MP.DFOKD MATT, TRTTYTNTR MF.DFOttTV OTJKflOX, SUNDAY, .TANrQKY fi. 1l'!. An Unsolved Mystery of Long Ago Can nine is not news. It happened ITS yrars aH-x waa not -ft son of uny kiVui importance Ui Q? social world. In fact hhe was an Knjflish, inaitl'tiervant. Hut her difappearance urnl reappearance anU thw tircumMtanct'H and f pla na t ion h uttcniliitK hvti ntK tui-nishi-d food for iet'Utmitn in irhteenth century Kngluml, from th hiKhest Wreles to the lowest, and from "John O'f Jroat's House to Lund's Knd." Th ca?e went Into the U-Kul boo). as one of KriKlund'K lauw-H telohres. hinktd with it was the name of Henry Kiel.linK, the author f "Tom Junes" utid the futher of the I'.uk lih novtd, who mu as a raaKistr.it in oti' phiiHf uf Un 4-aMf and after w:u Jm wrote a pnmpM. t nliout it. I.h' tary mihh w-ie vast ly inliji:ut-il hy its iuyt-ry. TheorlK of wiii'turaft wi-ri- fre.-ly ('hiivnw''il in i'oniu-i'tion, wit h it and for si-vrral generations all Iiu:lainl wuh divt'W'd in opinion as to the fitiitt or innocent of Kliza inih t'annin. .Wvor was maid servant ko HUddt-nly and to widely mitde u ctdehrity and a theme for preachers and poets, for JudKes and counselors, for romance writ ers and ha) lml makers. Auctions wero formed in the case ami tio three criminal trials rt-.sulted from it, the mystery remahied unsolved at leant, enough of It has perco lated to the present day to inter est that Knglinh lover of myster ies, Arthur Maehen, to attempt a quite recent solution. in an absorb ing review of j the whole ease, under the title of "The C'annlnir Wonder," published hy the Alfred A. Knopf company. Mr. .Ma ch en appears In the eele hrnted ease as a doubter of the maid's story. In his opinion Ktl. abeth Canning was a "liar, per fect, total and complete." a sum ming up w hich would appear to cover all angles of possibilities. And yM, despite his Sherlocking :uialysls of all Hie evidence,, and in spite of his expert presentation of Its inconsistencies, he leaves the motives of her disappearance anil the strange circumstances of her reappearance as much of a mys tery as it was when one-half of Kngland pronounced the maid a fraud and the other half .strenu ously cout ended for her inno cence and virtue. Of one thing only is .Mr. .Maclien thoroly con vincedthat the strange woman, for one reason or another, foisted upon the people of England a : story that was made out of whole cloth a story that brought about one sentence of death, another of transportation, anil from which, to tho day of her death in America, the maid herself never deviated. The Maid Vanishes It was New Year's day, 1 733, when Kllzahelh Canning disap peared. She was IS years of age, a younp girl of presumably good morals and a beauty of the peas ant type, ruddy and hardy, with npparently no neurotic tendencies, so far as was known. She was the daughtor of Joseph and Kllzabeth Canning, residing at Alderman bury in London, England, and she had been engaged as a maid servant in tho house of one Ed ward Lyon, who testified in the case that he had known the girl for Hfxteen years and believed her to be an innocent and honest girl. She left her master's house on the fateful New Year's day to visit her aunt who resided at Salpetre Hank in tho East Hmithficld suburb. Home time between 9 and 1 0 o'clock of that same evening Kllzabeth left her aunt's house to return home, with her uncle ac companying her part of the way. Jtut she iliit not return to her mas ter's home. Hhe disappeared as completely a If she had walked into an air vacuum or been swal lowed up hy a hole in the ground. No trace of her was to be found after she left her uncle's side on tho London highway. Within a week all London was agog with the mystery. Rewards were of fered for Information as to her whereabouts and advertisements sent broadcast thru the newspa pera and posted on tho highways. Uut h had vanished as com pletely and haffiingly as the Charlie Ross of later years. Kour weeks later, when nil hope for her had been given up, she suddenly reappeared at her home Itkfi one resurrected from the dead n tragic figure. Clad only in a "bed-gown," emaciated apparently from starvation, bruised and sore in body from evident 111 treatment and to all appearances on the verge of complete hysteria, she appeared at her mother 'lr door, scarcely lo be recognized. And then, after euro- had been given her, followed- tho strange story whleh inflamed all England, and which Mr. Machen lias designated us "tho beginning of one of the minor enigmas, of the world." Soon after she had 'parted from her uncle to make her way back to the town house of Edward Lypn she said that she had been waylaid hy two men, who had beaten her into insensibility. Then they bound and sagged her and dragged her Into a house of ill repute in En field Wash., kept by "Mother" Wells, nn old crone with a reputa tion for witchery nnd other evils, whoso husband had ' been hanged K a notorious malefactor. Here nho claimed to have been as;tulted again and robbed, this time of her clothes, hy a gypf-y-wi widow named Mar Squires, an inmate of Mother" Wells' institution. She then claimed that "Mother" Well and the cypny so-ht to make her "go their way, and then she re-fuj-ed, she was forced into an up stairs room, where she was kept a prisoner for four weeks, living on bt cad and water, nnd being sub jected to inhuman treatment. Dur ing all that time she was not per mitted to ne anyone from the outside world. Finally, she claim ed, she succeeded in making her escape hy pulling a txd off her window in the upstair prison room, clambering down to an ad joining "pent house,' and thence to the freedom of the highway. I'Tom .loncV " Author Mt on ludgo Thl atory added to the Intense excitement caused hy her disap pearance. Newspapers nnd pam phleteers exploited it. The ballad I makers put it into verse. Prints j of the house w Enfield W'aMi and Us "witch" iiSliaw were circulat i ed by street venJ?is. and Mayfair ' was agog with sympathy for the j betrayed maid. Llizahrth guided : the officer of the law to ".Moth er"' Wells' brothel and tlm "witch" i and the "gypsy" were placed ' under arrest, the latter churt-d with robbery, a capital crime in i t hore days, a m! t he former with being an accessory thereto. The preliminary cases were tried be fore Jus'.uc fielding, who took a keen inlereM in the development, letter the higher courts inlet -j vened. Mary Squire the gyp-- . . was sentenced to be hanged ami . "Mother" Weils "to be brandt d wild hot Irons." The bitter scii ; l--li e was actually earrie.f imo j execution, with it mad mob howl j ing around . the victim. Then I doubts began to creep into (he i public mind as to the truth of the 'story told by Elizabeth Canning 1 and JtiveMigaiions began, which ; resulted in a charge against, her ! for perjury. Justice Kiel d 1 n g seemed to have been greatly im j pressed with the maiden's story. i but In his pa ui ph let on the case ne hints that there was a reason able doubt in hfs mind, lie wrote: "A 'child In years, but more so in understanding, Elizabeth Cun ning had all the marks of simplic ity that 1 ever discovered in a hu- J man countenance. Iff fore noble j men and magistrates and judges she went through her evidence i without heslt a t i o n, confusion, trembling, change of countenance lor other apparent emotion it was cither tlic highest impudence or j the most perfect innocence." i A IVycln loftlcal Mystery ; All sorts of I henries about the truth or the falsity of the maid's 'story were advanced by the tiews ! papers, by the pamphleteers. ,y t scientists and by psychology! s. i Witchcraft was insinuated, the 1 theory of religious hysteria ad vanced, and there were many who j believed that the young girl, inno- cent in mind, hail been for the jtime "possessed by ihn devil." Hut at Elizabeth's trial for perjury, j witnesses were found who proved ! beyond doubt that it was impossi ble for her to have been at the ! seene of the crime at the time de.siMiiated that she was even un- familiar with the physical aspects or the premises. It was shown that the "t'ypsy". was a hundred miles away from "Mother" Wells' house at Enfield Wash at the time she was supposed to have been there. Numerous other discrepan cies were discovered in Elizabeth Cannings story. A new trial was granted the "Gypsy' and she was cleared of the charge and her neck saved. Then came on the trial of Elizabeth Canning herself for "wilful perjury." A bench of ! seventeen magistrates, including I the lord mayor of London, heard the case and the most eminent I counsel were engaged on both Hides. The trial lasted seven davs amid the most Intense excitement. She was found guilty and sen tenced to transportation to Amer ica, in which country tho last phase of the tragedy which ter minated in romance wns enacted. It must be said that the verdict of j the judges did not change Eliza beth's story in any particular. She ! issued a .statement before being j deported in which she repeated j her story and swore that it was I true in every particular. I Tho remainder of this curious jtalo is to be found In the archives ; of the ancient town of Wethers field, Connecticut. Elizabeth was ;sent away to Philadelphia In the Ishij, Myrlilla, in August, 1754. On I the vessel she became acquainted ! with the Jiev. Eleazer Williams, a prominent figure In Wethersfield during the revolutionary period. Between the wife of Hev. Williams and EI iza be t h Canning a st rnh g attachment developed. The former became a firm believer in her innocence. Under the protection of Mrs. Williams. It seems that much was made of Elizabeth in her new American home, and in the end she married an "opulent Quaker," one John Treat, n grand- I " n ei iim jvonei i i real. m j i i a j.ojiDeiii canning men, and, adds the present reviewer of her case, "her secret died with her." Tho Secret Vnrevcalcd T3espite the intensive analysis and the fascinating syehologlcal and evidential deduction made by Mr. Machen In a book of '77 pages pages that reads like a piece of weird medieval fiction, questions remain unanswered. What was (he real cause, of Elizabeth Canning's disappearance? Where did she go? Who were the persons who mal treated her? Kor she certainly disappeared, wns found counted for four weeks among the lost, and returned with every evidence about her of starvation and tor ment. Ot only one thing Mr. Machen pectus convinced that the maid lied. Itut why? That Is the secret that died with Mrs. iJohn Treat of Wethersfield, Conn., and the one which will now prob ably never he revealed. IS XKW YORK, Dec. 2S. I) The ' ability of n codillliiK muth to lam-i iiKc upples Kprnyril wiih nn ar- ' srnlcHl iinison variiH In different 1 parts of the country. ; The Colorado lirnnrh nf thin family of peat n-nx dcKnibed l.y Ir. Walter S. llnunh of ttm VI,-. iKinia nurl.u It ui 1 1 experiment la- iion. looay. an li. jnK ruio-rliir In thin rei.pe.-t to Iik Vlritlnla rel,itlvl while thoie that thrive In the xtale , of Washincon ocnupk-.Ua position , in between. w i IteporJinsr to the Ameriran A-' soelatlonvof Keonomle Kntomolo. Rlstn and niemhei'K of the Amerl-, cm Amoelatlon for the Advance-' ment of Hcienco on Btudleii made In the laM two yenrn at WlnrhfKter ! he ftald tliene relative dri;reea of; damaging power appear to be hereaiury. . New Radiovisor Lights Street Lamps ; 1' til"1 iLl," r 'IL At Dusk; StopjoTrains, Burglars011110 Harnessed light, in the form of a radiovisor. is performing many tasks in England. The device, mounted along a railroad track as pic tured above, aids in train control. Placed on a street lamp (lower left) it automatically turns the light on and off at dusk or dawn. KARNES. Eng. bW Rrilisli sci-lger signal, it will come within the t once has put light to commercial ! use with a radiovisor. I In a .test covering ten months, ja Mreet lamp was ignited and. shut ; off automatica'.'.y at dusk and sun j rise. The device consists of a ! small light sensitive up para I us. I which can be used in conjunction with electrical current of any volt- age to operate alarm hell, switch on lights, control trains and work slgnals. For automatic train stopping a lamp is arranged on the rails so that when a signal is set at danger the lamp projects a beam of light along the track toward th i- coming train. In the event of a second train over-running a dan - TEMPORARY LOCATION ' ' ' While wo arc awaiting completion of our new Master Service Station, we have -,.,mi,.,l for vour convenience a large huiltling at .lackson and K'iversi.le. where you will he supplied with the famous line of Firestone Tires. Every size, and every type of this extra-quality equipment is now in stock awaiting your needs, at, the lowest prices in the history of the tire industry. Furthermore, throughout the lire of the tire, we nor, oiny appiy your me nini.i, .iu come vou back for regular tire inflation and inspection. We help you get out mile of the extra, in-built miles for which Firestone Tires are famous. J$r e$ttt& Factory Method ... Repairing . . . Firpsdnno engineers developed a hiahlv successful tire repair method nnd tho sary equipment by experienced The injured section of the tire is removed tire was built originally. The vulcanizing ju i,:..i, .,,.!. i ;.,t tl, ;... ll'ilil Mini ll ir v iuni jiiiu iiiv: tuv. . We make tho repaired section of the tire We guarantee Medford of train-stop lump ami halt. With electric trains, circuit breakers can be worked In con junction with the train-stop lamp. The uncanny burglar detecting powers of the harnessed light al ready have been tested In a big London store. In the burglar ; alarm, infra-red or invisible rays come from a concealed lamp. 1'as- ! sage oi a shadow in Mont t me lamp cuts off the beam and stalls an alarm bell. The radiovisor will automatical ly light a train passing through ,ln I nnd lamps at the approacb ; of a fog. It is reliable as a lire ! alarm. Not only is the alarm our complete service goes .... .. I.. ; as well. We use both in repair men. range every repair we make charges reasonable. TIRE & SERVICE CO., Inc. Itadio audiences in all sections of the country are getting new thrills of iletiuht due to the intro d net ion of art ntii -Hy new type 1 of radi bnvideasting by The May tag company, washing manufac turers of Newton. lorta. The in- lit.diielory proiiims broadcast re cently troin K I K A, l'ilthi;r gh. - iiiid KYW, t'hicat:o. Were so suc cessfully presented and so i utbiisi 1 aMh ;,lly r.r. ived t hat he new system bids fair to revolutionize p.-e-ent hroud casting lil-thuds. Thi' Hew type of 1. olio )road ' lifting is Utinun as the So-A-; Tonic pn-i e.-s. and p rinits the ;is- semhl.ng of tab nt in l he bit gcsi cities, where a transcription is made l.y electrical reproduction and transported to the various sla lions elected to broadcast the May lag programs. The limit radio program for the j Maytag company calls for broad ; casting under the Sn-A-Tonic pro ; cess from over Ml of the principal stat Ions t hnug limit t he I'nlieil Stntcs and in 'anada. I The iuitinl broadcast was a dra-niati-.ation of "The Yellow Streak" a thrilling story written i xclusive , ly for the Maytag company pro grain by Courtney :;tc Cooper, nationally known writer of circus ; stories. A circus band furnishes ! the musical background. The see , end prog rti in dramatized "The i Kiss," a story with collegiate at I mosphere and a distinctive inusi c;il selling, written by Pat ltnrnes, popular radio announcer. Mr. , I'.arucs also directed the prod lie- j tion of his story and acted a prom- j 'llietit p;irt in the play. with every tire we sell . . i. i: our repair department, which is ope nnd replaced, step by heat is applied from the both look nnd act like the OLDE Jackson and Riverside, Phone Shtdebaker Maintaining average speeds of 85.2 and 85.08 miles per hour two Studebaker President Eight Roadsters have broken all American records for fully equipped stock cars for periods from one to 24 hours and for distances from five to 2,000 miles. Studebaker now holds every official American stock car record, five world and eight international records. and continues I?.,- vi... step, just inside, dn rest of the Establishes 12 Neiv Records 520 (left) Drivers of the two President Eights. Left to right. Ab Jenkins, 2elce Meyer, Bob McDonogh, Ralph Hepburn, and Kussell Snow berg r. ( Br luu) Arthur H. Means, assistant secretary of the Contest board of the American Automobile Association, starts the Presidents on their rrcot 4 brewing run. Oregon