WEDFORD SlXTH TRTBUyE, SfEDFOK'D, OREGON. MONDAV. fvRPTFAfnF.Tt If!. if)2. "
Bedford ISIail Tribune!
Dally, 4J. niif
iMf-ti h. fu tt. fi
KubEKT W. I! HL, kUhar
L ll'timit sVJIH. WiM
Al lbdpfkH Siw
Ord. WkWf Art rf Mvtft t. UTD.
f UtH IB Aaitora:
11:?. Uh feiodT. rrtf
ltiij. auk ftBjJlf. wctt....
IU?. litowl rr...
I'm. iUwt &i-rUj, BM'Jt. .
HmIII U&il friUita, c t.
..It 10
.. -tt
.. HO
.. .
. s ua
Sjrl4f. M ?f "
hy I'urWr, Ib Athv Ib VIkL'iJ, Aitnd.
I'm'?, !th gunltf, xrt
.is
11, Utwut SanJ, BMfttk.,
I'Uj, vntMut Suodv. an fv
WCr, tt und4j, fur,.
Ai trftti. cj la aJtLtc.
TOO
l.l0
wr.viiu. or ths associated run
KKThU Full LMMd Wtt. fefito
1 AiMutf4 Pmi to cxriiuiitlf Mitltbd tt
tfeM m w ibiik W lj am iitfttb
trlt4 u U of MbtrvtM crwfliad Is thto Dtp,
tori u UN toel Dm plitfi1 tomta
AU rWUi for publVaUde tt Mll litcil
mil in tlM NMffiL
wtkui rw o rtu Mxifaci.
mi fell tvcnci rum; it fr all
:.r aw a in. ti:i.
U. C UUOtNSEN A CUUTANT
OTm Id M Imi. C&Km. IWrslt,
rtAotlm. U AktIm, 8x:iu. NrtlMd
Ye Smudge Pot
Br Arthur Perry
During the lull that has settled
over the national custom of Irate
kltU shooting' their Dud, the Run
of Senator Heflln of Alabama, will
get drunk again.
The outstanding booster of thoa
parts, is the one who came all the
way from New Jersey to got a
drink of water.
READ LISTKHINE AIS
(Kufrno HeUtor)
Dear Annje Laurie:
I went ridlne one night last
week with a boy whom I like
very much, lie k lsed me
several times and said he liked
me lots and lots.
I have aeen him nearly
every day at the store where
he works, but he hardly no
tices me. What shall 1 do? I
love him so much!
LOXpsOMK BILL.
Football Is crowding out the In
terest In harness racing, and the
l'ortland ball team.
Many of the sun-tan frocks are
appealing, and so are the wearers
thereof.
A number of the valley intellec
tuals think the Williams cut-off U
a barber hop.
.Mr. Chart en Hall of Coos county
has decided to make the near
m pre me sacrifice and run for gov
ernor. He is the first of the horde
who will seek the same office.
There seems to be no reason for
.Mr. Mall running, except that he
has nothing else much to do be
tween now and next spring, lie is
the eminent gent who split the
Republican party of Oregon up the
hack, nhen it had its hind legs
tangled up in a Klan nightgown.
In those krazed days. Mr. Hall
xisited tuts fair city and went to
dinner with the Kleagles. His in
tention to run. will probabiy
inspire the mayor of Portland to
run for the 1. S. Senate. The
metropolitan burgomaster is also
willing to make a sacrifice.
Applr are beinj crti-hed into
Vinecar. which later will be ship
pd from Iittbur?r to -atify the
Kcal vintuar demand. If the apple
cuWr if frvjen, alt the alchot will
fa to the cr.ter und can b thrown
an ay or ud in the nutue it
It i volatile, the woman id of
the Copvo effiv-wncy eipert. The
thtw of kpp; cler herehut- to
date. i 1 4 cnd fet mor than
Ksue rivit-r. Sm apple butter
n-.i be va
After ail the ciir.ic and leoture '
on :tar.krea. a kM was raucht on
Jackn rrt l.t ek attnr a
p.-o of bread and butter atter
school. !
It ha b-en mertiond verl
timtw herein, tha: th fall trea-f!i
at lo&t nvi, to Cxver Up the
jphat:y fenvale kne. Thw ii rot
th 3 of it. The fahioi:M fll
ater coer up the ihton-
The rarful hunter who kdlM a
Afvr because- h rt;d cot know the
der Mon had been cUd. ! due
to show up Ute today, in cutoty.
r Wt Y HIT1N"
La Harp has ba a buty Town
bear of late the Oh;a.jua and
t i a r veyn a le o n and a c m i r. c
down in full fore and a rvake
be hfe Ram all at one time
created 5rtMtion and ajt for
dentul crM.ti to hc- polish tt uto
be iockn but they don t war em
any more.
Mr Uarvey m. amounted to
four hundred dollars a KtturJy
. p to advrtts or moe
don't 'know w h:ch rnvath 1
they ure will be mi.-1.
Laura Pen !nd wax over in thi
ward a Tuesday early.
Our Neighbor nen dorr
(let up at four
And lurhts hU b-t ciicr
Then the truck orr e a lone
They are Kolr.f from lion:
And to !fp we ar bo mor
jvt up to .
What th day it ill b
and find
It is Just what it was hfor.
A pr tT ir a y the
llttel liirl mM I wonder t( any on i
taken Ih Ket:er o w u!d Kr
row it for 1 wan to c how Pop
and Amy et a Knjt and the rt.
Mai Karker om a Unc delner
in Milk a Tur-t.-' he jiKi h ,
wan late h had to (to down in th
litwr after his l'onejr.
i la Harp Items in lola. Kan,.
Keitr-
TortUnd Hid. nrciv f'.r eo-.
str'jitioo 1 two Umi imi tji
A GREAT INJUSTICE TO DR. WILLING
Pr. Wlltiiifc' wonderful playing, hU.li carried him into the
final round, in which he wus defeated, not mi much hy jxir play
ing or being outplayed, hut by a hostile galler. ub.ich failed to
show the courtedie which are due contenders in a Boll competi
tion, gave Portland world Hide publicity.
j The eighth hole of hi- linal match with Harrison It. ("Jimmy"!
I Johnston was the turning Kint. The Rr.Uery had been hostile to
that point but when IVic misled an explosion shot in a trap there.
It openly cheered, enough to rain the morale of even the most
stout-hearted player.
' Prom then on WlPim: was playing uphill. tl--:hiiui: tiie bluest
' battle of his entire coif ll!'e. The memory of that eighth hole never
left Ulm. It is ridiculous to believe that he could so easily cast
astde such a demonstration :md ku on about his methodical play.
, Portland Journal.
EVKN' if this were true, it is sometliiii' the friemls of Pr.
Willing should never have cliiinicil. tor it is one of '.he first
rules of jjooil sportsmanship to take even an unjust defeat with
' a smile.
I Hut it isn't true, ami does a e.reat injustice to Harrison John
ston, one of the finest golfers and truest sportsmen ever to win
jthe national title. Unless we are much mistaken, Dr. Willinir
I would he the first to repudiate such a statement, and the last to
'countenance any surest ion that the smiling, hiird-fij-'htin lad
I from St. l'aul owes his victory solely to the unsportsmanlike
tactics of the gallery.
Till, action of the ".-tilery at the eiahtli hole WAS inexcus
able in fact disgraceful hut the best evidence that it
was uot the cause of Pr. Willina's defeat is the fact that ho
played 10 more holes in that round and ended the first 1. one
up upon his opponent. Hut for the miraculous recovery Johnston
made, from the ocean on the final hole, "NVil 1 in r would have
been two up.
The championship was won and lost on the afternoon I
round, and during; that time, thanks to the inevitable reaction,
the gallery not only played fair, but during the final stages.
seemed to sense the shame of
appeared determined to make amends, by cheering the Portland
player heartily whenever opportunity offered.
NO. it wasn't the pallery that defeated AVillinp. It was the
par polf played hy his opponent on that second IS. l'rom
the li'th hole on Johnston clicked off pars and birdies with machine-like
regularity, while Willing: simply couldn't get point;.
and was in trouble a larpe share
In fact, to claim that the uallerv defeatm! Willing that after-
noun is not only contrary to the fact, but is a proat injustice to
the Portland nlaver as well as to his opponent. For the plain
i t- ,,.. ,
truth is Dr. lllintr is not the sort of ' tender-foot polfer who
wilts before a hostile or unsvmpatlietie siillcrv. He is a super-
- 1
scrapper. The harder the point;,
. .,.!.,.! o r;a,1t.. ...ill.,,... ......
...w..,. ...,.. ... ,.,,
nave beaten either t ynl lollev
ther of these matches in fact at
Umtil as before stated that dispiacful eiphth hole started n tidal
wave of sympathy for himl was he popular wiih the crowd
This is not to say there was any actual hostility. Hut the plain
fact is that Dr. Willinp is not now and never lias been a popu-
., . . ... 1 '
lar poller. tills IS not IUS fault,
careful, methodical, always formidable type, utterly without
that color and dash, that subtle di
lie demands in iis popular heroes.
Illl coiur nihl (insn. UUU sillHlc
A 'H thw w vh-r. th Imnv if
A
rcuer. or this l obhie beach uemonstration was the very
tllinir that, from tiie stumlnoint of tOIUtlaritv 1)r Willing noe.l-
ed. It supplieti that appeal which he never eouUl have supplied j
himself. j
He had boon unjustly treat od. Kveryone realieJ it. lie
maile no complaint, he kept on playing his tvime. aiul as a result ;
not only tlid he tet the gallery support he deserved on that
second round; but during the presentation eeremonies follow-'
inn he shared honors equally with Johnston and Bobby dones.
When in his short speech he showed no rancor, and smilinclv !
congratulated his opponent, the crowd went wild. As he started
back to Portland, through San Francisco and Kureka. his return j
beeame a real triumphal journey. 1
IF Portland had only b ft it at that, and eontrolled its zeal ;
to honor itx favorite sou! But now all the benefits derived;
will, we fear, bo lost. For this sort of whining alibi is imply
one of those things that, iu the world of amateur sport, is not j
done. The sport inir editors won't suffer, but Ir. Willing will.
For in spite of all that can be said, the impression is bound to
paiu rromul that t his icw represents Or. Willlng's view, and
was inspired by him. undoubtedly the ery reverse of the
truth.
T
W bad: Too bad! Not important i:i the world of affairs
... . . , , , .
j-vruAj vu unporiaui in
tan: tor Oregon. Kor Ir. Willinc i; a criat polfor. one of the
country's beM. ,siivi a J'laycr in whom tb.o pooplc of the Mate
cam well take prule.
He has shown he can take covi oare of his enemies, but the
IVnUnd sport writer have shown that what he mi's; r.ee-ls is
to be sjive-t fnm his frieiwU.
MUTT AND JEFF
w-x ,inu ttV a rJu I I cSAKDINt itN 'nt v.irv.'s j ftlN I I VI .i ti VT)f5a UlUN J3U THPoaJ
A VJHAU! Do josr. HvLe you r-i wo sootj. tat harrow
,
i
that morning demonstration and
of the time.
the harder he fiphts. Had he
1.:.. 1 ......... l.. ...n..l i -
K.,-, ,- it, m-w-!
or ( handler r.pun. For m nei-
no time durinp the tournament
lint Ills misfortune. He is the'
He is
tiraiiuilio njipoal, wlllcil the JMlh-
th it ..Ai.toc Ii.t. '.
. " . ' I
t:ie worut oi spin. .na impi-r-
Meet the Prince of Whalers
6T
i " ' "' -y '
Personal Health Service
By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D.
aifnad ! fttrttlPtr U ptftonil brtKh tnd hu. t ta dim r trttimtrt
21 rnttti try It. bVlJ If lUd,4. Mir tMtt- 1 fFtic H 1jl Ullm bt
UUt rj rttt la Irk. 0lr to tfia Imrjt Dmtr Wrtt rtUti, ar,(j ft fin t ir-..
t0 bt. So m-if fo l U Gur box etofofBUnt U lutrurtiou. kMrtm Dt Kj'.'aBj
Braiir. to cart af th emattf.
. -
ALL MI--T AM XO VKCiCT.UIMi M VKK AX All"Qt'A TK 1IKT
'i!lj:!inur
I'f.m-on. who do-
r.nil his companion
explorer Ander-s'-ii,
h.ivi recent
ly C'jineted u
yar tf lift in th-I'nitf-d
Siaioy on
an exclusive meat '
diet, undT ohser
valion of compe
i ciu nutrition'
s p e c i a I 1 b i a. '
Knowing from h'i
exieri-nce in the '
Arctic how this ali meat diet;
work". Su-fanon predicted thcit he i
would . Ill in a fiw dys when ;
the dirt staited, and sine enoiiyli,
l-y th" f-v-nint; of the second day
he was naiisr-at'-d. h-tari;ip an 1
weak in ttn- kin-ex. ju-r a he haa
In-i ll v
itmpr I
d to subsist on
an all rmM die: in the Arctic. The
third day the ymptonis were in-tensifie-J
and a diarrhea developed.
This was all due tr the pure lean
meat di
fat was
Plus ft
The fourth day some
add d, and on len meat
in tasttfut quantities S.e
fnnon recovered his usual KOod
health in two days. In the firt lrt
days of the meat plu fat diet he
lust about four pound in weight,
and fcfu-r the diarrhea stopped
there was stubborn constipation
and a craving for calves' brains
-ind hac.in. Too hecrtv induleence
( in these resulted in a couple dayaiak place is usually a situation
or nausea anu marrnea. incn an
adjustment of the proportions of
lean and fat meat brought about
a normal state of the digestion and
intestinal activity. ;
Anderson lost five pounds in the
first wtvk on kan-fat meat, an1
then I. is; an to pain steadily and
vwthiti tv- U"n:hs h.td reached his
onirinal normal weight. He euf-,
fered no upsets .like Stefansson's in
jthe early stage of the experiment.:
' f"r f,""jc'tnt ,at i'V;
.loan niriit all the time, while Me-1
fans.on ..uiiste.i for several days!
" a" lean anJ n,f,t- in ""-d.-ri
that the ductors micht observe ths;
,,.ff,.c;. on metabolism. (
.xi'fnon traveled about the;
' .initrit rv iliirin (Via Winlpr I n t
' h-m iti the rourse of the second
: month of his ex iterimont. He seem-1
,,.,,,,., ..., , ,
,i,....i, k.. . ,.i .v .-
th. ,ii,-li he tvi.l ius; sove.l nwav
! Plateful of taters. bread and ice:
' t . i-... i I,.--. , ..-...i.i.
i i,k(, ... 'nl,. ,nPs , raw frozen fuii.
and he a.ked me how 1 would Uke!lut ai sucn a pretty. Muam-.
. -i. : .t little rlo. k that it was a favorite
, np believed if he could geti,v,n if il couldn't kerp lime. !
I raw f ezen (i-h here like that m it w.w late one evenins when
lil.e Ar.t.,- he would eniov It. rvsirj-. who was ... had Kone to bed
i ,1,,. entire vear on the
entire
vit die:
Ivisive tiv
iStc-f inssoti
i silie.red cxcds;ve weight: and An-
j derscn lost
pounds. Both nie:i
r l.iy-w calories a day:
' M"0 C;
1-0 calories in the form of f.-:
nn,l r.-io rjilorU'- in the form of.
nror.in- ihiv received noi over 40
;r 5 t.aIorifls d;Uly in :he carhohy-
Idrate in meat. Stefanon? blood
tresnre remained normal fr him
ait ih vr-:ir- AmlKivn' w.i a
u-ifle hitch at the becinninc And
aliout that of a healthy youth a:
ihP en.l of the year. Hoth men
l.l t;.ir- l:ve: n.M:hi-r fil: ar.v
indication of decreased physical r , you. no one else: No one ele
mental v:or. Anders n believed h - 1 may share n.y s--crct.'
. . .. - v. . . . . i V. .11 V . at-rt'T " J.ihn
SlOOa ial MIIllllU'l lll-.U .-t-.n-;
than he doVl. ordinarily on a mixei.
die:. l:o:h men appeared ruddy at ,
the end of the experiment. An-
.t.-r.. r..r:.. ih.t hu hair hdi
stopped fallinc out shortly after
:h.. meat diet wi started. I'nt;s;s
watchinc both subjects noted r.o; "Wan and years ato I decided
deterioration of the teeth, but there - Pd stop tellins- the ordinary time.
an m,-re.-.s'd tartar deposit on' the tittle Mack clock explained.
Stefansson's teeth, loth men notic-! "I was- allowed to use tome niaK1"
e,l no change in the bowel functl.ta. . which lets me Vtirn myw!f Kick
In bth taes there was observed ward or forward to any time lit
little or putrefaction and n.i ga.;a'd exo-i t the correct lime
formation in the intestine. ' for the rest of the world I err.
Stefanfon craved no Mlt: Or.- to be T o'clock. Comet We Trust
.t-.!. f.,v- i,.rv l-:: wirh h-.'be off. How fur shall 1 turi
food.
Water, coffee and black tea ;
wTe the onlj" beveraces taken: no;
ntilk; of coarse, these b vt rates .
were not we;cnej. Kach m n ,
took an average of three pints of
fl'j.d da:iy s.efar.on ome:im"
took -:; when on journeys wh-.ro
; Kod mti was no: available. Ho:h
n n-d ea::rr r:iymj Sr.t
of mat. from which :cy derived
anJ s"-'-e
c .-nideriib caVium pr-bab'.:.'.
MvM: of the.r meat w a co'.d s..t.
awe stuff: for two months in !h
br::r.n:J thf y had freh'y k.l!ii
meat. Tiie meat was usually boi!-' 1
or :e-.vt,d. but not lor.i; for .h-
men like the inside lei rare. T:y
I;ke raw bor.e m.vrrow as a dc-. . t
when thfy ccuLt fv ;t.
tr S""f .ti-sn av f--ir n:"s's
BUSY, Kit). t'i-Uj KoTT,
day: Mr. Anderson ate three. They
en;"e,i iheir meals and always lei:
:h- t.inl completely ..i:ified.
t IM. t-.tr' 3 not: Ir. i'.iady'.t inter
e.-;;r.K urficle wilt be continued to-
m-'i-r-iw.)
n.sTiONs vi axsvi:i:s
lAMtU Out
My brother had an Inside ftoiwr
cut out. The doctor charged him
$3'.Ui iind telln hint "nuw you jut
want to take care of yourself," hut
nary a word of advice or instruc
tion as to what that actually nrl-ans
M. J. tt.
Answer It does sound sil!y.
Prrhaps the doctor means that your
brut her fehuuld not be dependent.
Or a-..-a:n. he ma be trying to im
ply that the goiter dev.d'tprrf bo-c:;ij'-e
the patb nt tlid not tak cure
"f himelf. I suptose the ritK-mr
;lso cautioned the patient to 'avoid,
undue- exposure." ;
It u (Hurt
Please advie me what rupture !
in a new-born infant is caused
from. VounK Mother.
Answer Rupture.
otherwise
, known as hernia and breach, i
majority of cases a connital
defect of development. that is.
i & weak pltce in the abdominal
; ad at the time of birth. thoun
this weak place may not Kive or
; hulye until long afterward, tome
. times many years after birth. The
,"'"riw -tnus nv;-
mally exists before birth.
VUopyriKiu joiin r . utile
Co.)
-SO. '
.'a. S ir?. . : i i-v i v.
3 5 iS rss t h
) -J. .
Hy Mury Craliam Ronncr.
Turnlns the t1tk.
The little black clock, with it
white face and dull black hands
j had stood on top of the d-sk in
the back hall for many years, and
'or many .irs it had not
The hands pointed to the fact
that at a certain T o'clock veais
- i years before, it had .-topped.
''"" John, her brother, three year
AMer.
?!en!y
was about to so that he sui-
5r!nn:ni;. Its hands were stretch -
eu o..i. .u KMii.t r uiu nit i'""
to " o'clock.
; neuo, neno, neiio came a
whiter
from the little
biacK
' clock. John went and stood be
fore it.
"1M you speak, by any chanc.
. he as-ked.
i "I certainly did. I've be'
wait -,
, inp for aues and ages for you t,
' notice meat bedtime, ivi you wan
to come with me? You may
ah
' IVstfy if you l.ke. But.
mind
' - ....- -
asked. 'Then that's h;it make.-
look so nice why we all like
you."
John went and Quietly wok -
, Pessy. The res; of the
was downstairs.
t-ack tonihi?" !
"'v'h, when the Indians used to
own the country.' said John.
"All rUht. The Indians it shall
be. thn "
So the clock turned 'round and
'round and "round until the whole
frcen charged and it was tvcra;
years earlier- and they were at an
Indian tepi-.
Tomorrow "TIrw ImtiJn TVXH"
Brisbane'sToday
(Continued from rage On)
run fr tho l"nitsl States ''!
THAT
I - - - - c TAG. 'ijits p I l v l v . i ...... .
MAIL TRIBUNE
DAILY CROSS-WORD PUZZLE
'
I.
i
:
'
At lit 11
M.I.I, nirjklral
ii;tr tintfBl
t a .Miti ,
i am lh a
iifrc(ta:n( at
Solution 13
t-ri
It. ) irflatlt ft
H.-itkrl
li. Iiinaa mrn
it. i "hi rtcii bit .
K 1i rani
K. i ..mtort
t.
1 l!rrks nl ntl
, 1. 4aRi Hh
tfin f A. t(rr..ni ma
ii.urt: fllBf.
H'itf.
, t'. lrtHrr
; XI. Mttrliinr for
t ri-li inir
i rlt.l li
S3, lie n ubc'S
; ffnunl
51. TIH n I Have
i S'. Ilrait rtnerlnt .
) :i. M..lrl
' Ilrrll to mua
w e"s tHa'b
li. Iiftlre for food
i:. Animjl nltli-
not frrt
: :."I'.M.....
trathnl Ly tba
ii dm in-r oni
it. Kei f mad
iZ. nn.itr from
Iritlh
it. i:airBlf
9. Ul.r.
n, Ku.lrnrr
3. 'I hut who de-pl
' I; 5 If j.. 15 fo p p S .19 IiO hj
- "T"r
y
IT- 71 I xi .
y I . -" ; .
TT1 i. 1 2 7 VLS '(.? 'i0
-rS -t . . .. -f 4? -t:J
53 . 5 55"
White Woman Kidnaped by Natives
of New Zealand at Age of Six, Is
Restored to Kin After 30 Years
Al'CKLAND. New Zealand. Sept.
i .4 Kidnaped by tiie Maoris
in childhood and eventually mar
ried rn a nattvo chief, a whire
woman has been restored to her
relatives after ne;r!v .tn yars.
' rett went to teed the cows on her
- I'arenis iarm at i uranaKi. in the
'north island of New Zealand. She
uisapiearea ana it was believed at
the time that she was carried o:f
. by Maoris in revense for the riis-
. turhance of their burial ground in
mane wa :or a railway. From
then until recently no trace of her
was found.
A niece nf the irfeing woman
not to pb'ase the British, or
hr::iii-Ameriean bankers, will
ee thiit this nation is protectcil.
as r raiiee means to be pro
T-cted.
; -HO J-ronoil COVerr.ment 1
famiijnm for Franco, exclusively.
Senator Walsh, of Montana, im
portant among Dem-jcratir nresi-
demial possibilities, rather remote
possibilities j-jgt now. gives an imi-
ution of one crymg in the wilder-
ness. He is alaimed bv "the men
ace cf the Morgan jxjwer deal in
New York." expected to control SO
per cent of the states power.
Crying will do no good. We live
in the age of mergers, and govern
ment hy corjwratiens. benevolent
corporations, on the hole. if you
let them have what thev want.
Mercers will grow bieeer ard
bigger. All power will be under
various names and one control
eventually. And that inciudes
money power. Creat banks are
mervir;; as raj
I an;- ?.
idly is HiVr c m-
It i the tr.ov-mvnt of tho
indastriAl feudal;m replacing miii
larr fe"'1a::.'nt. as predicted by
Charles Fo'.iner 1-3 yfars ato. Doi-
lats that keep themselves and earn
ipfiau- oi .ier. mat had
It TZa TMoVnT L - M0U WHY
Saturday's Putzl
f. tUTlnC wtnr
H 1 nolaiil I'Cfl
f . ii t.'Ula nrar ("
A LEWDAJL f. small wild ox
T'O RfflCEL0 P S; . c,i.
S O R R 6 WflPRi lJGES - "00 '
BR E WBJC L 0 VEHHEJ SI. Short lor .
AiWRosFisjA: .
S 0"fP L I N Y0iS C'A RJ u. Hlir'tmii Tnr.
S T C R 5 DjSB A in aln.lnn.
ISSri; i n omoXM e...b? ll:
,r. R I EKJl O V EE RGJ .. !'iaij
e dHR'Yiei li WZX.
4U. HobnU
Sj. Cryitalllrfd
rain
DOITS
41. Otir "iiO
mimics
4. Must
it. Strikes rlo
lenllt
I.
t. KcmlDlne nam it. ftlKli. pointed
3. Carrsslnr
4. limit Lake 43. .Muanlaln:
4. LMff LuptiiSS- roinlf. furin
nri 49. f umlpnucd
C it Dm or moittara
saw a European woman with the
Maoris at Taneoma. She was struck
hy the extraordinary family like
ness, and questioned the woman,
who said she had been with the
Maoris all her life. She could not
remember how sh? came to be with
them.
The niece asked the wo.T.an to
show her neck, as she knew that
when a child the aunt had fallen
scar. The uoman bore "this mark.
the remembered the Maoris tak
ing her in an open canoe to the
sum fields near Whanttarei. She
had married a Maori chief and had
C'o children.
The chief died re-
c-ntly.
to be fed and clothed.
The only alternative is govern
ment mr-nasemerjt. and the povorn
; i:;ent agrees that it Is not honest
or capable enouith for that. How
ever, everything remains in the
country, and the people can always
:ise their judinnen;. if they happen
to have any.
Russia's effort to plant commun
ism in China is no more of a fail-
u:e ,ilan . a northern effort to plant
cimunisni. or even powerful la-
r "hionism. m the south.
i ne potttn tninks it wants more
northern capital, more factories.
mor employment, and objects lo
anything that would
discourage
northern capital.
A truck load of all ase commun
ists. iiriv3Eir to a mpptme of jiro
tft in Gast.-mia. N. C. were stoi
ptd by artr.ed mpn i:i automobiles
and or.kred to turn Lack.
They obeyed, the automobiles
and armed men following them.
The truck ran into an automobile
unintentionally. The collision an
noyed the law and order men. and
a volley was fired into the truck.
Twenty men and women on it
scattered in all directions. leaving
one of their number dead on the
road.
The dead one was Mrs. Klla Mnv
Wiicins. mother of four young i-hil-
oren.
Do Yon Remember'
TF.S VEAKS AGU 1UUA4
(From of the Mall Trlbun.
M pi. mlR-r IB. 1UI9.
, Willi.'im wlt-r tiivea concert it
Pi-csljytTi.in church.
' snn Antonio Hundreds die in
irofiir.il hurricane.
ion; auto bousht In
Onsuil since Sefiletnhor 1.
riianls I'lis ami (llendalo citi-2,-ns
clve I'rfitU-rit AVilson a dfr.
"in :i pie latifn of your efl'om
for hfiHlil of in.inkind."
I TWENTY TEAKS AGO TOD AT
(From files of the Mall Tribune.)
! .SpiiciiilK-r 10, !('. ! .
I Jackson county bankers hold
! banquet at Nash f'.rlll. E. VCnS
: ter of Ashland, chief talker. '
! Kish monopoly In Hogue may
be at end with sale of Hume es
tate interests.
Mayur (,'anun and City Attorney
: .v,.ff 'iisk Juilne Hanna to pe.j
I t-c:sin in H:tnh-y water turn.
rf.urt says it will be Oetuber
or later.
1 II. ('. Kentnor residence Kutte.l
: by rlutnes.
North Dakota people hold pic::;c
at Jacksonville.
Editorial: Com. I'eary continur.?
; to use the hammer with which hi
nailed flat; to North Pole.
You may say that a mother of
four children should not go riding
with a truckload of communists.
She might say that she should
have been warned that her life was
in danger.
The incident lias created "a pain
ful impression." But the fact ap
pears plain that North Carolina will
not tolerate communism, or any
tiling that North Carolina calls
communism.
L LIFE, PASSES
The recent death in San Francisco
of Mrs. Clara Hasllngs Darling, rec
ognized as a molder of social des
tinivs when California was young,
is of interest in that Mrs. Darlini;
is the mother of Mrs. Charles K.
i Maud who. with Mr. Maud, has had
a fishing lodge along the Rogue
river for several years and is well
', known here. Mr. Maud is a great
'. fisherman and sportsman,
j Mrs. Darling was the last of the
'great leaders in the old tradition.
said to be a woman of brilliance
:and wide culture. She was born in
- Muscatine. Iowa, and came to Cali
fornia as a child. Her father was
an attorney well known throueh
i out California. Serranus Clinton
I Hastins. He tounded and endowed
i the Hastings College of Law.
I Mrs. Darling spent most of her
j life in Californi and ruled its s.
: ciety hy her wit and charm. She
j was descended from Alfred the
' Great, and perhaps because of that
: she was a frequent visitor in En
f rope. She only had one other
daughter. .Mrs. Joaquin de Pereya
, of Biarritz, Prance.
1ST
' "The Family Boss." a Helen
'. N'orris radio drama, which was pro
duced over KMKD, the Mail Tribune-Virgin
station, on the Copco
hour last Tuesday, night, with a lo
cal cast, will be heard over KGO
I Wednesday evening. September l.v
from 9 to 10 o'clock, according to
a report received here.
Wilda Wilson Church, director of
; KOO players, for w hom the play
was especially written, will be
heard in the rote of -Nan.'' the
servant and "boss of the familv."
MEXICO C1TV iPl Families too
poor to bury their dead leave th.
coffins on the curbing of a narrow
street off or.o of the city's miii
arieriej. , health departmer:
wau-vtn then convoys the caskets to
the general paupers' grave in De
lores cemetery.
Portland Kxtensive imp.-ovi--mems
completed at plant of Cc.--
tinent.il l'.iking cutnpany.
By BUD FISHER
WHV Houli x
AAuE Kim,
AMY MA0DT5
THAN) H