The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 08, 1921, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE OREGON STATESMAN. SALEM. OREGON
SUNDAY MORNING. MAY S, 1921'
LUELLA KIMBALL
SOCIETY ELECTS
Organization of Wives Of
Pastors of College is
Active Club
The Laella Kimball club which
it named after the wife of Dr.
Kimball, founder of the Kimball
School of Theology in this city, is
rendering excellent service to the
college in all of its interests. The
society is composed of pastors'
wires, and at the last meeting of
the society, a resolution was car.
ried that a rote of thanks be ten-
Eastman
Kodaks
and
Supplies
We have just added this
line of world renowned
kodaks and supplies to
our stock. -
Bring Your Films
to Us
All developing and print
ing work absolutely
guaranteed.
COMMERCIAL BOOK
STORE
1S3 N. Com! St. Salem
Phone 64
dered the retiring officers). Mrs.
D. C. Hassell, pres. dent, Mrs John
McNees, vice-president. Mrs. Au
drey Clark, secretary-treasurer.
The following new officers were
elected for next year: president.
Mrs. C. M. Keefer, vice-president:
Mrs. Stanford Moore, senretary
treasurer; Mrs. David Itassell.
Mrs. Minnie Marcy Bates is chair
man of the propram commitle and
a program will be prepared to cov
er the whole year's work.
Thursday afternoon the students
observed clean-up day and after
ward met with the I.'iellas ait Mrs.
Fred Royston's home on Ferry
Street, where the lades enter
tained their husbands with a
tine lunch.
The Kimball picnic will be held
Friday in Bush's pasture and a
very delightful program is being
prepared.
SALEM
IS BEST
TRAVELERS SAY
;Mr, and Mrs. H, C. Corn
j Have Eventful Auto Trip
To Los Angeles
HE HOME
-m -m rrnat ir nome wimuw .
GARPJH
imam
(Articles in this series are furnished by the National Garden
Bureau)
E
MEUGY
MEETING
BUB
Errors of 1921 Legislature
Make Necessary
Apart of Money
Sam A. Kozer, secretary of
state ad secretary of the state
emergency board, yesterday issued
a call for the emergency board to
meet Wednesday, May li at the
state house at 10:30 o'clock.
The call is at the request of
Faul V. Maris, director of the ex
tension service, Oregon Agricul
tural college, and several county
clerks, and the subject for consid
eration is the provision of funds
for organized work for the eradi
cation of harmful rodents carried
on cooperatively by the United
Spates biological survey and Ore
gon Agricultural college through
its extension department, and for
the payment of one-half the. boun
ties on wild animals as authorized
by law..
The call of the emergency board
is made necessary because of er
ror in ntnhe enrollingn of house
bill No. 381 of the 1921 legisla
ture because of which no appro
priation for the work referred to
,was made.
Here Are The
lecords
You have been asking for. We
actually .have all these in stock.
11052 ; Birds and the Brook
85 cts. In Venice Whistling
110 'Uncle Josh's Hnskln Bee Dance
' .85 : Last Day at School at Pnmkin Centre
11145 i Uncle Josh at the Opera
.85 Uncle John in Society
119 Arkansas Tnrveler a
.85 Rabbit Hash r - - r -
11218 Massa'a in the Cold, Cold Ground
.86 'Cornfield Melody,
11228 Uncle Josh Playing Baseball
.85 Uncle Josh on a Fifth Ave. Bus
18261 Shall We Gather at the River
.85 J Rest for the Weary
18414 Tell MotherJ11.be There
Sometime We'll understand
Sweet Genevieve " -
Where the River Shannon Flows
.85
18440
.85
18520
.85
16533
.86
Uncle Josh' Second Visit to the Metropolis
Uncle Josh In Department Store
Lead Kindly Light
"Mr Mother'! Prayer
Belmont and Victor Orchestra
Shaw
Stewart
Stewart
Stewart
Stewart
r S pence t
Golden
Hayden Quartet
Hayden Quartet
Stewart
Stewart
Hayden Quartet
Hayden Quartet
Hayden Quartet
Trinity Choir
Wells and Hayden Quartet
Macdonough
18876 Uncle Josh and the Photographer
.85
16748
.85
16749
.85
16804
.85
16814
,85
16931
.85
17015
.85
17035
.85
17143
.85
17221
.85
.-.a
Farmyard Medley
'Jesus Savior Pilot Me
Nearer My God to Thee
,When the roll Is Called up Yonder
He Leadeth me
Uncle Josh's trip to Coney Island
Roll on. the Ground
'Pagllaccl '
- Trovatore
Uncle Josh at the Roller Skating Rink
Uncle Josh and the Fire Department
16967 ; Herd Girl'i Dream. ,
.85 'HaDDT-Days
Southern Melodies' xylophone
f Fascination Walt Whistling ,
'Aloha Aoe Cornet .
From an - Indian Lodge
. Sweetest "Story Ever Told
Simple Confession '
. Preacher and the Bear
Bake That Chicken Pie
17222 Three Trees (from Spring Maid)
.85 No News, or What Killed the Dog
17231 Anvil Chorus (Trovatore! ;
.85 'Forge In the Forest
17305 r In the Evening by the Moonlight
85 .-Massas in the Cold, Cold Ground
Silver Threads Among the Gold
; When Yoa and I Were Young Maggie
. Evening Chimes
'Woodland Echoes
1764$ , Italian 'Favorites
.85 Azalea -Walts
17661 j Traviata Prelude
.85 .La Colombo
17677 VTh at Moaning Saxophone Rag
.85 -Original Fox Trot
17701 Hawaiian Walts Medley
.85 Kilina Walts
17710 .Kahafa March
.85 -Honolulu March
17717 .Blow, Blow. Thou Winter Wind
Airs Sung by Ophelia
Wailana (Drowsy Waters)
Hllo
Cunka Medley '
H.ula Medley
Whispering Hope
Abide With Me
Silver Threads Among the Gold
Oh Promise Me
Uncle Josh in a Barber Shop
War Talk in Pumkin Centre
Uncle Josh Buys an Automobile
Village Gossips
Wedding of the Winds
Estudiantina Accordion
National Emblem March
Garde da Corps March
Little Brown Church in the Vain
When They Ring the Bells for You and Me
17474
.85
17523
.86
Accordion
L 85
17767
.85
17774
.85
17782
.85
17816
.85
17820
.85
17854
.85
17865
.85
117957
.85
U7982
.85
7987
.85
8019
.86
8020
.85
18097
,85
Stewart
Stewart
Trinity Choir
Freemantel
Stewart
American Quartet
M'Claskey
Hayden Quartet
Criterion Quartet
Werrenrath
Stewart
Golden
La Scala Chorus
Caronna and Chorus
Stewart
Stewart
Neapolitan Trio
Neapolitan Trio
Reitz
Graldini
Clark and Sousa's Rand
Sousa's Band
Neapolitan Trio
Neapolitan Trio
Golden
Collins and Harlan
McXaughr.on
Wills
Victor Orchestra
Pryor's Band
Hayden Quartet
Dun lap
Baka
Harrison
Neapolitan Ttio
Neapolitan Trio
Pieitro
Penney
IOrchestra Symphonique
L'Orchestra Symphonique
Brown Bros.
Van Eps Trio
Lua Kalli
Lua Kaili
Lua Kaili
Lua Kaili
Dixon and Male Quartet
.,. .Werrenrath
' Lua Kaili
Irene West's Rojal Hawaiian
Lua Kaili
Lua Kaili
Kline Baker
Kline Baker
Neapolitan Trio
Venetian Tiio
Stewart
Stewart
Stewart
Stewart
Accordion
Piet ro
Pryor's Band
Pryor's Band
Male Quartet
Imperial Quartet
Mr. and Mrs. II. C. Corn, who
, soiu the.r al-m restaurant to
Mr. and Mrs. Berk last winter and
in February equipped an autonio
I rile for an overland trip to Los
Angeles to reside, have just n
I turned to Salem, which they de
clare a better home and business
town than any place they visited
in the sister state.
Their trip south in February
was not without hardship and
thrills, their first trouble belnt;
encountered on the famous or in
famous Smith hill near Grants
Pass on which it was necessary
to secure a team to pull the autos
through the mud even down
grade.
Beyond Ashland in the Siski
yous they encountered five miles
of snow through which they trav
eled by equipping the car with
chains all around. I'pon arriving
at Sisson they found that snow
and had roads made the nignway
practically impassable a aistance
of 1") miles to Dunsmuir. Over
this part of the route they shipped
their auto and traveled by rail
road. From Dunsmuir on to Bakers
field their trip was without inci
dent. But for beautiful scenery
and fine mountain roads Mr. and
Mrs. Corn declare the ' Ridge
route" from Bakersfield to Los
Angeles surpasses anything they
saw on the trip.
Not finding southern alilornia
weather quite all claimed for it
they recently decided to return
to Salem to reside permanently,
after again looking over Portland
for a few weeks on their return
to Oregon. Smith hill they still
found rough on their return with
a few wrecked autos in evidence,
the highway otherwise teing in
good condition.
They have bought back at a
premium, their old business, the
"Good Eats" restaurant, where
they will be found "at home'' to
th.nr many Salem friends.
DO NOT PLANT COON N K SINGLE ROW AS IT HAS LITTLE OR
NO CHANCE FOO POLUMATION. f ,
sA Si
Coronach Kine. Wheeler. Dunlap
Soldier, rest Kline Baker
The Robin's Return Whistling Gorst
Spring Song (Mendelssohn) Whistling Gorst
In the Garden v Asher and Rodeheaver
When, the World Forgets! Rodeheaver
Bull Frog Blues, Saxophone Six Brown Bro.
Pussy Foot March Saxophone Six Brown Bros
Check X Opposite Itecortls Wanted and Send With Remittance
ALBANY TERM
COMES TODAY
Tempting List of Prizes Is
Hung up For Lucky
Salem Senators
Unless it rains again today the
Albany baseball team will be in
Salem to play the Salem Senators
at the Oxford street grounds at
3 o'clock. The Salem batteries
will be Lund and Edwards, and
for Albany, Coleman and Gill
will be the battery. Gill is the
well-known Salem player who is
now in college at Corvallts.
Another tempting. list of prizes
has been hung up for the game
today.-. Blessing- & Boone will
give a carton of cigarettes to the
first Saem player who makes a
two-bagger. The Spa will give a
box of candy to. the fjrst player
who bats in a run. For the first
home run a pair of silk socks or
a necktie will be given by Kafoury
Brothers. Jeffreys wJll a photo
graph album for the first two
base hit, and the Clark tire shop
will give an inner tube for the
first three-bagger or home run.
Luther Burbank has added a
new nut to the world. If they all
get together they will elect the
next president.
3b
4L'
plants which are more expensive.
For garden planting it Is best
to make the rows three feet apart
and set the plants from 18 inches
to two feet apart in the rows. It
is important to set the plants at
proper depth. The crown of the
roots should be level with the
surface of the soil and each plant
should be firmly pressed into the
ground. In the northern states
the plants should be mulched in
winter.
There are several ways of grow
ing strawberries, but the best
plan for the home gardener is to
develop each plant to the limit of
its capacity. That is done by
pinching of the runners, which is
easy to cay but not easy to do. In
the growing season it keeps yon
busy putting a stop to the efforts
of the strawberry plant to repro
duce itself. But persist, and yoa
will see the parent plant concen
trate its strength in the produc
tion of berries, much to your de
light. Senator Dunlap is a favor
ite midseason variety.
rw
ftrlMU lUt'
1 Burns
Bandage the japoC with plenty of soothing
a
Cools
teadage Ue spoc wua piemj oi wauuDg V. I
ndbealntlyandantie
-maAnsssasSBBBBBBBBSjasa
We read a lot or stuff about
the news of an event "spreading
like wild fire." There is but one
thing in this world to which thlJ
description can be attached in all
fairness scandal.
PLANTED N SQUARE 5 THE 5AME
AMOUNT OF JCCD PCOOUCCJ MORE COQM.
TWO Ftt T APART N ROWS THREE FEET
APART. 3 0H4 SEEDS TO A HILL.
DO MOT HOF CORM '
TOO VIGOROUSLY AS '
IT IS S MALLOW ROOT
CO AND TOO DEEP
MOEIMO DISTURBS I
TME BOOT SYSTEM
A Square Deal for Sweet Corn
Five rows of corn 10 feet long
will produce more sweet corn
than the same number of stalks
in a single row 50 feet long
Every strand of corn silk repre
sents a potential kernel of corn
on the cob from which it issues.
It becomes a kernel ot corn pro
vided the dust from the tassel or
pollen falls upon it. The pollen
dust must be deposited on the
silk or there 'is no kernel of corn.
The corn depends upon the wind
to drift the pollen dust upon, the
silk. Other plants depend upon
bees, but the bees do not find
corn so much to their liking. The"
tassels give off clouds of dust. All
it needs is direction.
In a square of corn, whicnever
way the wind comes, it drives the
dust through the planting. Most
of it is bound to fall upon the
silks. In a long single row or a
double row, the pollen is blown
away In great quantities and
strikes no silk that it can ferti
lize. This explains the basis for
square planting of corn rather
than in long rows.
Two feet apart in the row and
rows three feet apart is about the
right distance for corn. Three to
four stalks in a hill is plenty.
Three is better than four for ful!
development. Another system is
to plant the corn in rows with
single stalks about a foot apart.
Corn loses its sugar within
four hours after it is picked. It
can't be kept overnight and re
tain its sweetness. A chemical
change takes place, which changes
the. sugar in the corn to starch.
So corn is one vegetable that must
be home grown or grown very
close to home If it is to be placea
on the table really sweet.
Corn is the shallowest rootins
large growing vegetable. Its
roots radiate like the spokes of a
wheel, but they do not go deep.
This is one reason why it is so
easily blown over by a high wina
If not hilled up.
As it is hallow rooting, too
deep hoeing disturbs the root sys
tem and hampers growth.
This doesn't mean that it
shouldn't be hoed, by any means,
hoe lightly and do not dig too
deeply. If the soil is in good con
dition. 6tirrlng the soil with a
rake or a cultivator toothed ho?
is a better system.
i
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3
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'I
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r-
PLANTING PLAN FOR, AN HERB GAR.DEK SX6FEET
P
WHOLE MILK
AND PRODUCE WANTED
Marion Creamery & Produce
Co.
Salem, Oregon Phone 2488
1 SALEM MARKETS
BUTIKO rKIC2'
Eg(t and rotmry
KltR, IB 17c. . .
Hens, hey 20c ...
Hens, medium. 22e.
H?n. lijht, 1718c.
rM rnmun. 8-1 dr..
Fork, Mutton ana fcuf
Top hoirm, ffl.'ia.
1920 Umbt, 3 to 5e
1921 milk Umbt, tf to 7.
Drwd Hog, 14 tt
Bert ateers, 6 to 1c.
Cowi. 5 and 6c.
Bulla. 4-4 4e.
Top veal, on foot. 0 to Sc.
Hay
Clover bar. 117 to $20.
Oat and Vetch bay, $20 to $23.
Cheat hay. $20 to $21.
Orals
Wheat fiOe to $1.
Oat. 40c.
Mill reads, Wholaaals
Mill run, $38 tona.
WholeaaM to Doalors
Creamery butter, 32 33c.
liutterfat, 25c.
Trait
Oranges, $3.50 to $5.60.
Bananas, 11 He.
Lemona, $3.50 to $4.50.
Grapo fruit, Cal. $4; Aria. $$.50;
Florida $8.50.
Vogatablos
California cabbage, HVi.
Onions, Oregon, $1.25
Oniona, California, $1.7$.
Turnipi $3.00 aaek.
Carrota, $1.25 aack.
Green peppera. 80e.
Lettuce, $4 per crate.
Potatoes, $1 ewt.
Rweet potatoes, $3.75 buabel.
-Radiahea. 60c doxen buncbea.
Comb honey, caae, $8.25.
Asparagua, 15c.
Rhubarb, Sc.
Parsley, 50c doten Tinneb.es.
Beeta. 75c do ten bunches.
Tomatoea $5.25 crate.
Honey, extracted. Too lb.
Strawberries, $4.00.
BtaO
Creamery Butter, 30-35e.
Ergs, 20c.
Floar, hard wheat, $2.25,
Flour, soft wheat, $1.75.
Snemr. $7. SO.
Clean Coal and
Cleanly Delivered
We have it for those who
need it. Our coal is what wi
are forced to call unusual, oul
of the ordinary grades because,
we find il pays us better to car
ry it, and our customers get
more real monetary satisfaction
by using it. It lasts longer and
saves you money.
LARMER TRANSFER
l PHONE 930
Announcing: a Halcm Representative - "
Clark-Kendall & Co,, Inc.
TO BE of additional Convenience and help to our
host of customers in and around Salem, we have
secured the services of Mr. William McGilchrlst.
Jr. as the resident Agent of the investment house of
Clark, Kendall & Co IncL
Headquarters for Government, Municipal and Cor
poration securities will be maintained at Suite 309-10
U. S. Bank Bldg., conifer of; State and Commercial streets.
Mr. McGilchrist is :well known throughout the Valley
as a successful business iroan of high integrity, and
it is with confidence in his ability to advise clients
both present and prospective regarding their invest
ment problems, that life place him in supervision of our
Salem business. $ j
ill 1
Our policy of hadlln $ only carefully selected In
vestment securities which we can conscientiously recom
mend was established ten ears ago when this firm was
organized, and has been consistently maintained,
i !
Specialists in Bonds-that-Build-Oregon
Clark-Kerjdall & Co., Inc.
Gorernment, afunlclpal and Corporation
i bonds
800-10 U. 8. Bk. Bldg 'l 5th and Stuk
I rortiana, ure.
Salem, Ore.
J;
U
-I
,Vti
The Herb Garden, a Garden of Flavors.
S. C STONE, M. D.
CURES CANCERS
an 4 does a general office practice.
Office Tyler'i Drug Store
1S7 South Commercial Street
LADIES
when irregular or awppreaxed ne Tri
umph Piila. Bafe and dependable la at
proper caaea. Not sold at drug atorea
Do not experiment with others; Ji
appointment. Write for 'Relief an
particular it'e free. Addreaa National
Medical institute. Milwaukee, Wis.
The LANG
Best Range in America
For wood only and the only
steel range made with a 26
inch oven.
Patent draft construction al
lows no cold air to enter range
while baking. The fuel burns
from the top. and consumes
nearly all the ashes. Cuts your
fuel bill in half. Burns saw
dust, bark, green wood and
is a perfect baker.
Rend for Catalogue
PEOPLE'S FURNITURE
STORE
271 N. ('ommirrial Street
SALEM. OREGON
There is no more practical use
for a tiny patch of ground than
to make of it a herb garden, a
patch of taste and smell to glad
den the soul. The great secret ot
foreign cookery and a department
in which the American cook is
too often lacking in flavoring,
particularly for sauces. The
French or Italian chef uses quan
tities of herbs, dried or fresh,
often to add tang or zest to a
vegetable which has no very pro
nounced flavor of its own?
Stuffing for fowls is dependent
for its palatableness upon the
herbs which flavor it. Three or
four herbs enter into some of the
dressings an accomplished chef
will turn out.
Only a few plants are needed
of each herb. It is a great con
venience to have them handy in
the kitchen, for when they are
needed they are needed badly. A
fresh home-grown supply is worth
double the dried product obtain
able from the grocery store.
Sweet basil, a favorite of French
cooks for soups, stews, dressings
and sauces; marjoram, used for
the same purposes; thyme, often
used in combination with basil
and marjoram or alone or with
sage; chervil, a flavoring akin to
parsley: mint, to keep the lamb
from being lonely and to cook
with green peas or to make into
jelly (no longer for juleps);
summer savory to flavor soups or
stews and to cook with string
beans; sage, the inevitable herb
of the Thanksgiving turkey, and
if worse comes to worse, usable
as a hair dye; annual lavender,
the dried blossoms of which make
scent bags to be placed among
the linen for the dainty fresh
fragrance it imparts; a few plants
of dill for the pickles; all these
in a small space may be growa
readly, and all except the thyme
will grow from seed. The leaves
may be dried and put away in
cans, boxes or paper sacks and
some housewives merely cut down
the whole plant and hang it to
dry, protecting it from dust.
A few plants of tarragon will
furnish leaves for flavoring the
salad vinegar and this aromatic
herb is also used in cookery.
hoes
the stem, for it forma a turnip
wun leaves upon it above the
ground which is the ediblo nor-
tion. grows too large it becomes
wooay ana imrous. and It ia too
tough in texture for a table vege
table. It should be used when
still small and tender, when it ts
oneof the most delicate of the
cabbage tribe.
It has one particularly valuable
trait in that it will grow In dry,
sandy gardens where other vege
tables are usually a failure after
the early spring month?.
A Fine Hummer Vegetable
If you haven't grown the kohl
rabi for the summer menu, give it
a trial. It is .one of the most use
ful of the quickly maturing vege
tables. In fact it is supplanting
the turnip as a summer dish on
many tables.
It needs to be sown frequently
like the radish as it matures rap
idly and must be used when about
half grown or an inch and a ha!t
or two inches in diampfr. Kohl
rabis have been discarded by gai
deners in many cases because
they were allowed to become too
mature as the wanted bigger
roots. If the roots, or more pro
perly spesking, the thickening of
Straw Ix-rr,es
Strawberries may be grown in
the average home garden as eas-
y as radishes, and though they
are a little more trouble, think of
the reward!
Fall bearing varieties, especial
ly Progressive, which is generally
considered best of these, have
done much to popularize the
strawberry for home cultivation.
Two crops are borne by a well es
tablished bed. one in the summer
when other berries bear and an
other in the fall. If the plants
are disbudded in the summer,
they will bear more prorusely In
the fall and continue bearing un
til checked by frost.
Plants may be obtained now
most cheaply, as well grown dor
mant plants may be st out In
April and May. and will becom
established quickly. in the fall
it is necessary to plant pot-grown
Means Special Bargains in the New Things for This
If3) !
Yes, our mammoth S. O. S. sale is being continued anld tfce new things for this week
win surprise yoa more man ever. Most of Salem's Careful dressers have realized
the true worth of this sale. There is yet time for y&i to join the ranks of our sat
isfied customers. f .
These Prices Give You the Profit
1 lot of Boys' good wear
ing Elk Shoes, worth
$3.50 today; better see
these at once
$1.89
EXTRA SPECIAL! OnS
lot of Ladies' Shoes, alii
Leather and Cloth Tops';
in this lot, with French!
and Military Heels, val M
UeS UD to $9.00 fipf ripro?
1 It . i
eany ior inese, at
$1.39
Ladies' black kid and pa
tent Oxfords, also Pumps
included in this lot, with
puban and military heel ;
regular $5.50 value; will
be sold at the record
breaking price, per pair
$3J5
We Stand The Los:
Ladies $7.25 black kid
Lace Shoe, with Cuban
heel ; will be sold during
this sale
$4.98
MEN'S SHOES $4.65 '
A fine assortment of :
Men's Black Gun Metal
and Brown "Calf. Shoes,
Blucher Style, Goodyear
Welt Soles; regular $7.
50, going at
$4.65
Your choice of one lot of
Men's Brown , Oxfords ;
domes in a neat Medium
toe, well worth $7.50. S.
0. S. Sale Price
$6.19
Come Early Monday; You'll Marie! at the Prices
Every
Article
Reduced
Maaaaam-MaBaBBBBW '.- i
il (
UilLtJlV.MlMM
Ml Ti lain
Salem's
Biggest
Shoe Sale
1" i
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