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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 9, 1920)
SECOND NEWS SECTION P4GES 1 TO 4 Society, Slogan, General Hew 'cad Classified SIXTIETH YEAR SALEM, OREGON', TIURSDAY UOKXIXU, SLTTEMIIKk U, 1020 PRICE: FIVE CENTS : .... By La Von Coppock Mr. and .Mrs. W. IL Eldridge returned Tmesday from Gearhart where tney have been domiciled at their cottage, '"Chanticleer, since July. '; Miss Mary Elizabeth Murray of Condon is a guest of her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mr?. G. 1). Murray, of this city. Miss Mur ray, will leave the first of the week for Pullman. Wash., where she is a student at V. S. C. Audrey Gordon of the Univer sity of Minnesota is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Gordon fori a few days. Mr. and Mrs. C. Clive Durant of Pasadena, who have been visit ing at the Seaside cottage' of Mr. Durant's nephew. James L. Du lant for several days.f while pass ing tbro'igh the city Tuesday, en route for. their home, called on several of their friends here. Mrs. A. N. Moores, who has been visiting her daughter, .Mrs. Rogert- . Kinney, in Astoria for several weeks, returned Saturday. . Howard Lee of Drain Is a guest at the WV S. Wright home on South Liberty street. Mrs. Louise Wilson of Portland and her daughter, Miss Althea Wilson, wer. Salem visitors on Tuesday. Sunday. September r, at the home of the bride's mother, 2.1 4 Lee street, Lucy Bowman and Hoy Petzer were quietly married by Rev. F. W. Launer of the fhemeketa Street Evangelical Last Time Tonight GRAND THEATRE church. Only the immediate fam ilies were present. Mr. and Mrs. Petzer will make their home In Monruouth. Mr. and Mrs. 1?. J. Miles had as their guest Sunday and Monday Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Miles of Portland, who motored up for a visit. Mr. and Mrs. B. J. nies ex pect to motor to Portland Sunday to meet Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Miller of Arkansas City. Kan., cousins of Mrs. Miles who will be guests at the Miles home lor several days. Mr. and Mrs. James Campbell. Miss Itorothy Montgomery of Mc Minnville. and lan Campbell of the Pniversity of Oregon were guests of Mr. and Mrs! F. J. Ru pert Monday. Dr. and Mrs. W. H. Byrd have returned from a week-end vaca tion "at Newport. Miss Madeline Rawlings of Al bany spent yesterday in Salem as the guest of. llss Beryl Holt." ,Mrs. Frank Durbln and her mother. Mrs. J. Wj Sprlggs, who will aecompiny her from Port-? wild terror tht ....i , i :and. win motor up the Columbia before. I Disfiguring Growths of Hair Entirely Removed (New Method Bemovei Boots sad All) If vou rr afflicted with a growth of nperflttas hir. gn to jrr 4ranrit l nnrr, get tick of pkttm, follow the impir ittklrarlion -mod hav th jW Ut urpri of yoar life! With yoar own ryrt joo will rr the hair come oat. root and alt quick!?, eaJjr, Irating yoitr kia smooth and hairlrs as a habe'a. rhelactine i not tn hm compared with the imiI depilatory or electrical method. 1 It i new and different. It ia odrol. noir i rotating. and so harm lea a ehild t could af.-lr eat it. ' SGI i .. i " .. - - DAYS Now is a good time to prepare. Mothers will solve the many problems in preparing their chil dren ready for school at this store Gingham CHILDREN GINGHAM DRESSES, ages 6 to 11 ,years, in new plaids and stripes . 2M$, $1.83, 9g MISSES' GINGHAM DRESSES, excel lently good quality, new styles; a real serviceable dress for school wear. .$3.98 - Middy Blouses for School Wear $1.65 Gingham Week One of the most successful Gingham Sales we have had for some time; ' ! . ; ' '..'si.: each day sees thrifty gngham buyers taking advantage of this sale. FINEST FRENCH GINGHAM, 32- incJi, new pietty, plaids, yard 59c ZErilEU GINGHAM, 32-inch, very ehoice patterns, the yard. -49e ZEl'HER GINGHAM, 27 -inch, new stripes and colors, yard. 35c APIiON CSlNGlIAM, small and large ehecks, one week, yard 25c LIGHT PERCALES, 36 inch, yard 32 DEVONSHIRE CLOTH AND SCHOOL DAY CLOTn, guaranteed colors, one week, yard. . - -55c I j School Shoes ! The kind every Boy and Girl needs, at the prices you wish to pay. Visit ! our Shoe Department Today. Rulers and Pencils Free with suits, dresses and shoes. School Suits for Boys with two pairs of pants with each suit, : $7.95 ! BOYS' WAISTS, BLOUSES, ETC, . ' I:- :';;:"i i . at i " ... . SAVING PRICES CBaWaWaW"BBaMaaaBBaaaBalaa ''U-. il Uiver highway an far at Arling tou where they will eujoy a rort laght with relatives and friends. - Mrs. 'lattie Reader of Vancou ver in iho ruest of her slater, Mrs. J. H. Linn for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. J. It. Lewis are receiving congratulations noon the arrival of an infant daughter. Mrs. Lewis was Miss Flora Whll aker or Salem before her mar riage anu has many friends here. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Lien or Quebec. Can., and their son. who is an instructor in one of the military academies there, are guests at the home of Mrs. Lien's brother and his wife. Mr. and, Mrs. J. II. Doyseii. I SI 2 Trade street. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Wilson have returned Trom a few days outing at Casradia. . Mis Ethel Edwards.who has been spending the summer with her aunt. Mrs. O. E. Hrown of Seattle, is In Salem Tor a fortnight. Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Adams have as their puest their niece; Miss Lora Armstrong of The Dalles. Mrs. Harry Ilohart of Vancou ver. Wash, is a puest of Mr. and Mrs, Henry S. Hell. Miss Lorraine Parsons has gune to San Francisco where she will attend school this winter, i Miss Ethel Fletcher, state pres ident of the Rebecca lodge, has established headquarters tor the week in Ifrownsvllle while she In spects the various lodges of Linn county. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Hasey re turned last night from a month's cuting in their cottage at New port. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hechtel of Howell Prairie returned last night from a short vacation at New port. Mrs. Charles A. Bowen and her children have returned from Pa cific City where they spent the summer and will be here for a few days. Dr. Bowen leaves to day for his old conference, the Puget Sound, which ia in session at Olyrapla. where he expects to receive cn appointment to a pas torate. They will leave their daughter. Miss Margaret Bowea. at Lausanne Hall for her secoa4 year at Willamette university. REVELATIONS OF A WIFE The Story of a Honeymoon A Wonderful Romance of Married Life Wonderfully Told by A DELE GARKISOX CHAPTER 89 WHY DOES THE UNKNOWN HORSEMAN RIDE AWAY IN FEAR? r or not to emerge from inv hid mg place casually and meet the man face to face, or to remain where 1 was with th chance that he might not find me. Walloping Hoofbeats. Inaction of any kind is dis tasteful to me. fo that I didn't poncer long. 1 poke to the dog in the careless way so many wo men use when they're alone with an animal, as if the beast could understand the language. "Pete, old doggie, don't you think we've gathered all the vio lets we can here? What do you say to going on runner?" Pete gave the short, snarp bark with which he always answers any remark made to him. but my lit tle speech was punctuated In a far more startling manner. For the man on the opposite side of the brook, instead of com ing toward me. leaped to the back of his horse and put him through the vines and bushes alonr the path he had come at'a tremendous rate. He didn't go clear to the road, however, for the sound of his horse's feet ceased as sudden ly as they had 'sounded, and I in stinctively knew that he'd again dismounted. To say that I was bewildered is to use a mild expression in deed. The man who had un doubtedly followed me frou my home and had tracked me there could be no other word for lt-i through the woods. Why in the world had he scurried away like a frightened rabbit at the mere sound of my voice? All 'at once a plausible explan ation of his latest action struck me. I couldn't understand his reason for tracking me. but evi dently he'd planned to follow me. himself undiscovered. It was no part of his plan for me to see him. or to know that he was following me. A Strange Thought. Instinctively I felt that the rea son ror this attitude most be a fear of recognition upon the part of the mysterious horseman. Once again I visualized the tense mo ment when I had looked from my taxicab into the one drawn up beside mine In the Fifth avenue blockade, and had met the eyes of the man who J just fled at the sound of my voice. Hanntingly familiar eyes they were, and they d registered start led recognition as they met mine. The conviction seized me, all the more firmly because I had fought against it for so so many days, that I knew this man. and that his foreign appearance was only a elever dissuise. Where had I seen eyes like his? No longer afraid of pursuit. 1 moved away from the thicket and sat down upon a fallen tree while in memory I ran the gamut of men friends, acquaintances and those with whom I had had busi ness or professional dealings. There was but one who fitted in any manner the appearance of my new neighbor. His name near ly escaped my lips, then I re presred even the thought of him. It was so absurd a thought that I wouldn't voice it even to my self There was no reason, how ever, why I shouldn't continue my walk. The mysterious horseman was evidently as much afraid of me as I was of him. Even if his shadowing of me had some sinis ter purpose I was safe as long as he foared my recognition. I knew that I was a half-mile (rom the road which ran parallel o the one I had first traveled. I had no wish to wade the brook Rain, even if there had been no mysterious figure waiting in the woods. So with Pete still in con- Sometimes the realization of a fear steadies us, where its antici pation has given us only terror. It) tented attendance I strolled lets was so with me when I looked through the screen of bushes be hind which I was crouching and recognized across the brook from me. the reatures of the foreigner I had seen In the taxicab. All the vague fears at which I had laughed even as I yielded to them were more than realized as I saw th face of the horseman. He had followed me, but why he was spying upon me I had no Idea, unless, he belonged to the same sinister organization of which Grace Draper was a leader. His appearance also corrobo- urely through the woods and came out upon the other road. onc which had far more travel than the first one. A number of autos. carriages and farm wagons made my walk much le!8 attractive than the stroll along the deserted roadway had been. In my annoyance at having to keep to the side or the way or else be compelled, fre quently to dodge I 'forgot the horseman who had annoyed me. But when I reached the first crossroads I saw. as I . glanced down It. that the horse was grax ft fcVt S eiDteinnilber- Vieto .Reeo 31 Now On Sale' ci iwttw tap a jmmm in e immnjn 'jkhibK.':!1 i j mmmmmmmmmmrm i. m i jMBa rated the secret theory I had had ing at the sid of th road while that my new neighbors had rent-1 his natter, half hidden bohind ed Mrs. Durkee'a home because It him. with keen eyes watched th would give them opportunity to I road on which I was traveling. observe, my j movements. It was so absnrd a thin on the surface of it that I hadn't even told Lil lian about It. Bat little Mrs. Durkee's description of the man with whom she dealt tallied ex actly with the appearance of the man standing beside his horse so quietly on the other side of the brook. J I was glad to feel calmness de scending upon me. instead of the You Can't Brush Or Wash Out Dandruff The only? sure way to get rid of dandruff Is to dissolve it. then ou destroy It entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of or dinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring: use enough to moisten the srat and rub it In jrently wtth the finger tips. Do thi toniuht. and by morn ins most .if not all of your dand ruff will be gone, and three or tour more applications will com pletely dissolve and entirely de stroy errry. single sign and trace of it. no matter how much dand rurr you may have. You will find, too. that all Itch and diKi'ng of the scalp will stop at onde, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous Klosy. ilky and soft, and look and leel a hun dred times -better. - You can get liquid arron at any drug store. It Is Inexpensive and ncTcr falls to do the work. (To be continued ) Harding and Ccolidge Comply With State Law Certificates ot nomination of Warren (J. Hardin? for president of the United States and Calvin Coolidge for vice president, by the national convention at Chi cago last June, were filed yes terday wlh Secretary of Sate Ko zer. The certificates are signed by Henry Cabot Lodte. chairman of the convention, and Lafayette It. Giason. secretary. Certificates ot nomination for the Democratic presidential tick et were filed some time a;o. Of all the national tiektes, only the Socialists have not ?t filed. They have until Spein!Mr 22 If not filled by that date th names will not go cm the ballot In Oregon. XKW SHINGLE PAINT 3IADE. PORTLAND. Ore.. Sept. S. A p.int ths: will pevcn shingle from wa'-pin-g :r hrinkinr n-.l at the same time waterproof them has joined the ranks of Oregon products crying for Urer output. The Roof Security company, which manufacturers the preparation, is now erecting new buildings and installing additional equipment in oorder to double the quantity now being made. -.:m j2"- '.ri ... j" The Pure Wheat Shop We use only that flour we know to , . , be made from pure wheat That's the reason every housewife uses Peerless B read She knows that when she gives Peerless to her chifdren, it will not harm them. But that is not all! The careful baking of this bread gives it the flavor by which it is known. Electric ovens used exclusively in our shop, and elec tric ovens mean better, purer, more dzlicious bread. Try Peerless today and you will never use any other. Peerless Bakery Philip Winters, Prop. 1 70 North Commercial St Phone 247 "Once a Peerless User, Always a Peerless Booster" ""A WANT AD. IN TUB STATLiLA-N WILL BKLNti.KLSULTS . , , - ' - fc ; : , " t . ' " it 7SI fx I X4 w i r ' ' r. t v. if t'