The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 25, 1920, Page 6, Image 6

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THURSDAY. MORNIKfi. NOVEMBER 2.'. 1020.
HEALTH NURSE
IS COMMENDED
Teachers of County in Reso
lutions Urge Retention
of Official
The final session of tbe Marion
county teachers' annual institute
closed yesterday afternoon. Fea
tured In the adoption or the reso
lutions adopted by tbe association
was a resolution that the county
public health nurse, who has been
working In the county the past
three months under the auspices
of the Oregon tuberculosis associ
ation, be retained for the present
school year, : The vaJue of this
work was considered of tbe ut
most importance. .
That the salaries of superinten
dents and teachers from ijhe state
ruperintendent down should be
increased was another important
I stand taken, and it was resolved
' that not less than $1200 a year
salary be paid teachers. The plac
ing of the Bible in the public
school libraries wa3 heartily en
dorsed by the members of the in
stitute. The resolutions follow in full:
Superintendent Commended
"Whereas, this annual session
of the Marion county institute has
been such a pleasant as well as
profitable meeting, the spirit of
good will, of earnestness and of
service being everywhere promi
nent
"Therefore, be it resolved that
we do hereby express our. appre
ciation for and confidence In our
county superintendent as a leader
and an adviser, that we commend
her kind, courteous and consis
tent treatment during this insti
tute, and approve most heartily
the program of good things she
has served to us.
"Resolved farther: That tre
thank the several Instructors for
their exceptionally beneficial and
inspiring work in our behalf and
assure them that we shall do onr
utmost to 'hold high the torch' in
our several places of service this
year. .
"Be it further resolved: That
we thank Miss Lena Belle Tartar,
director of music and those pupils
'and teachers of the Salem schools.
jalso the citizens of the city of Sa
lem. who have in any way ton
Itributed their time and their tal
jent to make these sessions more
I interesting' and entertaining.
Agencies Are Hit
"Whereas -there nas grown up!
throughout the whole United
States a large number of private
institutions called teachers agen- ;
cies for the purpose of placing un
employed teacher and for secur
ing, new positions for those who
for any reason wish to change,
and
"Whereas these agencies, in
our Judgment, are demanding for
their services fees or commissions
out of proportion to the services
rendered, f
Therefore, be it resolved. That
we favor a teacher's employment
bureau in connection with the
state teachers' association, which
shall render the above mentioned
service as nearly at cost as may
be determined.
"Whereas Oregon has wisely
planned for school libraries and
has placed many of the best books
in our schools to the great and
lasting benefit of our young peo
ple and whereas the one greatest
of all books, the Bible, has not
been included in library lists,
"Be it resolved. That we go on
record as believing that no school
library is complete that , does not
include a copy of the Bible among
its volumes. . .
"Whereas a resolution was
adopted by the executive commit
tee, recommending a salary, of not
less than $5000 per annum for
the state superintendent of public
instruction: we. the teachers of
Kill That Cold With
CASCARV
Cold,, Courts OM
QUININE
AND
Grippe
Neglected Colds are Dangerous
Take no chances. Kp this standard remedy handy for tha first anezc.
Break tip a cold in 24 hours Relieves
Gripp in 3 days Excellent for Headache
Quifiin In this fcrm doe not affect the bead Catcara ia best Tonic
Laxative No. Opiate in Hill's, , ;
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT
Marion county. In institute duly
assembled, do hereby resolve that
the salary of the state superinte n
dent of public instruction be In
creased to $5000 per annum.
"Be it further resolved. That
the .jninimjim salary" of all rounty
superintendents b not less than
$2400 per annum.
Health .NurM Praineil.
"Whereas, teachers attending
summer school do ho for the pur
pose of preparation for more effi
cient service, and as tbe courses
pursued by them are elected with
that end in view, therefore,
"Be it. resolved. That such at
tendance be the basis -for exemp
tion from the required reading
circle work, successful completion
of the summers work being ac
cepted instead.
Resolved, That we. the teach
ers of .Marion county, indorse a
suitable tenure law for the teach
ers of Oregon.
We welcome the introduction
of health work and general child
welfare activities in the schools
and communities of the county,
and hereby give our approval of
the work of the county public
health nurse. We express our ap
preciation of the interest of the
Oregon tuberculosis association
in placing a public nurse in Ma
rion county for the initial period
of three months. This has been
free to the county this far, but in
order that this work may contin
ue. It will be necessary for public
funds to be set aside with which
to carry out the plans.
"We hereby respectfully re
quest the county court of our
county to provide a sufficient
imounflo support the county
public health nurse for the re
mainder of the present year.
Salary Schedule Advocated
"We hereby petition that a sec
tion be placed in the next cjounty
institute for instruction in public
scbool drawing with a competent
instructor in charge.
"Resolved, That Marion county
institute go on record in favor of
a new salary schedule with $1200
as minimum for teachers fully
prepared in normal ori university
or by recognized successful ex
perience, be it further resolved
that we favor ascending scale of
cot less than $120 per year for
continued efficient service."
ever in
giviag
out
too
enough. Have we
history lost through
much?"
He instanced South Africa a
an illustration and said it was not
yet too late. As It slood. the lIP
would only mean trouble in Ire
land but if the bill were Improved
there was a real prospTt. He
bgged the government to lake
coinage from the history of the
empire and not throw away thi
nnnorl unity but give the house
the opportunity of recording lt
verdict on a larger and better'
measure.
Viscount ISryce said that In
stead or cutting Ireland in two. P
would have le-u letter to have
one parliament with all possible
Raratitees that Tinier would b
looked after. Tbe bill as it stood
offered no prospect of fulfilling
the hopes they all cherished anti
it was only by going still furthe?
that a settlement could be accom
plished. .
JAPANESE TREATY
IS PROTESTED
(Continued frQm pag 1)
CHICAGO TO WAR
AGAINST CROOKS
Finn KXiivr;f:i:s mvk.
BUDGET MADE KNOWN
(Continued from page 1)
or
to
ALII ANY. Ore.. Nov. 21 Mr
and Mrt.' Alien :;!! and their;
rrnnd-n. NvJj Teller, yer ro:t-j
relied to climb uat on the ror-f of
n p - . n . i ihir porrh In their night rar-j
7Z paloons and Labarets' i.-nts i. eap- a nn hih u.-
ryed their reden-e in the eji-i
ern part of Albany. eaMv today. J
They were rwiiel from the porch.
it b a ladder. When the fire wa t
discovered tht while lower Mnrv I
ut the residence wa. in flame and f
enrape by the stairway blu Kl
The hou with all in rnnteutj
was destroyed, the occupants J
even saving th'ir clothes.
Are Raided in Drive
Against Liquor Dealers
A
S 1
S3
y
y
i
- g
h
Closed all day
THANKSGIVING DAY
u.
5
2
3
3
M
te
i! J
- " 1
$45,500; amount asked, $54,500;
cut.
Oregon school for the deaf-
Amounts allowed: Salaries and
maintenance, $77,000; replace
ments and repairs, $7850; total.
ss4.8o0; amount asked, $121,-
6C8.50; cut. $36,818.50.
Heavy Cut Made.
Industrial school for girls
Amount allowed: Salaries and
maintenance. ,$47;200; - replace
ments and repairs. $6340: total.
$53,640; amount asked, $129,
739; cut, $76,099.
Eastern Oregon hospital for in
sane Amounts allowed: Salaries
and maintenance. $269,460: im
provements, $35,500; repairs and
replacements. $22,000; irrigation
pipe line $2500; total, $329,460;
amount asked. $478,540: cut.
$149,080. i
State Soldiers home Amount
allowed: - Salaries and mainte
nance. $70,880; improvements,
including heating plant, $28,000;
replacements and repairs, $6500;
total. $105,380: amount asked.
$112,380; cut, $7000.
by its own official.
Klgtitw Are NmrenIerei.
"It certainly Is a matter
nrinriDle for this country not
surrender lo any foreign covern-
ment the right to determine and
declare what Immicratlon shall
enter through our ports; such
surrender is aiDarently eontem-
rtlnt1 in this case. Such
right was surrendered to japan
under the existing 'gentlemen's
agreement with the remit that
the Japanese population of Cali
fornia increased three-roid in 13
years since negotiation ci ,iu
agreement, while the Chinese pop
ulation decreased in 20 years un
der the exclusion act 50 per cent.
"This country" has surrendered
to no other nation save Japan the
right to determine what immigra
tion shall enter through onr
:orts. and no other nation In the
world has surrendered to a for
eign power its similar right. ,
Karneit Protest Made. .
"We protest earnestly also
against exclusive concessions to
the Japanese or the alien races
ineligible to citizenship (in con
templated treaty " provisions, as
reported) under which the Cali
fornia land raw forbidding con
trol of agricultural lands to such
ineligible aliens, passed undef the
slate's constitutional rights, shall
be set aside. Please note
that the present treaty with Japan
specifically fails to accord to the
Japanese in this country the
privileges forbidden them by" the
California law, and which the re
ported provisions of the contem
plated' treaty would confer on
them."
GREY MAKES APPEAL
FOR IRISH RULE
(Continued from page 1)
ft
J w.
Sunshine Girls Help
North Salem Families
The Sunshine class, an organ!
zation of girls of the Jason Lee
Methodist Sunday school, com
posed of junior high school girls.
have collected and given a qnaalK
ty of good things for the Thanks-.
giving ainners oi two aiuerent
famines in poor circumstances in.
North Salem. . . ;
The teacher of the class is Miss
Lois Tyler, and the members are:
Bethel Johns, Alpha Holcomb.
Lois Pruit. De Loise Hice. Gladys
Wheeler, Velma Taylor, Winifred
Ritchie. Alene Ritchie, Vida Mc
Coy, Rhea McCoy, Elsie Raymond,-
Beulah Graham. Juanita Hockett.
Ixria Hockett. Myrtle Smith. Leah
Panning. Ethel Dishart. Edith
Wilson. Catherine Young,
Wiley and Bessie Taylor.
CHICAGO. Nov. 24. Chicago
will be "the rnoft unhealthy plare
for crooks and the dryet city in
the I'nit-d States by Christmas
federal, slate and rit) officials
declared tonight after they ha J
taken part today in a drive
against liquor dealers which in
cluded suit to close 72 waloons
and cabaret. Injunctions shutting
down eii:ht such placet, arid-federal
Indictment of 31 persons un
charges of conspiracy to violate?
the Volstead act.
, Attorney General Itrundaae.
who instituted the 72 suits, to
night said that several hundred
more were contemplated and that
the slate would continue th.
drive "until ther was not a drop
of intoxicating liquor in any of
Chicago's 300o "dry saloons. "
The federal officials 'Joined In
Ihe drlre shortly after the attor
ney gnertl had filed his suits
when Charles Cline, Coiled State?
district attorney, procuted tem
porary In unctions from Federal
Judge K. M. Landi closing eixht
cafes. Shnrtly afterward the fed
eral grand Jury which has been
investigating alleged illegal liquor
trafffc or several weeks, re
turned indictments agartist 31
persons.
City officials welcomed the
state and federal drive as an ad
junct to the roundup of criminal
started on Sunday and said it
would make it eafier for them to
keep crooks out of the city. At
the same ime they frustrated an
attempt to steal. $60,000 worth
of liquor being transported
through the city on trucks and
arrcsiea two persons in connec
tion with a theft of $50,000 worth
of wine.
f-hortly after the Honor drlvw
tecame known, the city council
adopted a resolution authorizlnr
the may to call a tneetlnc of all
state's attorneys and mavors of
Illinois to plan a state wide cam
paign against lawbreaking and
Chief of Police Fltzmorrf dis
missed William Tobln, patrol
han. for alleged "whiskey runn
ing." Further dismissals will
follow, the chicr said.
The theft of $167,000 worth nf
whiskey Trom local railroad yards
started the 'investigation which
found its climax In today's drives.
It was charged that this liquor,
brought here illicitly from LouU
v!lle. was guarded by. policemen
and then stolen from them bran
ether band which also Included
member? of the police force.
The injunctions issued and the
suits filed today cover many of
Chicago's most notorious cafe,
while the indictments include
men well known -here n.l n
other cities and several members
of the police force.
When We WeiZh Cc
ther i Lo driver o rV
of lt rart or iratk. rr
cj-:. not driter. t4 ls
m1 yrvi a or more a "
Jot that noantity .f tu
We r'larante ifce e1ctt 4
wrll o l qualiiy fef aar
If I h" rum!,inaika f j -
Ifht and b-tt jal,-j
et yoa. gite u aa ordt.
Lamer Trcnxln
phone
Clara
direct, real and effective control
in Ireland it would be better to
withdraw the armed forces now
He wished the government tc
have all powers for punishing
crime, but these powers must b
exercised by real discretion and-
control, and if that were possible.
tnen witndrawai was the better
course. -
Voicing his doubt as to wheth
er a constituent assembly or
convention to settle the question
was practicable now and criticis
ing the financial clauses of the
bill, tbe speaker urged the gov
ernment to try to amend the bill
and make it more acceptible by
more generosity regarding fin
ance and by offering fiscal au
tonomy in the hope that it would
bring about peace, instead of de
manding peace as a condition o'
giving fiscal autonomy. Alluding
to foreign opinion. Lord Grey
hoped the government would en
deavor to make tbe bill sufficient
ly strong and generous to appea1
to all moderate opinion.
Empire Has Reverse
"We have the greatest empire
'in the world." he declared, "but
It has not been without its re
verses. We lost America thronrh
not giving In time and not giving
PENROSE IMPROVING
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 24.
There has been such a marked
Improvement In the condition o
United Stages' Senator Penrose
It was announced tonight, that he
has made an engagement to con
fer with Senator Lodge of Massa
chusetts on Saturday. Senator
Penrose has been ill for mor
than a y?r.
Price Drop in Farm
Produce Investigated
j m
WASHINGTON. Nov. 24. Con
gressional investigation of recent
price drops on the commodity ex
changes where farm products are
dealt in will be asked, the Ameri
can Farm Bureau Federation an
nounced today, as soon . as con
gress reconvenes. Representative
Dickinson, republican, Iowa, has
prepared an. Investigation Resolu
tion, tne bureau said, which re
cites the facts as to the decline
in the prices of cereal- grains,
livestock and cotton, asserts that
it has gone as far as "to threaten
tne rood supply of the country
and drive many producers out of
the producing business" and de
clares that profiteering and specu
lation have been permitted to
trol said declines."
WARD m ARRESTED
SEATTLE. Wash.. Nov. 24.
Robert Ward or Decatur. III., gen
eral manager at the Chinese-American
Export & Import company
of Shanghai and of the Shangha
Motors corporation, was arrested
by federal officers here tonight
on the arrival of tbe liner Kashi
ma Maru from the Orient, on
charge of having $4,000 worth o'
stolen Jewelry in his possession
Ills Chinese compradore. Lin
Sang La also was arrested.
DRAMATIC PLEA MADE
Something To Be Thank-
ful For !
SHO
E8
Within The Reach Of All
Men's Buckingham & Hecht Army
Shoes ...... -... .......-$7.85
Ladies' Black Kid Shoes and
! Oxfords $4.85
New Fashion Woo! Hose. . $1.45
Nu Brown Spats $1.69
Teal to Promote Pacific
Coast Shipping Interest
LOS ANGELES. Cal., Nov. 24.
Joseph N. Teal of Portland.
Ore., recently appointed to the
United States shipping board by
President Wilson, told represen
tatives of the Los Angeles cham
ber of comerce he would "do ev
erything In his power to promote
the shipping interests of the Paci
fic coast.'
Mr. Teal arrived here early to
day, accompanied by Harold H.
Ebejf, director of shipping board
operations on the Pacific coast.
They visited Los Angeles harbor
and said their plans called for a
visit to San Diego before their
return north.
BEND. Or.. Nov. 2 4. In a dra
matie statement made just before
sentence was passed in clreul
court here today, A. J. Weston-
convicted of the murder of Rob
ert Krug of Sisters, declared hi
innocence, claimed that he V
the victim of a Tevengeful plot
then offered to deliver his com
mitment in person to the warden
of the penitentiary at Salem. A
the penaltyf o rsecond desrre
murder. Weston was sentenced t
Imprisonment for the rematnde
of his natural life.
APROPOS OF NOTHING
1
; OUR WINDOWS TELL THE STORY -
F ARIS; S HO E ST O RE
Elkton Postmaster
Recovers Valuables
ROSEBURO. Nov. 24. John
Redden. Elkton postmaster, has
recovered some of The valuable
papers lost by him when his safe
was blown several weeks ago. Thi
papers consisted of notes, mort
gages and securities to the am
ount dX several thousand dollars
and were hidden by the robbers
in a barn and were found under
a haystack. The boat belonging
to S. H. Brown which was usel by
tne robbers In making their es
cape was also located yesterday
near the Sawyer ranch on the
Lmpqua river. Almost $30,000
in money, notes and securities
and other valuable were taken
from the Iledden store at the time
of the robbery.
Ambition is always boxing con
tentment on the ears.
Self-preservation is the first
law of nature. It keeps nations
alive.
This is said to b the aga of
young. men. It may be; but the
old men manage every age.
In time one accumulates
great bulk of remlnscences of
things he has had to give up.
If oneis all dressed up and
nowhere to go he can walk on the
street and advertise the prosperi
ty of the town to strangers.
There Is a distinct office-holding
class. The multitude recog
hixes Us fitness for the work as
readily as it recognizes any other
kind of talent.
It is a great triumph to make
a grouch smile; and many enjoy
a task that puts them on their
mettle.
There Is an almost pertain cure
iim lusuuiBia. stay awaxe an
night the night before.
A type of woman exists who
knows everything that Is going on
In town; not because she Is In
quisitive, but because people like
to tell her.
Dont use Jawbreakers. You
may have to eat your words.
(St. Louis Globe-Democrat).
If that federal fair price com
mittee was tn existence It might
tackle the. high cost ot bootleg
whisky. - '
TTv
Furniture i
mams Koom
Solid Oak Lentz Dining Room Tables
- Wot Ifeneered, hut
Solid at:
Every piece of wood Roing into the titles U boiled In oiL ThU means & per.
fectly keasonec non-check and non-warp top with a smooth hard finish. The slides
respond to the slightest touch and do not have to be jerked open.
- Over forty (40) patterns and styles of the btantiful quality tables to pick frcra.
A $93.00 set consisting of 6 ft. solid oak extension table and six slip seat diners
for $69.30.
f !!'
1
Se Oar East Windows
Oriental Rag Rugs
Produced with a beautiful fine weave, fast colors, and stunnin? designs.
You will be surprised to learn how reasonably priced are these beautiful reft.
Se Our West Window.
Lowered Prices
Trunks, Suitcases, Hand Bap, CLrdtone Bas. and English Rajs.
Featured of course in the extraordinary sale of luggage is our famous
Belber Luggage
selling at a discount of 25;; on the whole stock.
At these prices we are compelled to display this merchandise In the east window
of our corner store showirtj in plain figures the regular prices and the sale price.
yew
W fc. rv m r - i "in - m , i i m
p
I
-K
B
VERY SPECIAL
4
a
For
Friday and Saturday
Only
1 WS
$1.25 quart cans Wizard and O-Cedar Polish, one to each
customer 95c .
i