8 - TlfE PRECOX STATESMAN: WKUXKSWAV. JtXK 12, 1018. - ' I .1 t - r..n HIT VVVTMfl VI PV lT VT W S 1ITT1 I mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmmim.m 1 s '-' i i it TV A Am Newsy Notes of State Industrial Growth I I X.'' ..j.Cl 'A i -lit 4 COAOAMe P6TR0VA VDAOGHTR OF D STICKY" 'You, vrcicaiiYou Tru?e: to ttonz'tnat you would ask me. your wif. to do such a thing! You may degrade wives la su.eh manner ia your country,! but American women are not their husband's chatties. This is theiend -X would die rather than .submit." A powerful scene in "Daughter of Destiny" Coming to The Liberty Theatre 3 Days starting Tomorrow. - UNCLE SMI TO HELP HARVEST James R. Coleman Will Be in Charge of Employment . f Office Here ' r Uncle Sam will help. The United States is now behind the loganberry picking job. And the prune picking. ' And the harvesting generally. . The- U jilted i States employment service, of the department of labor, will from now on have an office in Salem . h? - . -,. It will be in the CaOln -ouilding, on State street, near .Liberty the place which has been the Red ross drive headquarters. ; James It .Coleman. formerly of Sa lem will be In 'charge and will be known as an ezaminier. Examiniers will ' be at work also in Pendleton, Eugene, Hood River a'nd Medford, and they will all work in conjunc tion with the Portland headquarters. Charles E. Curtain, of the Portland headquarters, and R. P. Bonham, of the department of labor, were In Sa- i Pain k'l Mil wn I , Here is a message Suffering women, frt Mrs. Kathiyn Edwards. J of K. F D. 4, Washington f0 Court House, Ohio. I 'vj lem yesterday, getting things start ed. One may get an idea of the extent of the work already being done In Oregon by the United States employ ment service, when it is known thai there were sent out on Monday of this week 535 people to do work In various parts of the state and the machinery of the service is only just getting oiled up . 1 The Portland office will be the third most important in the United States, in this service. The United States employment service works with all organizations in securing labor for the harvesting of crops, etc. If works with the Y. M. C. A., the Y. W. C. A., and all kindred orranizatinna All it asks is that these organizations work out from Its offices. In order that there may be no duplicating or ef forts and so that every one who will help In doing the work of each ter ritory will know Just where to re port. All the people who will work will be employed in the local districts, and then laborers will be sent In from Portland, or from any other point where laborers may be had. Mr. Bonham says that the depart ment has tackled some rather large jobs, in securing laborers and has not yet fallen down. So, Uncle Sam being behind the movement, the loganberries will like ly be all picked; and the prunes, too; and the harvesting will likely be all done. June 10. Toledo Sawmill plant from Monroe to be set up here, capa city 50,000 feet. Another large saw mill to be shipped here soon by Ta quina Bay H. It. Co., capacity 100, 000 feet. . Portland Western Spar Co. is fur nishing all booms and masts to Chandler Shipbuilding Co. at San Pe dro, also 85 foot flagpole for Pacific Car & Foundry Co. of this city. Portland capitalists propose con crete shipyard for Portland. Portland All government pur chases for Oregon. Washington and Idaho will here, after be made through a director or purchases with headquarters at Seattle. The government is mobilizing farm labor which will begin work on Ok lahoma wheat crop first, then work through Kansas and the northwest states as the different harvests come on Vale A new community hall for city park proposed. Coquille Contract for construc tion of Coos City bridge over Isthmus Inlet let forS12.064.50. Canyon City Road between John Day and Prairie to be repaired and keep in good shape. Medford Large section of coal land In Roxy Anne district leased, to be developel extensively. Two shafts at work on property Schwab Is inspiring ship workers to increased activity and production and Pacific coast yards are more than holding their own in construc tion records. Strikes are becoming more unpopular e.ery day. Rieth Improvements at depot nearing completion, Stanrield Stanficld Auto Co. to build new garage. Joseph Work started on new 100 000 bushel elevator here, cost be tween $30,000 and $40,000. North Bend Bandon auto stage line to be started soon. Reedsport Crew surveying site big 'mill here Shipyard may rollow. Gold Beach River and harbor bill passed U. S. senate, providing ror Improvement of Crescent city harbor as a war measure. St. Helens Due to increased num ber' of men working in shipyards greatest activity in building experi enced tince 1910 and 1911. Hood River Local canneries urg ing orchardists to plant increased acreage of string beans. Coos Bay Oil lands In vicinity be ing leased preparatory to boring. Marshfield Three carloads of cheese shipped to "Seattle this week. Coos and Curry counties Cheese As sociation plans to ship two cars weekly during next three months. Tso million, one hundred thousand pounds was last year's shipment. Cheese sells now at 23 rents per pound. Portland Oregon lumber cut thus rar reported for 1917 shows Increase of 262,219.000 board feet over total cut in 1916. Toledo Kngineers and assistants or State Highway commission here surveying ror new bridge across the Yaquina. Canyon City Mill remodeled to handle low grade chrome output, now ready to operate. Means In creased revenue1 for people of the county. Portland City gains 24.000 pop ulation last year, principally due to shipbuilding Industry. Dayton Arcade theatre opens un der new management. Roseburg Growers cooperating with Itoseburk and Douglas county Merchants association to support can- naries. Increased tomato and string bean acreage desired. Dufur New pavilion and grani stand to be constructed. , Helix Mill here ships first car load of flour to France. Dallas Outlook for abundant wal nut crop unusually promising. Sheridan Prune dryer with' 3000 trays, and large warehouse requiring 50.000 feet lumber to be erected Im mediately. Silver IJike fVnlrnctlon of soda-ash plant under way at Summer Lake. Kxpects to operate in 30 days Corvallis Steep grade near BlodS ett to be Improved by local volunteer good roads gang. Cottage Grove Local mill begins running double shifts, first in section to adont schedule. am Plad In tell, anrt him t told man v women whnt J I 1 suffered befor I tn ot caraul and the great benefit to be derived Trora this ly. hecam tically helpless . . V TAKE few remedv. A y ears ago I became prac- r nrlS Tfca Vomsa's Tonic mi ! was verw wmV I Mrs.- Edtvards eoes on to say, "and could not stoop without sufferimr at pain 4 . . Nothing med to heln me tint 1 heard of Cardui end be 1 0 7 great pain seemed to pan ths use nf it gradually rained j strength ... i am new able to do all my work." If you need a tonic take Cardui. 1 1 is for women. It acts jrently and reliably and wilt probably help . Vrl 9t It hln1 K 1-.- Afl Draggists V EBtZ i ' t 0 If ilP Certification to Bonds Is Asked of Commission , Application to the state irrigation securities commission for certifica tion of S125.000 bond w im.u yesterday by the Squaw Creek irriga tion aistrict. Should the bonds be certified to by the commission It wonia tnen be necessary to obtain approval of the capital issues rom mittee. The district Is located In Deschutes county near Sisters and embraces 7000 acres. It was organ ized In February this year. Money obtained from the sale of bonds. Jf the i?ue is approved, will not be used ror construction as is usually done on simbilar projects, but will be used ror purchase or existing ran nals so that settlers may have con trol ln their own hands instead or relying upon private companies. Counties Responsible for Burial of Paupers Dr. G. C. Bellinger, superintendent of the state tuberculosis sanitarium, has asked the office of Attorney Gen eral Brown If a county that Is tho residence of a pauper Is responsible for the paupers burial expenses. Th reply In an opinion prepared yester day Is that the countv is responsible Another opinion holds that an In mate of 4he state feeble-minded In stitution can not be relieased by anv court except that which committed the person to the Institution. Ap proval of the superintendent mun be obtained and the relative or other person to whom the reeble-m'nded I person is released must give a bond i to the court guaranteeing proper t care. GIRLS! GIRLS! GIRLS! TODAY GERALDINE FARKAR 'IN "JOAN THE WOMAN", Based on the Life of "JOAN OF ARC" J TH2ATOE HUGE MERCHANT MARINE IN 1920 IS FORECASTED Great Commercial Fleet Will Amount to 25,000,000 Deadweight Tons HURLEY IS SPEAKER Program Calls For Building of 1,856 Ships of All Descriptions A BIT THICK "The Germans exaggerate their submarine murders as the old set tle! s exaggerated their fog yarns." The speaker was a champion flyer of the Hem p3 lead aviation camp. He went on: t , "An ol4 ectUcr took a chew and ra' .: " The worst fog I ever seen was back in 'T4. I remember I had to go to the henhouse that night, and the fog was so blame thick I had to get the three hired men to push me through It. I remember that there '74 fog well.' said the second old settler, 'but It wasn't nothln to the '3 one. That was a fog! Solid! Why, U3 boys sat on the "fence back of the distillery all that day makin' fog balls an' beavin 'em at the people that went by.' " Dettolt Free Press. SOUTH BEND. Ind.. June 10. America in 1920 will have a rner chant marine or 25.000,000 dead weight tons. Chairman Hurley of the shipping board declared here tonight in an address giving the mot com plete statement or the nation's ship building program which has yet been made public. He was speaking to the graduates or Notre Dame univer sity. This gTeat commercial rieet. Mr. Hurley said, the largest assembled in the history or the world and Involv ing the expenditure of more than rive billions of dollars will link the I'nlted States to South and Central America by weekly steamer service which will enable the Latrn-Amerl- ean countries to utilize their unlim ited resources In the rreest competi tion with other ns'lons. It also will bridge the Pacific for transportation of products or Japan, Russia. China. Australia and the Orient, and will continue to promote America's trade with Eurooe. IU4C luvestment HeqnlrciL. "Our program calls lor the build ing of 1856 passenger, cargo, re frigerator ships and tankers, rang ing from 5000 to 12.000 tons each, with an aggregate deadweight ton nage or IS.000.000." said Mr. Hur ley. "Exclusive of these, we have 245 co man dee red vessels tagen from foreign and domestic owners, wrich are being completed by the emer gency fleet corporation. These will agregate a total deadweight tonnage cf 1.750.000. This makes a total of 2101 vessels, exclusive of tugs and barges, which are being built and will be put on the seas by the emer gency fleet corporation in the coarse of carrying out the present program, with an aggregate deadweight ton nage of 14.715.000. "Five Million dollars will be requir ed to finish our program for ISIS, 1919 and 1920. but the expenditure of this enormous sum will give Amer ican people the greatest merchant fleet ever assembled In the history We sell War Saying Stamps. HIPLEY'S Broken Lines Sale Continues With Unabated . Interest This is the time to save on present and future needs in Women's and Misses Read to Wear and Ready to Use Merchandise. U.G.SHIPLEYC0fv1PAMY Where Shopping is a Pleasure i- or the world, a 'Tre gating 2S.000.000 tons. "We have a total of S19 ship ways in the United States. Of these, a total or 751. all or which, except 90, are completed, are being utilized by the emergency fleet corporation for the building of American merchant-ship. "In 1919 the average tonnage of strcl. wood and concrete ships con tinuously building on each way shoud be about 6000 tons. If we are using 751 ways oa cargofch!ps and can average three ships a year per way. "we should turn out in one year 12.51. 000 tons. "The total gross revenue of our fleet Is very Impressive. From the ships under the control of the ship ping board, a total gross revenue Is derived of about $3(0.000.000. BLrXDERBV OX THK FORCE. "What is this man charged with?" demanded the magistrate. "Bigotry. Judge." replied the of ficer: -he's got three wives." Bos ton Transcript. ADDBITS ...m JSryeargkelk.e EaL The American checker players on the western front ar of course, ex pecting to take the king. INSTAIlfilENTS PLAN FOR TAX WASHINGTON', June 11. IasUS roent plan payments of war taxes be provided for la the new reveaia bill which the house ways and xneasi committee Is preparing to drsfv. Chairman Kltchln cUcIc.se J this fa- dortnr today's hearing before t committee, when. Albert IL Paler of New York, representing a larp number of corporations, urged Cat such provision be made. Details ti the scheme are yet to be worked ctr. Mr. Palmer uked tax on gm sales which he sa'd wosll t U i Telt than the tax en war profit. !: opposed a tax on stock dl tide '-. contending that exemption from til es should not be based on ear'-'--because or the widely varying rrrt noes of companies operating alorj the same lines. He argued for tax' on grots incomes which toz'.'. ! passed along easily to the ees sn mer: i,ia,...,l,,.,Vu,i. tt,.M,,,,..,ff.,,a.t,;v,',, .-w j. .. w ffw. - A - 1 5 ; t j i - ' - . - ' ' " "- ' ' , N ...- . 1 . ,. . . j f "Mammotti Furniture Sale i - THE BIGGEST AND BEST EVER j IVIUSICAL COIVIEDY ! I STARTS THURSDAY We have purchased the entire stock ol FURNITURE, RUGS, LINOLEUMS, RANGES from Chamber & Chambers at a great sacri fice, which must be closed out at the earliest possible date. In order to do this we have made another cut of 10 per cent discount on aU Ranges and furaiture, during, this week Do not fail to attend this great sale. We mean business. Every article must be sold without reserve. ' f j 1. - 1' ' " We cannot emphasize too strongly about this well selected stock. It is the best in Salem and will be sold at less than it could be purchased wholesale. i s We quote only a few prices: yniversal Eange, Polished top six 8-in. Lids, Hih Warmin- Closet, Nickel Trimmed 18-in. oven, stands on sanitary base ' . . Regular Price $75.00, Reduced to $55.00 J . Elegant 6 Hole Range High Wanning Closet 16-in Oven, stands on sanitary base. Regular Price $55.00, Reduced to $35.00 We also have an elegant line of Rugs and Linoleums at greatly reduced prices, which space will not allow us to quote. We would also state that Chambers & Chambers are in no way connected with this firm. We have purchased all goods, right and title of this firm and they are in no way connected with the new firm of Feldstein & Drektor who are now closing out the entire stock Old Furniture Taken in Exchange : L OSTEIN Formerly Chambers & Chambers & DREKTOR 467 Court Street, Salem BfcIGH THEATRE tojiM'iMiiiiiiiiirttii....'.-Twl,i'.