j ; I r k i t. if I i Hi ; THE OREGON STATESMAN: FKIPAV. JAXTJAKYrig. 1020. LACHMUND BILL MEETS DEFEAT IN THE SENATE Reliability of Figures of Com missioner Booth Questioned by Thomas COMBINE IS SUSPECTED Hot Fight Is Staged Over Auto-Royalty Measure of Sa- ; lem Lawmaker ,. j ' Figures furnished by R. A. Booth, state highway commissioner, purport ing to show that patented pavenienf, rail he laid in Oregon, even should a royalty be paid, cheaper than can unpatented pavements, made the main basis on which opponents of thi Lachmund antl-rpyalty bill suc ceeded in having the bill indeflnite ly postponed in the senate yester day by vote of 20 to 9. ' This iii face of an attack by Sen ator Thomas who charged that a combine exists between the Warren Construction company and other con tractors ! whereby secret manipula tions in bidding are made and which Senator Thomas asserted make Mr. Booth's figures inaccurate and with out weight. . . OmuniM&ton Excoriated The state highway commission was excoriated for refusing to take the advice of Attorney . General lirown by laying a pavement of the same general characteristics as the War ren pavement, yet not infringing on its alleged patent, so that this as well as the questionable validity of the patent might be a ground for defense if the highway commission is sued bv the Warren romoanv to .. 1- lect royalties which have not been! paid since early last year. Iirliniuinl Staru Fight Declaring- that there are many liebple in Oregon who do not .believ they have received from the Oregon legislature laws that afford protect ion against the paving trust. Sena tor Lachmund initiated a f i i - in the senate. The fight was over the majority and minority reports on Senator Iachnvund's bill to submit t) the people the question of prohibiting the payment of royalties on pavement inj Handley. I. S. Smith, Norb'.ad and Orton signed the majority report om mending, that the bill not pss and Senators Thomas and Iachum:i3 signed the minority report. Lach- mund moved substiluipn of he min ority for the majority! report. Senator Iachmund declared iha: pavement as good as bitulithic can be procured without the necessity of paying royalty. llooth Sways Smith Senator Smith said on the floor that he had gone to the committee meeting with the intention of voting f "SKIN THE CAT' But if you won't exerdse vigorously you must trke "Cascarets." Bridge Over Euphrates From Which Turks Hurled 4000 Armenians 1 There is nothing like bending ex ercises, taking long walks, or chop ping wood to keep the liver and bow els active, but most folks take thflr exerc ise in an easy chair. Such -folks wed Cascarets. else they suffer from tick headache, sour, acid stomach, indigestion, colds and are mlseralbe. Hut don't stay bilious or constipated. Keel splendid always by taking Cas carets occasionally. They act with out griping or inconvenience. They never sicken vou like Calomel. Salts. Oil. or nastyharsh Fills. They cost so little too Cascarets work while you sleep. . for the Lachmund bill, but that lig ures submitted by Commissioner Booth had caused him to change his mind. Senator Pierce, who stood with .ahmund and Thomas, flayed the highway commission for not heeding the opinion of Attorney General Brown in which he advised that a pavement of the same general char acter of bitulithic be used instead of the patented article and which woaid not be an actual Infringement, so 'National .Thrift Week BEGINS SATURDAY, JANUARY 17 THRIFT FRUGALITY; ECONOMY; GOODu HUSBANDRY (Standard Die tionary) And right in this connection Thrift could be shown of the highest order by taking advantage of the tr aeeary iioc At the Electric Sign "SHOES" 167 North Commercial Street EVERYTHING ON SALE - NOTHING RESERVED LADIES! Maybe you like better shoes, style 114 Selbys Black Kid, cloth tops, French heels, $8 qualities at special $3.95 LADIES ! Brown with cloth tops, lots 228 240, $9 and $9.50 values this sale only at $5.95 LADIES ! Fine Dress Shoes, nothing nicer for your silk dress, style 155 Red Cross Pa tent, new long toe last, the very latest style, today's value $15. Our price was $13.50. Un til Saturday night at $10.85 MEN! If you want a fine high grade shoe there's rstetsons" now worth $18 to $20, black or brown. We sold them at $15 but unil next Saturday you can buy them at V. ; i 4 $12.95, $13.45 and $13.65 plus war tax MEN! If you want lower priced shoes there are Regals" and "Brennans," for instance gun metal English lace, Goodyear welted, oak leather soles, style 740, today's value$10, our price was $9.50. Until Saturday you can buy for. . . . . . . . . . . ............. Warranted equal to any regular $10 quality. MEN! If you want just a cheap light weight shoe buy style 717 Gun Metal Eng- usn lace weu soies, an $8.50 shoe for $$ $5 T.nfin t ttktrw lurwi w Or "Bed Cross" All Beaver Brown De Luxe alfjSnl?1? ffier yle. d r. B. & C. Kid, turned nhinltt valued today at $19. We sold at $17. UntU debaln turdly at 9 p. m. you can have them actually worth now regularly $20. Until . "' ai.M Saturday night you can buy them for r - '$16.95 BOYS! Black Calf Blucher lot 821, sites 1 m. . L:. . , to 5H, regularly priced at $5, special price This is a Wonderful .Bargain. . . S3 35 LADIES! Would you like a very inexpens- ive, yet nice looking shoe, see the Black Kid i or Patent Vamp, Grey Cloth top, practically Also lot 806 Brown Army Blucher, 1 to 5, all sizes, $10 values, would be cheap at $8.03. regular $5.50 grade at. $4.45 Until Saturday you can buy them at $2.95 LADIES! One lot small. sizes up to 4 in Lot 826, extra heavy oil grain blucher, sizes Hanans, Selbys, etc., to finish out. . . J.35 1 to 54, $5 quality at. $3.85 And Hundreds of others at just such bargains. You cannot afford to shiftlessly allow this chance to pass. Sale closes Saturday, January 17th at 9 p. m. AT THE ELECTRIC SIGN SH0ES: l -J. 167 NORTH v COMMERCIAL STREET SALEM, OREL 1 .' ... - M l c ,. 7 A h-.- ; ''.-Ti? vv'-f -v: . This photograph shows a brldse over the Euphrate4 River at Teio. Turkey, which ha been the n of lerrihle Armenian massacres. More than 4.000 Armenians were driven on to this bridge, killed and their bodies thrown over bv the Turks. ,. GIRLS! A MASS OF WAVY, GLEAMY BEAUTIFUL HAIR Let "Danderine" save and glorify your hair this might constitute a ground .f de- attention to the ' city beautiful." fense in event of suit. A. .J. Baef. "I heard Mr. Hooth's speech a. the; Salem, Jan. 14. Methodist church last night," said Pierce, "'and came away mo; a than ever convinced that we should have a paid commission that could gito its entire time lo this work. Mr. Itootb told the audience that t te specifications of the Warren Con struction company are being fol lowed. The attorney general's i-'d- vice is not being followed out a n't the people are paying the price. j In 1917 it was said $6.0o0.f0' would be all the money required Last session. Senator Orton told yon on the noor that tne iu,uuu,v'jw voted at that time would be the la.---.. Now they are after $10,000,000 morv In 12 monhs they will be after an other $10,000,000. And they w'.'i spend it like drunken fools. Hurley Defend Tru.it Senator Hurley, who has stood and voted consistently with the paving trust at this and other sessions. seemed to state the Warren Con struction company's case exactly when he said it makes no difference to the people 6t Oreicon whether the Warren patent Is valid or invalid. It is a question on which the people have no rigiit to vote." said Hurley. "It is a question for the courts." Senator La Follet declared he had no confidence in the highway coi.i- mlssion and offered to pay the cost of a special train if the senate would adjourn and go with him to Wash ington county to see road , work be tween Forest drove and Tlillsboro The argument that paving can be procured cheaper with paying royal ties than without Senator Strayer termed amusing and ridiculous. For the closing speech in support of the minority report. Senator Lachmund yielded the floor to Thomas. "It occurs to me that if the high way commission bad desired to lay a pavement Just a- little difieient from the Warren pavement but just as good, as it was advised to do by Attorney General Hrown. this law suit for $300,000 in royalty that is coming would be avoided." snid Thomas. There if a common belief about the state that a combination of events between the Warren Construction company and other contractors whereby some remain out of tn? bids through secret manipulations. That is why the figures that have been submitted by Commissioner booth are faulty when be says that even with royalty payments bitulithic that has been laid would be cheap er than other pavements. Slam Taken at Hurley "Hurley says that the Lachmund bill would drive the Warren Con struction company out of the state with its big payroll and I can't help but think that the thin he is in terested in is not the Warren Con struction company but its payro'l." Senator Moaer did not participate in the debate' but In explaining his vote said he could not support the bill but would support the Hare bill prohibiting the highway commission from paying royalty to anyone ur.'il the status of the Warren patent has been determined. The minority report was defeated by a vote of 20 to 9. The vote: For Eberhard. Eddy. Farrell lachmund. Pierce, Strayer. Thomas. Vinton. , Against Baldwin. Hanks. Hell. GUI. Handley. Howell. Huston, Hur ley. Jones. Moser. Nicholsen. Nor blad. Orton. Patterson. Porter. Rit ner. Shields, Smith or Coos and Cur ry, Smith of Josephine. Wood. PORTLAND MAN NOW ON STAFF M. 0. Evans Becomes Field Representative for Co-Op-erative Association en work in Portland daring the sea sons of 1913 and .1914. assistant county agent leader for Oregon for nearly three years, and as supervis ing farm help specialist for the United States department of agricul ture in the 11 western states for two years. He takes op his new duties January 19. M. O. Evans, travelinr representa tive, of the Portland Union stock yards, has resigned to take the posi tion of field representative for the Oreeon Growers association, the new state wide fruit marketing organiza tion with headquarters at Salem. Mr. Evans Is a graduate of Cornell uni versity, a former student of O. A. Q. and has been a resident of Oregon for the past 12 years. He served as supervisor of school and home gard- Suffered 3 Years with Rheu matism, Catarrh and Stomach Trouble, Since Taking No. 40 Feels Fine Gary. Ind.. April 25, 1919. "1 suf fered for ever three years wfth chron ic rheumatism, catarrh, constipation, stomach trouble, bad blood, nervous spells, aching limbs, so I could not sleep. Saw an advertisement in the daily paper about Mendenhall'a Num. ber 40 For The Blood. Thought I would give it a trial. Although I was discouraged, as I had doctored with a number of physicians and tried nu merous medicines .without receiving any benefit. 1 have taken but two bottles of Number 40. Can eat any thing I want without fear and am not near1 so nervous and am feeling fine. I am now starting on my third bot tle. Mrs. Gostlne Rainey. 2270 Jef ferson St." 40 Is demanded in poi soning, gouty conditions, malnutri tion, auto-toxication. constipation. liver and stomach .troubles. Be lieved to remove and prevent gall itones. appendicitis. Successfully used in eczema and skin diseases. I'sed with phenomenal success In .hronic rheumatism, catarrh, lumba ,'o. myalgia (pain in the muscles, muscular rheumatism or neuralgia) ;landular swellings, scrofula, mercu ial and lead poisoning, abscesses, tores, ulceus, boils and carbuncles. Vild by Perry's Drug Store. XOTH1XO MORK IP 1 J S 11 1 7 , In a few moments yon ran trans, form your plain, dull, fat luir. Toa can have It abundant, soft, glossy and fall of life. Just get at any drag or toilet counter a small bottle of "Danderine 'for a few cents. Thea moisten a soft clotb with the Daa derine and draw this through yoar hair taking one small strand at time. Instantly, yes. Immediately, yon hare doubled the beauty of your hair. It will be a mass, so soft. las-, trous, flffy and so easy to do np. All dust, dirt and - excessive oil Is re moved. Let Danderine pat more- life, color, vigor and brightness in your hair. This stimulating tonic will freshen "Wombat Invited me to inspect hU! cellar last evening." "I suppose a pleasant time was had?" "Naw; he merely wanted to show 'your scalp, check dandruff and fa.ll- me a lot of coal. ier Journal. -(Louisville Cour- ing hair. and. help your hair to grow long, thick, strong and beautiful. EDITORIALS OF THE PEOPLE We Have a Good Assortment of the following goods that we are offering: to our pa trons at a big sacrifice Union Suits Boys' Underwear, $L30 rtluei .' ...S3c Oirl Underwear, $1.25 nine V.95c ladies' Union Suits, $1.85 nines. LIZ ' . Ladies' Hats We are still selling ladies hats at half price. $9.75 values .A25 $7.25 values. : $3.C0 $5.00 values . $250 $3.50 values $1.40 Children's Hats ranging from $1.25 up to $3.00. your choice at 85 cents. Matches, per box 5c The place where you get the most for your money at the SALEM VARIETY STORE 152 North Commercial Street (Th Statasmaa Is plead to print communications upon topic of general 4nteret at any tlma. Thar la acarcalr any limit to the topics of "rencral D. taraat." It la aakad only that corre spondents refrain from praonalltx.a ?4 V.l.er th,t written of a libelous nature. Letters must haa writer a name and address. Uieucb net necessarily for. publication. Ed.) Salem Ileautlfol Editor Statesman: We bear a good deal about Salem beautiful. But. for weeka- and weeka, the atreet In front of the Oregon1 Elec tric depot, where more people e It than If It were located In any other place, has been used as a wood yard. It is high time that we paid more 1 UNION STMSDABB MADE IMS We are now handling only standard lines and in "Union Made" where possible We Carry full lines of Boss of the Road "Union Made" over alls and pants. Black Bear " Union Made" work pants and shirts. Lee's Unionalls "Union Made" Unlonalls. H. & L Black "Union Made" Work Glores. Washington Solid leather Shoes are "Union Made". Guaranteed lines. ROSTEIN & GREENBAU1 240-246 North Commercial Street, "The Store That Protects Its Customers" a 5Y