 Several times during the past week people called us up and asked if we were getting out an extra about the war. Some of them snorted when we asked in effect ".What war?" and, insisted there was one going on. They had heard about It somewhere. But the reliable Associated Press kept us Instantly Informed on all that did l.2?pen, and nevtr once sent a dispatch telling what didn't happen. . ' The war scare obligingly evaporated in time for the capitol "'Clsil-JLUon, the weekend football game and the world series. - . Editor and Publisher been published in the news- a tVif rtutlnoK chanced from wora L-rrvrlrrl into cocked - . rn f nirlv permanent basis: more or less permanent basis, selecting nominees for public m tne snort space oi 34 years Denies Slums Czechs Bits for Breakfast? By R. J. HENDRICKS Five of the men L 10-2-J3S who la California in tho '40s-'50r got: i t , training for work of '60s: ! '.' s t : i.'L. (Continuing from yesterday:) Henry W. Halleck. one of the five of the list being considered in the present series, was graduated from . West Point in the class of 1839. In 1848 he was sent from New York on the troop ship Lex ington to Monterey, CaL, and oil that 198 day ' voyage translated Baron Jomini's "Vie Politique et Milltaire de Napoleon," in Eng lish. "The Political and Military Life of Napoleon," which, in 1864, he published, in tour volumes. - "Old Brains" was the name his companion in the military serv ice gave him; a deserved title. In California, Halleck had quite a remarkable career. Under Col. R. B. Mason and General Bennett Ri ley, the two military governors of California during- its transition period from Spanish-Mexican rule to American statehood, 184 6-'50, Halleck was virtually secretary of state. He was brevetted captain, rr. S. A., in May, 1847. He was a member of the consti tutional convention, which framed the first set of fundamental laws for what became the state of Cali fornia. He refused the offices of supreme judge and United States senator. From 1854, he was head of the leading law firm of Cali fornia, at San Francisco, and, ac tive in early day business affairs; amassed -a fortune. April 10V 1855, he married Elizabeth Ham ilton,' a granddaughter , of the great Alexander Hamilton, one of the founders of the American re public. . At the beginning of the Civil war, President Lincoln made Hal leck a major general. He suc ceeded Fremont in command of the' Department of Missouri.: Kan sas and Ohio were added to his command March 11, 1862, and the whole named the Department of Mississippi, and later he was made military adviser to President Lin coln, and still further along in the Civil war was- given the title of general in chief, ' and, toward the close, chief of staff. Halleck was again to have high service in the westernmost west. August 30, 186S, he was given charge of the Military Division of the Pacifl'vand his last high com mand was that of the Division of the South, to which he was as signed March 16, 1869, with head quarters at Louisville, Kentucky. General Halleck died in 1872. He was the author of "The Ele na e n t s of Military Art and Sci ence," and other books of kin dred import, used widely as texts in military schools. ; . Nathaniel Lyon, born July 14, 1818, died August 10, 1861. Birth place, Ashford, Conn., of an old Puritan line, running back to n,-r the Mayflower days. He graduated from West Point with the 1841 class; had service in the Seminole war in Florida, and the Mexican war; in the bat tles of Vera Cruz,- Cerro Gordo, City of Mexico. . Raised to first lieutenant In the' Mexican war, and captain In 1851. After the Mexican war, was detailed for frontier duty in California, until 1854; then, till j 1861, was sta tioned in "bleeding Kansas." V S Captain Lyon felt that no state should withdraw from the Union, and that attempted secession should be met with "discreet measures of coercion." On Feb ruary 6, 1861, Capt. Lyon was put in charge of the St. Louis arsenal. On May 1, 1861, he was made brigadier generalj and given su preme command j of the Union forces in St. Louis. He sent Col. Frank Sigel into j southwest Mis souri, and himself took Jefferson City June 15, and captured Boon vUIe two days later. V ' V jJfVIth 5400 troops, General Ly on attacked a combined forca nf V0.000 composed of Confederates &ad disloyal state troops, and in the battle which ensued was killed at the head of his battalions. He immediately became a national hero, and was given a large part of the credit in holding the state of Missouri in the Union. It is at this particular period of history interesting to know, or to recall, that freedom loving German im migrants, a large number of whom (not long after the 1848 purge) were in Missouri, fighting under Col. Sigel. one of their number, also aided materially in holding that state in the Union. -.: .v -t General Lyon was related to the first and second Mrs. R. P. Boise, Sr., who Were sisters, wives of the well known early Oregon pioneer, circuit and supreme 'judge, one of the principal framers of the Oregon- state constitution, etc., etc. General Lyon had a brother, who came to California in early days, then to Oregon, and erected at In dependence, Oregon, one of the first warehouses in that town. The brother had a son, who be came a druggist in California, and there began the manufacture and sale In and from , his own drug store In a modest way of Lyon's tooth powder, which from that in conspicuous start grew and de veloped into what is now a world wide business, representing a great fortune. ' Continued on Tuesday, con cluded on Wednesday.) v Ten Years Ago October 2, 1028 Mrs. C. N. Needham and Mrs. E. 1 E. Bergman : have returned to Salem " from a motor trip to Denver where they attended na tional convention of Daughters of Veterans. Rev. and Mrs. Thomas Ache ion will leave Thursday for Ta coma where he has been given a pastorate. Rev. Acheaon haa been pastor of Jason Lee church. Speaking oi " Alphabet Soup" i i Radio Programs : KSLM SUNDAY 1S70 Kc 9:30 Christian Endeavor. 10:0 0 American Wildlife. 10:15 Romance of Highways. 10:30 Men With Wings. 11:0 0 American Lutheran . Church., 12:00 Harpist. 12:15 On a Sunday Afternoon. 12:45 Silhouettes in Music. 1:00 Benay Venuta Program. 1:30 Press Time. I 2:00 Musical Salute. 2:30 Tennis Tournament. ' 3:30 Show of the Week. 4:00 Rabbi Magnin. I 4:15 Dick Jurgens Orchestra. : 4:30 Dick Barries Orchestra. : 5:00 Nazarcne Church. 5:30 Say It With Words. 6:00 -Old Fashioned Revival. 7:00 Good Will Hour. ' 8:00 Sons of the Pioneers. 8:15 Caico and His Orchestra. 8:30 Percy Faith. 9:00 Tonight's Headlines. 9:15 Jerry Blane Orchestra. 9:30 Back Home Hour. 10:00 Savoy Sultan Orchestra. 10:30 Ted Florlto Orchestra. KGW SUNDAY 630 Kc. 8:00 Press Radio News. 8:05 Pine Tavern. 8:30 Sunday Sunrise Program. 9:00 -Ray Towers, Troubadour. 9:15 Silver Strings. 9:30 U of Chicago Round Table 10:00 Shakespeare's England. 10:30 Darwin & Lansing. 10:45 Becker's Dog Chats. 11:00 Stars of Today. 11.Q0 Kidoodlers. 11:45 It Happened So Quick. 12:45 The Night Watchman. l:00-f Rangers' Serenade. 1:15 Radio Comments. 1:30 The World Is Yours. 2:30-i-Posey Playlets. 2:45 News. 3:00--Stars of Today. 3:30 Gallicchio Orchestra. 3:45 Jean Leonard Program. 4:00 Professor Puzzle wit. 4:30 Fitch Band Wagon. 5:00--Coffee Hour. 6:00 Manhattan Merry-Go-: Round. 6:30 Am. Album of Familiar ; Music. 7:00 Carnival. 7:30 Win Your Lady. 8:00 Walter WinchelL 8:15 Irene Rich. 8:30 Hobby Lobby. 9:00 Night Editor. ,9:15-f-I Want a Divorce. 9:30-r-One Man's Family. 10:004-News Flashes. :; 10: 15-r-Bi id ge to Dreamland. 1 1 : 0 4-Orchestra, t . KEX SUNDAY 1 180 Kc 8:00 Dr. Brock. 8:30 Rollinl Trio. t 9:004-Quiet Hout. 9:30 Music Hall. 10:30 Musical Workshop. 10:45 Radio Tips. . 11:00 Magic Key. 12:004-Proper Housing. 12:17-;Orchestra. i 12:30 Oregon Grange Program. 12:45 Horse and Buggy Days. 1:00---Fmlly Altar Hour. 1:30 BasebalL 3:00 Catholic Hour. 3:30 Baseball. 5:00 Spy at Large. 5:30 Songs We Remember. 5:45 Catholic Truth Society. - 6:00 Orchestra. 6:30 Readers' Guide. ' 6:45 Souvenirs. , 7:00 Horace Heidt. . 7:3 0--Cheerio. t:00-i News. S: 15 Orchestra. 9:00 Everybody Sing. 9:30 Dr. Brock. 10:00 Paul Martin's Music. 10:30 ramily AlUr Hour. 11:15 Charles Rnnyan. ICOIX SUNDAY 040 Ke.' t: 00 West Coast Church. ' 8:30 Major Bowes. 9:30 Salt Lake Tabernacle. 10:00 Church of the Air. ' 10:30 Europe Calllnc. 10:45 Peefa Gold. . 11: GO Walberg Brown String. 11:20 Farmer Takes the Mike. 12:Cf0 Kverybody'a Music 1 : 00- Sunday Serenade. 1:20 Texas Rangers. . 2:00 Old Songs of the Church. t:S0 Thru the Years. . . 3:00 Silver Theatre 3: SO Laugh Liner. 4:00 Deep River. 4:15 Strange As It Seems. 4:45 Sons of the Pioneers. 5:00 Mercury Theatre. 6:00 Sunday Evening Hour. 7:00 Hollywood Showcase. 7:30 Headlines and Bylines. 8:00 Bernie and Lehr. 8:30 Leon F. Drews. 8:45 Orchestra. 9:15 News Review. 9 : 3 0 Orchestra. 10:00 Clem Kennedy, pianist. 10:15 Thanks for the Memory. 10:45 Orchestra. 11:45 Prelude to MIdnite. KSLM MONDAY 1170 Kc 7:30 News. 7:45 Time O Day. 8:00 Four Square Church. 8:15 Georgia Crackers. 8:30 Hits and Encores. 8:45 News. 9:00 Pastor's Call. 9M5 Friendly Circle. 9:45 Bill Lewis & Organ. 10:00 Women in the News. 10:30 Hawaiian Paradise. 10:30 rMorniag Magazine. 10:45 Voice of Experience. 11:00 News. 11:15 Dr. Carl T. Thompson. 11:45 Value Parade. 12:15 News. 12:30 Chamber of Commerce. 1:00 Federal Housing Talk. 1:15 Midstream. 1:30 Girl Meets Boy. 1:45 Hatterfields. 2:00 Hillbilly Serenade. 2:15 Johnson Family. 2:30 Ross Pierce Orchestra. 2:45 Musical Salute. . 3:00 Feminine Fancies. 3:30 Tennis Tournament. 4:00 Fulton Lewis, Jr. 4:15 News. . i 4:30 To Be Announced. 4:45 Your Coach. 5:00 Studies in Contrasts. 5:30 Dinner Hour Music. 6 : 4 5 Tonight's Headlines. 7:00 Singing Strings. 7:15 Musical Interlude. 7:30 The Lone Ranger. - 8:00 News. 8:15 Spice of Life.: 8:45 Jose Manzanera's Orch. 9:00 Newspaper of the Air. :15 Fan in the Kitchen. 9:30 Radio Candid Camera. 10:30 Jose Manzanera's Orch. -11:00 Jim Walsh Orchestra. KEX MONDAY 1180 Kc. 6:30 Musical Clock. 7:15 Asher and Jimmie. 7:30 Financial Service. 7; 45 Popular WalUes. 7:58 Market Quotations. 8:00 Dr. Brock. 8:30 -Story of the Month. 8:45 Viennese Ensemble. 9:0 0 Dorothy Dreslin. f:15 Kidoodlers. 9:30 Farm and Home. ' 10:30 News. ' 10:45 Home Institute. 11:00 Great Moments in History 11:15 Orchestra. 12:00 Dept. Agriculture. 12:30 News. 12:45 Market Report. 12:6 The Quiet Hour. 1:15 Club Matinee. 1:45 Affairs of Anthony. 2:00 Neighbor NelL 2:15 Irma Glen, Organist. 2:1 5 Don Winslow. 2:30 Happy Jack. 2:45 Orchestra. " 3:25 News. 3:30 Orchestra. 3:45 Lola Hutchinson. 4:00 Jesse Crawford. : 4:15 Yolchi Hiraoka. 4:30 Music Is My Handicap. ' 4:45 Vivian Delia Chlesa. - 5:15 Songs of the Lone Star. 5:30 String? i Along. 6:00 String Symphony, g.45 Sport Column. . 7:00 True or False. 7:30 National Radio Forum. t:00 News. - 1:15 RIcar do's Rhapsodies. 1 : 3 0 Orchestra. , 9:00 Music Graphs. 9:15 Orchestra. 9:30 Wrestling Matches. 10:30 Paul Martin's Music. 11:00 News. . 11:15 Paul Carson. KGW MONDAY C20 Kc. 7:00 Just Neighbors. . 7:15 Trail Blazer. 7:45 News. 8:05 Rosle and Her Guitar. 8:15 Laurence L. Cross. 8:30 Stars of Today. 9:00 Ray Towers. 9:15 The O'Nenis.. 9:30 Time for Thought. 9:45 Cobwebs and Cadenzas. 10:00 Vincent Curran. 10:15 Words and Music. 10:30 Dangerous Roads. 10:45 Dr. Kate. 11:00 Betty and Bob. 11:15 Arnold Grimm's Daughter 11:30 Valiant Lady. 12:00 Story of Mary Marlin. 12:15 Ma Perkins. 12:30 Pepper Young's Family. 12:45 The Guiding Light. 1:00 Backstage Wife. 1:15 Stella Dallas. 1:30 Singin' Sam. 1:45 Girl Alone. 2:00 Houseboat Hannah. 2:15 The Observer. 2:30 Hollywood Quiz. 2:45 Curbstone Quiz. 3:00 News. r 3:15 Candid Lady. 3:30 Woman's Magazine. 4 : 0 0 Orchestra. 4:15 Rose Ma rie. 4:30 Stars of Today. 5:00 Pleasant Interlude. 5:30 Those We Love. 6:00 Music for Moderns. GO This Sunday lias been set aside as "National Attend Church ODay." For the benefit of shut-ins and others unable to attend a church service KSLM presents these! outstanding devotional services On She ; By DOROTHY The Novotny Kidnaping Case i It is now seventeen day since little Jan Nbvotny, hia tutor, and bodyguard, have been penned up by the Buten gang. Such in formation as has been smuggled out 1 n d i c a tes that the child's spirit end that of J his protectors re main unbroken.'. In spite of the fact that hia rich relative are making - a deal rtay nwm with his - captors which frightens him very much, his upbringing under an old tutor, who studied under the great Anglo-Saxon scholars and a well known American revolutionary hero, George .Washington, stands him in good stead, although he never had the opportunity to learn, endurance on the playing fields of Eton. :-- It I is now fourteen days since the Butch gang delivered the first ransom note to the guardians of the child. .' These guardians, Mr. John BuU and ' Madame Marianne, were the child's godparents, and at Its birth bestowed upon him a handsome small estate with a very strong wall protecting it against maraud ers who in preceding centuries had : been numerous in that com munity. . In the first ransom note the Butch gang threatened that unless the wall be immediately given up, they would kill the child. A note smuggled 1 out by .the bodyguard of little Jan to his guardians said, "I don't want to be killed, but are you quite sure they won't kill me anyhow? We've got a few guns Inside this wall, and! maybe we'd better keep the wall. Listen, god parents, you dont know, Butch, but" he was around in our neigh borhood last week and snatched another kid, and what he did was something fierce." . The kid's guardians studied the ransom note a long time and de cided to contact the gang's boas in a mountain hideout. The boss said, "What's this kid to you anyhow? He is a brat, and has been teasing some 'of onr friends. "You just give up the wall and a good slice of his property or else." . Uncle John and Auntie Mari anne had never met anybody like Butch in their lives, although they had. read about him in the news papers. They, argued with Butch. They said. "Listen, sir, it's against the law!" . . Butch, making 'an ominous bulge in one pocket, emitted the genial laugh which has made him popular in the underworld. "Dja wanna shoot it out?" he said, and rattled ten thousand airplanes, the sound of which was practical ly drowned out by the rattle of 6:30 Orchestra. 7J00 Contented -Program. 7:30 Robert Ripley. 8:00 Amos 'n Andy. 8:15 Edwin C Hill. 9:00 Hawthorne- House. 9:30 Battle of the Sexes. 10;00 News Flashes. 10;15 Tanya and Glenn. 10:30 Orchestra. TO CW3 TODAY 9:30 a.m. Christian Endeavor Society; 1 11:00 a.m. American Lutheran Churchy 4:00 p.m. Rabbi Edgar Magnin ! 5:00 p.m. The Nazarene church broadcasting directly from the specially constructed studio in the new church edifice 6:00 p.m. ' Old Fashioned Revival 9:30 p.m. - The Back Home Hour Coast to Coast With Mutual 1370 Kc. Recoro TJOMlSON the medals on his understudy. . The guardians passed the word on to the kid's tutor. . "Pay the ransom," they said, "but if that wretched fellow does anything more to you, youcan count on your old guardians." The kid and his tutor talked to gether and said, "It doesn't seem a very smart thing to do, but prob ably the old folks know better." So they decided to give Butch the ransom, although both Jan and his tutor, and his bodyguards, didn't believe for a minute that that was all Butch wanted, be cause he is a bragging fellow and had boasted all around the under world that he was going to take over the whole place and bury Jan in the cellar. The godfather of little Jan next contacted Boss Butch in a small summer resort, taking beforehand the precautions commonly used in' kidnaping cases to avoid too much publicity. There was a good deal of talk , around, among-the mob, of lynch ing the bobs, and that would have been against law and order. But before making the next . contact the godparents notified the police and got them ready to act. They remembered the 10,000 airplanes and that little Jan had a distant relative off in the north, who was known as a hard-boiled fellow and nasty in a fight. John and Marianne hadn't -been on more than- speaking terms with him for a long time, but they sent him a wire and said i "Will you . send us some cops?" - " ? . And Uncle Ivan answered la conically: "Bet your life." i Godfather' now handed over to Butch the ransom money, ao coh troilinglhli features as to hide everything -except a look of in eradicable disgust and surprise. i "Dirty coward," thought Butch, shoving the ransom money, back into Mr. Bull's hand. "Yuh think yuh can buy us off with that!" And he raised the ante. "But we had a gentleman's agreement," said Mr. Bull, which for a moment, floored Butch be cause nobody had ever before . mentioned that word in hia pres ence. i Then, on second thought, Mr. Bull added, "Would you mind put ting it in writing. Sir." "He called me Sir," thought Butch .proudly, "him and me are goin to be buddies." . But when Mr. Bull read the sec ond ransom note, he said, "It isn't ' reasonable." (Turn to page 14). Fift A3. een ears October 3, 1923 P. H. Acton, representing the X. W. Mutual Life Insurance Co.. and family hare, become Salem residents after motoring through several western states to select a location. Karl Hinges, who recently va cated a position In the state in dustrial accident commission, is now with: the automobile divi sion of the state department. - Father J. R. Buck of St. Jo seph's Catholic ehnrch, will con tinue his address upon his re cent European tour for the Ki wants club. . RCH