The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 28, 1940, Page 4, Image 4

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    -F-'GS FOU2
. ' "No favor Sway Us: No Fear Shall AtotP .
Prom First Statesman. March 2S. ISftl
. - THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
CHAKI.BS A SI'KAOUK. Hr evident
MntlMT of rb Aixiirlitrd fl m
The As I elated Vies If exclusively entitled to the use for
publication of all news dispatches credited to It or Dot other
wise credited la pupvr.
- '
Let's Practice Hospitality
-This is Salem's centennial year; the year of Salem's
biggest celebration. In staging the celebration, Salem hopes
to attract an unprecedented number of out-of-town visitors;
if it doesn't, the purpose of the celebration will not have
been achieved. Salem expects to profit by their presence here.
For one thing, they will spend some money ; more important
is the opportunity to introduce them to Salem at a moment
when it has its "bast foot forward Good will is going to
be Salem's principal recompense for all the labor and effort
it is about to put forth.
The celebration is little more than two months away
and already various .croups are engaged in making the de
tailed preparations. Presently the huge pageant cast will be
rehearsing and other groups will be practicing their assigned
roles. . ' a
". There is one role in this celebration to which every Sa
lem citizen has already been assigned; that of host. And
while those chosen for more definite and active participar
tion are practicing, it might be well for the rest to do a bit
of studying and practicing on this host business.
JSalem has been host to various convention groups from
year to year in the past ; twice each year it is host to some
considerable portion of the general citizenry of Oregon;
those attending the state basketball tournament in the spring
and those coming for the state fair in the fall. Salem people
should not especially be in need of practice at hospitality.
But m the case of a convention there is always a hospitality
committee" and in the "case of the basketball tournament,
the high school and Willamette university do the honors.
As for the state fair, frankly we have never noticed Salem
people putting themselves out to let the fair visitors know
their presence was appreciated.
Beyond that, don't quote us as saying so it's not our
observation particularly but just something we have heard
Salem has the reputation of being none too friendly to
strangers, be they one-hour visitors or new residents. This
reputation is, strange to say, more often mentioned in Salem
tha elsewhere. One hears, for, instance, that nowhere else
in the west may a lone stranger step out onto a golf course,
equipped in a manner suggesting . he wants to' play golf,
without being invited to join the first twosome or threesome
that tees off. Likewise one hears that in Salem, the clique
system is so well developed that at certain of the service
club luncheons the same members sit together at the same
tables week after week without a break. These are the things
one hears about Salem in Salem; no one admits to being
a party to this stand-offish attitude and no one offers an
explanation.
Well, if these things be true it is decidedly time, thi3
centennial year, for Salem people to make up their minds
that not all strangers have smallpox, that some people even
though they live somewhere else, have been exposed some
how, to some of the rudiments of culture and refinement
and that on the occasion of this festival which takes its
motif from pioneer times, it might bej well to practice some
of that western hospitality which, according to tradition.
then prevailed.
Bits for;
Breakfast
Br R J HKNDKIl KS
"Historic Site Visited 5-23-49
by Class,! .headline of a
news article showing fine
enterprise of local school:
The neighborhood news depart
ment of the Capital Journal. Sa
lem, in a recent issue, under the
quoted heading above, had these
paragraphs:
"Salem Heights Closing - tbe
year's study-of Oregon history, the
class was taken by the teacher,
Prof. 'Ira, Dueltgen, and . V.
G waits ey to see the various his
torical buildings and places in
and near Salem.
A list of the places visited In
cluded the first bouse built in Sa
lem, the house of Jason Liee and
family, where Willamette onirer
city was organized; a risit to, the
new capitol and a view of. tbe
city from its dome: the place
where the Jason Lee mission once
stood near Wheatland ferry; the
od Catholic church built in 184S
at St. Paul, which is the first
brick church in Oregon: Cham
poeg, where the provisional .gov
ernment was formed and where
many interesting relics are pre
served; Oregon City, where the
house of Dr. John McLaughlin
stands.
The students were much im
pressed and felt they had a store
of first hand knowledge to be
reported on at school."
. .
The enterprise and public spirit
of the teacher of the Oregon his
tory class at Salem Heights school
is tine. It Is worthy of note and
of commendation that there is an
Oregon history class in that
echool.
Perhaps the writer of the news
item is at fault, but some cor
rections in the copy as it appeared
in print outght to be pointed out;
five or more of them.
"a "a
The "Lee" house (present 960
Broadway) was not the first house
(of whites) built in (on the site
of) Salem. The saw and grist
mill under one roof, a few yards
to the southwest of the "Lee"
house, was the first structure
erected by whites on the site of
Salem.
The second one, "the house of
Jason Lee and family." was not
that of "Jason Lee and family."
In fact. Jason Lee at that time
had no "family," other than his
second wife. But the house was
that of the Methodist mission of
which Jason Lee was superintend-,
ent; It was meant for the head
quarters of the mother mission;
for there were four branch mis
sions. V V
Jason Lee and wife alone did
not occupy the house as s resi
dence. Three other missionaries
and their families lived In that
house. That house had many uses.
At first it was main mission head
quarters; it was hospital and what
stood for postoftice: it was the
refuge for needy wayfarers in the
wilderness there were housed
"Grandma" Tabitha Brown and
her people . when they arrived,
barefooted, half frozen and hun
gry off the plains: and there
"Grandma" made the seemingly
divinely inspired and directed be
ginnings of what became Pacific
University, Forest Grove.
And Willamette university was
not organized in that house. It
Britain's Hour oi Peril
.... : rr i
r &y ziP
THE INVMNOBL'E AIRMA0A-194O
"The Cairo Garter Murders
- By Van Wyck Mason
Dulce et Decorum
One would like to say that the young Italians who last
weekend hoisted great banners bearing the words, "War!
War!" and "Iuce, we want to march, were "true sons" of
Horace, the 'author of the Latin tag which means It Is
sweet and fitting to die for one's country." This would be
quite proper except that Horace is traditionally the poet
of rural contentment, the Latin Wordsworth in a number
of ways, and so hardly the patron of young men who insist
that the onlv elorv is in a stickv death in an aimlane cock
pit, or the only beauty vomiting out pne's viscera through J had numerous beginnings r one of
a hole in the adomen inflicted by a machine gun bullet. Virgil
would perhaps be better, or Cicero: call them, as patriots
anxious to spring to arms whether the fatherland needs them
or not, "true sons of Cicero."
Yet even this is hardly accurate, since the Romans,
eren in their republican days, were not necessarily extreme
militarists nor hyper-sensitive in the ray of national honor
a such. True, the tribes surrounding Litium were annoying,
and had to be suppressed; then it was either Rome or Car
thage, and it turned out to be Rome. Yet Pliny, if we are
not mistaken, had strongly to exorcise the spirit of the
jroung Romans to persuade them to ro forth against the
Carthaginians, and the conflict was ttever looked upon as
one of undistilled aggression by one side or the other. The
best proof that this is true, and true to some extent at least
even through the imperial era, lies in the growth of the sys
tem of law and administrative procedure which has forever
marked Rome as something more thafc a mere subduer of rectors, appointed its building and
less well-disciplined states. This is one reason why the young
Fascists are not true sons of Cicero, j
The young Fascists, in fact, are not true sons -of any
body unless it be Mussolini and the twentieth centnry con
sidered not as mutually exclusive agents hut as a single
compound. The twentieth -century brought for them discon
tent and unrest, unemployment and problems too delicate
auid yet too profound lor themo'rope'-witlr;'2rxssoIini
brought them a'spurious contentment, an answer, based -on
false premises, to the questions which beset them. In return
they gave him adulation, and, on occasions snch as Jaiit week
end, their lives. They can be objects of scorn, though per
haps pity is a more just emotion with respect to them.
It is sweet and fitting to die for ones country out, one
ist persuaded, only -when one's country Js .engaged in a just
and ughteous conflict, or when ats soldiers, within the
limits of human reason, Jbelieve themselves to be fighting
for justice and right. IThat is why the young JTascists, "who
wave banners and make boasts, are xaot true sons; of Rome,
or of any of her great2st thinkers. Rather are they the myr
midons of a petulant, posmgde pawn ;
it is-worse than unfortrmate tliat they win never, though
they die m battle or live Jaier m Jaeatth and prosperity
snow it.,
tnem the 16 50 collection for a
school for whites, taken up on the
Lausanne as it sailed its way in
1839 over the wastes of 13,000
miles of ocean. The conception
was in tbe mind of Jason Lee
The preliminary meeting looking
to the organization of what be
came Willamette university was
held at that house January 17,
1S4Z. But that meeting ad
journed, for several reasons, to
meet at the original site of the
mother mission, 12 mies by water
below the site of Salem, on Febru
ary 1, 1842. That meeting, at
that most appropriate place, or
ganized the Oregon Institute that
by change of name became Wil
lamette university; gave it Its
name, elected its first board of di-
WPA and Seasonal 7ork
The lower house of congress passed s relief till -of ap
proximately $1411,000,000 the other .day after tying on. an
amendment harring communists And htmdists from WPA
employment. Chances sre that the unnrxmnist party's next
meeting in Salem will not be so well -attended as the last.
The mtion 4s planning to spend a' few xtra billions
for defense. There is strong sentiment for ma king this a
!pay as you go" program, which is good" csmmoa sens and
at the same time almost an absolute necessity in view of the
national debt's, bulk. : , .
The defease program will cresta a lotf jobs; expansion
of the armed forces will iAka nr Kmi more nf &m ttuhb.
ploymgnt slack. At the sama time, .the pay as you go"
feature -will ia iin immediata burdeui a the nation's pro
ductive workers. Specifically, if -congress las tbs tamxage; it
xriH mean broadening' the case of the income Jsrr that
the siasn averaga iniasns Via par a "portion cf this lax
fiirecUy. The feurden may he such -that cr national standard
uf iiring:wnj belowcred-":-' ---n: j
In visr? of these trsnda, cna hrs to wxsr xbocilhr!
necessity for teepinsr the rallcf burJEn at its pnssst lertL
And here in "western Oreiran .-whera nstkas f "berry ricisrs.
JwanSs- hsraLI tlia -Errtsral cf tha 1arjr.2jarvestiiis'sffiscn88s
there -arises the pkasixrr prospfict cf a xubstanfial Teductiaa i zbszdxmed and strenuous cITccis: szzds ta ktcp St extli-xt zt
other requisite committees. Feb. 1,
1842, is the date, the mother mis
sion of the Methodist Missionary
Society the place. :
Hr Jak KcLauglilin is the cor
rect spellis, not UcLanghlisw As
tm "Chm&oe&, were the previ-
Eional government wm fonmad."
that is myth.. -Tie
-Oregon -provisiomir gov-
rnment was lormed at tha mother
ralsslon presided over or Jason
iLeeou Thnrsday, JNeh. It, 1S41.
That was the only "Oregon provi
sional governnvsnt formed it
lasted till the territorial govern
uMmt took over by the proclama
tion of General Jeeepbt Lane, gov
ernor, March 2. 1849; acting un
der a law of -cBUirress. r - -a
There a meeting at Chan
poeg. May Z, 1843. called fey taa
woir meeting' that met at "the
louse tE Joseph Oervals Manes S
precftdlng, that waa called fey the
on -at the Opegtm Institute n
Wallace pralrts Feb. t preceding.
That (May 2 meeting mpaplnted
m commitlee to frsm tews and a
ronstltutlcn. j-take he -place at
Xh laws -ot Kvm Tea adopted t
the original organization meeting
of Ten. lg, 2841, at the Lee mia-
The Mmmiite ta drew up the
constitution and laws met at the
original Iea ntiasian six days. Mar
1 8-17. 3.8-13. nd JbbTT and 28J
It repea ted 1 saeetliuc at Cbata
2oeg July S, 1843, where tta tb
XOTt -was adopted. That's all.
: No other meetiag Itavins any
CHAPTER 11
North darted Into the bedroom
but kept the door open just a
crack so he .could discern Kll
gour'a tall figure.
That "Mr. Armstrong might
have returned to remove some
Implicating evidence came as a
dazzling possibility, and silently
Hurh North snatched a carafe
oft Follonsbee's dresser. Years
ago he had learned how effective
a well-flung bottle can be
Was t h I a Mr. Armstrong?
North had no time to guess tor
into the suite stepped a , thick-
bodied individual, who moved
with the silent power of a pan
ther on the prowl. The intruder
failed to perceive Kilgour stand-
ins: very still to one side. He
advanced boldly into the sitting
room and flicked " on the mght
switch.
-What do yon want?" Kilgour
challenged.
The newcomer swung about,
right hand plunged into bis coat
front. Poised, he faced the vigi
lant figure to his left.
"Say, what the ? Why, If It
ain't the Limey. Say, is Dick
corked off?"
"He's not to be disturbed,"
Kilgour evaded and, relaxing, of
fered his cigarette case.
It was now North's turn to be
astonished. Kilgour was quite af
fable. "Well, Colonel Melhorne,
what might you be doing here?''
"Dropped in for a nightcap
with Dick.! the other . replied.
"Might ask 1 yon the same ques
tion, so long as we're asking
Questions.
"For the same reason. Fol
lonsbee's gone to bed though."
"Yeah? Must have been soused
as a billy goat to wreck his suite
like this." A slow and mocking
smile spread over the caller's
thin scar of a mouth.
From what he could see
see through his narrow door
crack. North thought the soldier
of fortune little changed during
the vast twv Tears. His featares
still eetalMd their brataUyaand
some cast an8 their devil-may-
care gsd natare. An mid powder
burn sowed blue along ta in
trader left aek. Long' age
North Jhad decided that said bars
n&d Teero caused by the charge
of a shot which had nicked off
the ton of Stag Melhorne' s left
ear. All In all. the soldier of for
tnne in his not badly fitting eve
ning clothes presented at once a
sinister and a romantic tigure.
With a sudden flash of anger.
Stag asked, "Who's that behind
tho door?" .
"A lady, CoIoneL 4 Sae er
dropped in with me- When we
found Follonsbee sleeping
connection with the provisional
government " was evtr held at
Champoeg. There was no "50-52
vote. That was a fabta. concocted
20 years after the event.
Champoeg is historic. The low
er Astor fort was erected a little
over a mile above tha t point, in
the winter of 1812-18, The pur
chase of the Willamette valley
from the Indians was made there.
in 1851. That was-tie- head of
primitive boat navigation, where
riding and pack horsei met row
ers of canoes and operators - of
bateaux. It became- the shipping
pace, for grain taken there by the
Hudson's Bay company. The truth
In history will stand, and ought to
stand. A historic lie vill die out.
and ought to have that fate.
erly issued a nctlci that persons on WPA' are required to
accept any fcsna-fida effcr cf private employment, with the
provision tnatftsey ca alila ta do the work, that the .going
wsimistipaid3rrid working conditions be satisfactory
and that no union relalicsship be violated. Persons accent
ing .ggajuan&l enrcoyment "5rI3 he cireit Ertference in. reem
ployment on WPA when that wcrk Jxsninates, ihe'rectier
Looking at. the - general ' picture triiliocl Cdvir. z into
w03l?iz!iTm it is difficult to, ess why,, at least ' for tha
n eTrpIojnert,' VA canrct ha vxrta&Hy:
in relief and T7PA rols.
:icriasTer7
the end of that seascn, if prcrxrat trerdi are
y prc .jv.jn7'ni nsl -ccwit 1ch. i 1 3 uwy
maintained. The
er Just lingered to talk er
don't you know?
In faint contempt Melhorne'
scarred face tightened. "Yeah?
Try anotber gag, Kilgour, and
quit stalling. I can smell raw
blood all over the place. Who
in there?" He started forward
but the British agent blocked his
path.
"I advise you to stay where
you are."
North grew apprehensive as he
sensed the swift growth of an
tagonism.
"Yeh? Well, listen. Limey,
go where I please and do what
I please, get me?"
"Stay where yon are, or yon
won t like the consequences
little bit. I don't advise you to
try bluster in British, territory.
Kilgour advised in succinct ac
cents. "And this vessel Is Brit
ish. Don't forget it."
The heavier figure fell back
step. "You talk like a dick, so
guess that rumor I heard in the
smoking room is on the up-and
up. You're a British cop?"
"That's correct." came Kil
gour s chill accents. "Now Tm
asking, what business had you
with Follonsbee?"
"Try and find out," snapped
he with the unfamiliar decoration
ribbon in his buttonhole.
"Take it easy. Colonel." Kil
gour sootner. "mere s a good
reason why I want to know."
"Yeh? Say. what's been going
on around here?" The soldier of
fortune's look again sought the
disordered desk.
"Some pretty nasty work, Stag.
Known Follonsbee long? '
The other narrowed his eyes
and shook his reckless-looking
head In a purely mechanical
movement. Then he spoke as. if
he were making mental carbon
copies of everything he said. "No.
Follonsbee and I have been pals,
but we only met In the bar as
we were clearing the Mersey."
connection? KUgonr persisted In
a friendly taste. -
-He and I. weZL w were talk
inr of mebbe doing a little- busi
ness . tageUfeer aomathn." Mel-
home's manner sxew wneasy
"Whera 1 hmt" -
"You said yon smelt death."
Kilgour - replied. "Tro wim
right. " J - - '
- "How waa lie tamped oif?"
"Shot brutally, throaga the
stomach." replied tha . British.
a rent. 7-:-V-.'-
"Shot through tha stomach.
toddy's Garden
By LTLLIB L MADS EN
Twa can stUl plant glad
ioli for aammer bloom.- For reds
try Commander Koehl. Bell Sow
den.King George. White George's
White. Albatroa, Snowden.- fink-
Picardy. W. H. mipps, anas joj.
Loe Angeles, Kvelya lurtiana.
Debonair. Betty - NathaU. Betty
Co-ed. Bine Alda. Ava Maria,
Heavenly Bine. Felegrina. Yellw
Ruffled Cold, Golden Dream.
Good Dahlias Cactus type-
Ambassador.-Golden Standard, the
white Jersey's Daisy; formal dee
oratlve Cavalcade, Girl cf Hil-
crest, Whit Knight. Thomas A.
Edison, Marsh all's Pink: Informal
deeexatlve Sonar Boy, Spotlight,
Forest Fire, Dally Mall.
ZJf Plant your wallflower
seed during the hammer about
July for next sprfaai, bloom. Yes,
yon caa get them la named vari
eties each a Blood Red., Parts
Market Brown, Golden Gem.
It la lata to start Lobelia from
seed for tMejrear lloom. Better
bay the plants. For your purpose
rd suggest the dwarf variety. -
JT.C Ctlna-ssters ara Massed;
aacng the more difficult annnais;
hecamse they are as subject ta dlt-;
easa nd pesta. They Hi a com
paratively rich soil and plenty ox
water durirs tha Jsist dry mcntca.
K!rotiaa mast t ti t-it to
which you refer. It is IrcgaixtUy
ulfed the Flowertag Tohaceo. It
is not difficult to grow and It U
very Cnraat -
35
eh? . . . Td like to know who
did It, remarked Melhorne.
'You're sure you don't knew?
Kilgour drawled.
Say, listen, you! I ain't going
to stand for any dirty cracks.
Follonsbee and I got along swell
When I plug a hombre I Shoot
him through the heart.1
"Won't yon tell me what! you
and Follonsbee talked about?"
Kilgour Invited. 1
"Sure. He knew I'd been In
Egypt last spring., and he (was
NoY73 Behind
Today's Nov73
fcw PAUL MALLOri
guns
.una
ons-the
ngurin' on runnln some
into well, runnln' some
Melhorne explained. "So Fol
bee was going to give me
lowdown tonight bnt "
Gravely Kilgour considered the
glowing tip of his I cigarette and
sea noises crept Into dominate
the cabin's stillness. "I wonder
what gave him the Idea you'd be
Interested In running guns?f
"Dunno. Maybe I talk andj act
like a diplomat!" )
Kllgour's ruddy featurea broke
into a wide smile, "No dbubt
that's it. Colonel. Incidentally,
have you come across any cither
er hardware salesman?
might he better for you If
tell me." I
Quickly his belligerency evap
rated. "It smells in here," Mel
horne observed. "C'mon, Kilgour.
let's so get a drink. I've 1 got
some pretty tolerable snake oil In
mjr satchel." -' j
To North's surprise. Kilgour
accepted and, after making a pre
tense of securing the useless lock,
followed the soldier of fortune.'
Quite distinctly the man fromiG-2
caught Melhorne's subdued
chuckle.
(To be continued)
It
you
4 teat. Ida. rprx5urt U wttole
in part strictly probtWUd.)
Tf-ASinNGTOX. May 27 In
connection with the falJore of
Brltata to get all-Important,
trade agreemeat wtth Rasl at
this tlnse, the followtag "vy
Is b e 1 a g told ia the Whlf
Hons a eatonrage. (It was
broagbt back from Europeasi
chaaceUoriea br
retarr of State Somaer l ellca.)
rv. slaved a historic
trfk nnon Briuln's Prime Mini
ster Chamberlain at Munich. They
pmimhIm! in the secret council
chamber a dictaphone, tha pres-
r which no one else knew,
Including Chamberlain. Then tn
the preliminary dlsrusslons they
proceeded to draw jar. taimotr.
lata oat on a variety of subjects
ItwlnAlnar Rnrlla. This WSS a PUb-
it ii non which Mr. CDamneriain
was particularly hot at the mo
ment. Aa you wui recau
was not invited to tne saunicn
vathrinr. What he said about
Stalin, would have made that dic
tator's ears barn.
t itf did. When Hitler's for
elgn minister, Herr von Ribben-
trop, went to Moscow jest iroir
the outbreak of the war to liire
c.i!n into the nasi camp, ue tooa
along the phonograph record of
rh.nhrlaln'a add criucism as
..thi a. rirst thlnr ne aia in
Moscow was to play It over for
tm man of steel, whose tempera
ture Immediately registereo ui;
iinrrMi and has been mainiamca
nitrh atnea then, as far as
most things British are concernea.
Business U good. With stock
market and commodity valors
shrinking la fear of the fatare,
the statistic of Mr. Itoosevelr'a
economists show Industrial pro
dactloa Increased this month
for the first time since Decem
ber. Their estimate ia J0 for
May, aa Increase of 4 per cent
from Aoril. 1
Doubt It If you want to. but
. . a w
one reason for mis nse is iu
same one that has helped to cast
rlonm noon the security and com
modlty msrkets. the invasion of
Belgium. The nails nave ciosea
one of the world's largest steel
sources there. Orders, notably la
Latin America, which formerly
went to Belgium are now coming
here.
This Is only one of the confus
ing contradictions of the current
hysteria. Tremendous drop in our
markets was aupposeaiv causea
bv the sudden expectation of
German victory on the ground It
would cause cancellation of allied
war orders and close our export
markets.
While the economists are In
clined to nod assent to these gen
eral suppositions, they agree the
markets carried their anticipation
much too far and too fast.- Tbe
prospects of a German victory
have already brought more than
a billion dollars increase In the
American" defense budget.' and
this increased expenditure has
been generally described as only
tbe first drop ia the bucket. Cer
tainly It will be larger than what
the . allies would have ordered.
Why this assurance failed to stop
the market decline is explained
by the fact that there will be a
lag of some months before the
added American dollars, will ac
tually be spent.
In foods, the situation Is no
clearer. The sensitive government
index of 28 Important raw mate
rials dropped 6 per cent arter the
recent allied defeata and food
stuffs fell off 11 per cent. The
explanation offered tot thla (as
well as some of the Industrial
stock declines) Is that a victorious
Hitler would eventually get our
foreign markets.
Here again Is a logical long
range surmise which Is modified
somewhat by Immediate facts.
The allies have placed no large
orders of American foodstuffs.
The waste and destruction of war
should Increase rather than less
en demands for our surpluses
The course of our future ex
ports in this and other lines would
depend upon what Hitler decides ur t'd.)
Leads Germans
... 0 I
y
i
. -
Colonel General voa Beicbeaaa
r- .
Man behind the present German
drive across France toward the
channel porta Is none other than
CoL Cen. Walther von Relchenau.
above. General von Relchenau la
making bis temporary headquar
ters in a 17th century modernized
chateau at Enghlen. property of
the Duke of Arenberg
Reds Arc Harried
By Hostile Crowd
PEKIN, 111., May JT-VTen
Chicago communists took refuge
In the Tazewell county courthouae
Saturday when they were threat
ened by a hostile crowd. One of
their automobiles was burned.
Sheriff Gay Donohue said that
the eight mn and , two women
who had Identified tbemselres as
communists, wenC to tbe court
house square, i distributed litera
ture and solicited slgnstures for a
petition to place the communist
party on the Illinois ballot la the
November election.
Two hundred residents gath
ered about them quickly, the sher
iff said, and aeveral blows were
struck. Tbe visitors retreated to
the courthouse and the doors
were closed. They remained In
side for several hours.
A cordon of tl deputy sheriffs
and state policemen escorted the
party from the courthouse to the
county Jail where. Sheriff Dc no-
hue said, they were placed in pro
tective custody. The sheriff a!d
he asked for the atate police when
the crowd , became more menac
ing, i .
... .
to do after his victory. If he gets
it. The ; q pes tion of whether he
will want American cotton and
tobacco, for two prime examples,
would have a deciding effect.
Officialdom here knows noth
ing about that. There has been
some Inside talk that Hitler has
a secret hew economic wespon he
expects to use, which would do
our trade no - good. Apparently
this is informstion picked up
abroad by . some commercial at
taches and passed on to the blah
spots here. Its nature will not be
disclosed.
Where we stand now, however.
can be measured from the month
ly business chart in which each
figure except payr lls la season
ally adjusted and all era based
on 1923-2K aversges as 100:'
IimT fl Krtry Krfry
roditc- snptor !' r-
Avras,
Arirus
Arum.
January.
bruarr
March ...
-April
Jl.
-
tton
.11
.
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rn-nl
1
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101.1
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rolls
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